It has been another week occupied in the world of technology.
AOL finished telephone access, we fly the first 360 drone in the world and celebrate the return of a missing Apple Watch function, even though it is now a bit different.
To catch up with all this and more, move down for the seven largest news of the week, which we have summarized for its convenience.
7. AOL finished telephone access
In our modern era, constant connectivity is a fact, but there was a time when it made the connection through telephone access. This process was accompanied by the unforgettable and iconic sound of a digital handshake between your computer and a service. Now, the last vestiges of the AOL telephone access service are disappearing. We look at what that means.
6. Apple spoiled an airpod update
The last beta developer of iOS 26 has apparently caused an important update not announced for AirPods 4 and Airpods Pro 2: Real-World, real-time translation.
Apple announced the live translation last month on WWDC, but not to chat in the real world, so this translation in real time on Airpods is something we did not know that it would come (out of leaks).
It is still very unknown, as precisely how the function works and what languages are compatible, but this is an update would be our existing Apple technology, and we are all in favor.
5. HTC launched Vive Glasses
HTC has felt for some time as if it were the second fiddle to finish in the VR headphones category, but its new eagle glasses could be a winner.
As for the hardware, Live goes to Beat for Beat with the competition. It has a 12MP pargo, as well as open ears speakers, and a solid battery life of up to 36 hours of waiting time and 4.5 hours of music playback while performing with an elegant 49g design.
But on the AI side, we believe it could advance with its ability to access Gemini and Chatgpt.
The capture? It is only available in Taiwan for now, but we are praying for a global launch.
4. Samsung debuted the first of a world on its last TV
Samsung officially revealed that its micro-RGB TV is reaching the market, launching for the first time in South Korea in a size of 115 inches. Samsung says that technology will eventually reach smaller sets.
Micro-RGB essentially takes red, green and blue micro-size LED and places them behind the panel to create refining brightness and color precision. He hit the 100% HDR color range coverage of BT.2020 color space: A TV first!
The bad news is that Micro-RGB is expensive. The 115 -inch model will be launched in South Korea with 44.9 million KRW, which operates at approximately $ 32,000 / £ 24,000 / € 28,000 / au $ 49,750 (Yikes!), So this is definitely outside the budgets of most people. Samsung believes that technology will become more affordable and will become a true OLED rival. Look at this space!
After an 18 -month prohibition, blood oxygen monitoring will finally return to Apple Watch 9 series, series 10 and ultra 2, however, it is a bit different this time.
It was disabled during a decision in January 2024 due to a patent dispute between Massimo and Apple, but Apple has found a way to obey the failure and give users access to the function.
That is, reading is no longer shown on your clock; It will appear only on its iPhone, with Apple explaining that the update was also enabled by a recent customs decision of the United States.
2. We fly the first 360 degree drone in the world
After its debut recently, we finally had the opportunity to demonstrate the new antigravity drone Insta360, and it is the most exciting drone we have seen in years.
It is not exaggerated to say that flying A1 is the child’s game. Exceeds the disorientation caused by the use of glasses as the drone takes to heaven, and will quickly face the movement controller and how to use it to control the altitude of the drone and the flight route.
Unfortunately, although official prices have not yet been confirmed, experience will probably not be cheap. You have the drone itself (which packs 360 Camera Tech) and a headset. But currently nothing does what this drone can, and that could be all that Insta360 needs to succeed at this time.
1. Openai responded to those who hate
The OpenAI CEO, Sam Altman, has approached criticisms about the restrictive messages limit for Chatgpt users in GPT-5. When the new model was launched, Plus subscribers could only send 200 messages of reasoning per week, what many saw as a reduction of the previous model, GPT-4O. Altman confirmed that the limit would increase to 3,000 indications per week for paid subscribers.
Altman also confirmed that Openai is working on clearer user interface labels to show exactly which model is responding in ChatgPT, something that many users have been asking since the update.
The announcement occurs after a reaction wave on GPT-5, with complaints about the smallest update than expected and the elimination of GPT-4O, which has since been restored. Altman’s rapid response shows that Openai is trying to keep its users who pay, since it sails for the difficult balance between new characteristics and expectations of users.