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jeudi 18 juin 2026

Now That Apple Is Officially Raising Prices, Should You Buy a New Device?

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Between President Trump's tariffs, global instability, and historic demand for RAM, the past year has had an outsized influence on tech prices. It seems that just about every major company has announced price hikes recently, from laptop manufacturers like Acer and Dell to gaming companies like Sony and Nintendo. It's an odd turn of events: In the past, you only needed to wait for a new piece of tech to get cheaper. But now, if you didn't buy a Switch or PlayStation at launch, you'll pay more for one today.

Despite these increases, Apple has largely avoided passing higher costs on to consumers. It has some tricks up its sleeve, of course: The company eliminated some cheaper device tiers, so the cost of entry for products like the Mac mini and MacBook Air technically increased, but it did so without actually raising prices. Over the past year, not only have Apple device prices stayed the same, the company has also released new low-cost options like the MacBook Neo, which offers a full Mac experience for the cost of an iPhone 16. (Perhaps there are some perks to being a $4 trillion company.)

Sadly, this isn't a story about how Apple is continuing to keep prices stable. On Wednesday night, The Wall Street Journal published an exclusive, sharing news direct from outgoing Apple CEO Tim Cook. "Unfortunately, price increases are unavoidable," Cook told the newspaper. "We're doing our best to mitigate the huge increases that are being passed to us, and we've been trying to shield our customers from the increases, but the situation has become unsustainable." In other words, Apple products are about to get more expensive.

Cook went on to say that both RAM and storage chip shortages are driving factors in these issues: "There's less supply at a time when consumers want devices and the memory guys are passing along huge price increases." In a rather ominous aside, he added, "I've never seen anything like it in any area in over 40 years."

There are few details in the piece outside of the quotes from Cook. We don't know which products are going up in price, nor exactly when. The Wall Street Journal predicts that Apple will need to "substantially" increase prices if its goal is to maintain its current profits to cushion the impact from more expensive RAM and CPUs. Regardless, visit Apple's online store and take note of the MSRPs you see: They'll likely never be lower than they are right now.

Should you buy Apple devices now to beat the price increase?

Choosing when to buy tech is a bit like judging the stock market. You can make your best guess and hope you're getting the lowest price, but tomorrow, a massive sale could make your deal look paltry by comparison. Or you could wait, and prices could creep higher. There are no guarantees anymore.

That said, we can make some educated guesses. Tim Cook is calculated, and while he may be passing the torch to John Ternus soon enough, he wants to ensure Apple's valuation only continues to grow. As such, my guess is these price hikes are not immanent; rather, they likely will kick off with Apple's next hardware release cycle, which the company will almost certainly announce in the fall. That could mean the iPhone 18 will cost more than the iPhone 17, or the Apple Watch Series 12 will cost more than the Series 11. The "iPhone Fold" has no successor to compare it to, but perhaps it, too, will cost more than Apple originally intended. If that's the plan, Wall Street (as well as the rest of us) will no longer be surprised when the new products cost more than last year's.

If you're set on buying a new Apple device as soon as it's announced, you'll need to anticipate paying more. But if your goal is to get a device at the best possible price, I'd recommend buying sooner rather than later. While it seems probable that Apple won't raise prices before the fall, it could also choose to implement hikes long before then. As such, I'd encourage you to choose the device you want rather than getting fixated on paying a certain price. Use price comparison tools to see what deals are out there. If it looks like a device is at a relatively low price, jump on it now. You can no longer trust that older devices will be cheaper once Apple releases its next crop of products; if the iPhone 18 costs $200 more than the iPhone 17, there won't be that usual market incentive to drop the price of the latter.

The timing here is actually good, at least: Next week is Amazon's Prime Day (which should be called Prime Week now), and there are already early Apple deals with considering. A great discount on AirPods Pro 3 came and went (at least at Amazon; you can still find them for $70 off at Best Buy), but you can still score solid deals on the AirPods 4, with and without active noise cancellation. It's worth keeping an eye out next week for any deals on Apple products, including Macs, iPads, and AirPods. Again, no guarantees on what will get discounted, but we know two things for sure: Amazon is having a sale, and Apple is planning on raising prices at some point. More so than usual, the timing of your purchase matters.



I Tried Android 17’s ‘Bubbles’ and It Makes Multitasking Way Easier?

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Android 17 is on its way to Pixel phones around the world, and while there aren't a huge number of major upgrades—Google now usually pushes these out through the year—there is a useful new feature that gives you easier access to your apps. The feature is called Bubbles, and it's an extension of the chat bubbles that rolled out with Android 11 and that have since largely been forgotten about. This time the bubbles are coming to all categories of app, so you can set a floating shortcut to appear at the side of the screen containing the apps you use the most.

This shortcut expands and collapses as you tap on it, and you can have up to five different bubbles on the go at any one time. You can put your bubbles anywhere you want on screen if you're using a regular phone, but if you're using a foldable they get docked to the bottom right corner. It's like having an extra mini launcher to call on.

Android 17 Bubbles
Creating a new bubble. Credit: Lifehacker

The clever part is that these bubbles aren't simply another way of launching the app: They actually give you access to it in a slightly smaller window, so you can quickly check up on something or interact with an app before going back to whatever you were doing before. So if you've writing a text message and you've got a website you need to refer to in a bubble, you can quickly get an overlay of that site, check what you need to, and then get back to the message.

It promises to make multitasking much more intuitive and smooth on Android, and I've been using it extensively since I got the Android 17 update. I found it did take me a little while to figure out how I could best make use of it, but it's already changing the way that I use my phone.

Using bubbles on Android 17

You can create a bubble for an app by long-pressing on its icon on the home screen or in the app drawer, and choosing Bubble. If the app has its own long-press menu, then you'll just see the bubble icon without the text—it looks like a rectangle with an arrow pointing to one corner of it.

Tap on your new bubble to open the full selection, and you'll see there's a + (plus) icon for adding more bubbles as well. Tap and hold, and you can drag the bubbles shortcut to a different part of the screen. To get rid of a bubble, tap and hold on it, and drag it down to the X at the bottom. You can do this for all your bubbles at once, if you need to.

There are some apps that I can't create bubbles for, and I'm not sure why. It's possible the developer hasn't enabled the feature, or perhaps they're just incompatible with bubbles. They included the Google Authenticator app, the games I've got on my phone, and the default Camera app for Pixels.

Android 17 Bubbles
You can switch between bubbles from the row at the top. Credit: Lifehacker

When you select a bubble, you get the app overlaid on top of whatever else is on your screen, and you can interact with it normally—it's just that the window is slightly smaller than it otherwise would be. You can then tap outside the window to close your app bubbles, or use the row at the top to switch to a different bubble.

This doesn't replace launching an app in the normal way—you can still do that with apps that you've made into bubbles—it just gives you an alternative, quicker way of accessing certain apps without losing what you were already doing. It's a bit like a more agile recent apps screen, or Slide Over on the iPad.

I've got WhatsApp, Pocket Casts, and Google Health set up as bubbles, so I can quickly check and reply to messages, start and stop podcasts, and look up my daily steps without too much of an interruption. While doing these tasks and going back to a previous screen would usually take several swipes and taps, now they just take a couple of taps.



This Fire TV Soundbar Is $105 Off in Amazon's Early Prime Day Sale

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As Prime Day 2026 approaches, Amazon's first-party tech is unsurprisingly getting some of the largest early discounts. Take the Fire TV Soundbar Plus, which has dropped to $144.99 from its usual $249.99 price, the $105 discount representing its lowest price ever, according to price trackers—it's one of the best deals I've seen in advance of the big sale.

What you're really paying for here is clearer, fuller sound without turning your living room into a full-blown home theater. TV speakers often struggle with dialogue, especially during movies where background music and effects compete with voices. The Fire TV Soundbar Plus does a better job keeping conversations front and center—while, according to this PCMag review, offering overall audio feels bigger and more substantial than what you'd get from built-in TV speakers. Beyond TV audio, the soundbar can pull double duty as a Bluetooth speaker, while HDMI eARC and optical connections make setup easy. One thing to note: despite its Fire TV branding, this isn't a streaming device and doesn't run Fire TV software.

Also, while the Soundbar Plus supports Dolby Atmos, it doesn't include dedicated height channels, so you won't get the overhead effects that can make Atmos impressive. Bass is another limitation—it's present, but action movies and concerts won't have the same impact you'll get from a system with a dedicated subwoofer. Amazon does sell versions that bundle a subwoofer and rear speakers, but those packages cost considerably more.

There's no app and no on-screen interface, so settings changes are confirmed through voice prompts and LED indicators, which might feel less intuitive than competing systems with companion apps. Even so, for smaller living rooms, bedrooms, or casual viewing setups, this is still a meaningful upgrade at its current Prime Day low price.


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mercredi 17 juin 2026

Google's New AI 'Information Agents' Can Send You Alerts on Topics You Care About

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Google's efforts to transform online search and the ways we find information on the web continue, and there's now a new feature available in AI Mode: information agents. This new feature will keep tabs on news for you and ping you when needed. (At least, that's the idea.)

The update was announced at Google I/O 2026 back in May, but it's now appearing for those with a Google AI Ultra subscription (that's the $99.99 or $199.99 per month one). Google's Robby Stein says that more people will be getting access in the summer.

Google hasn't been any more specific than that, but presumably this will filter down to the other paid plans in the next few months, and eventually to everyone. I'm making use of my Ultra subscription here to get these information agents running.

Here's the idea: You look up, say, news on the next James Bond movie. Then AI Mode can keep tabs on the web and ping you whenever there's news on a casting decision, a release date, or a trailer. It saves you having to run multiple searches because the information comes to you (it's a bit like the old Google Alerts, if you remember those). These updates appear both in the AI Mode section of Google search and in the Google app on your phone. Or at least they're supposed to.

How my information agents worked (or didn't)

To set up your information agents, you can head to Google search on the web, then switch to AI Mode via the button in the search box. You then launch your search like you would if you were chatting to Gemini—something like "tell me who the main stars are in the upcoming Christopher Nolan film The Odyssey."

After you've got your answer, which is hopefully hallucination-free, you might get asked at the end if you want to set up an information agent to keep you updated on whatever it is you've searched for. If you don't get asked, you can put in the request anyway: Tell Google to "keep you updated" or words along those lines.

Google AI Mode
After some cajoling, I got my World Cup news. Credit: Lifehacker

You'll receive a confirmation message, and then whenever new information appears online, you'll get pinged about it. Updates appear as notifications in the Google app on mobile, and as new entries in the original AI Mode conversation—so if you delete the chat, you stop getting updates (you can access your previous chats via the AI Mode history button on the left.

Google doesn't say how often you'll get updates, but in my experience it was... not at all. I set up an information agent to keep me updated on the latest World Cup scores and group standings, which I thought was a fairly straightforward task, but my Google app stayed stubbornly silent and the AI Mode chats stayed static over a whole day as the goals went in and the matches went by.

Looking around the web, it seems that AI Mode information agents are working for other people, so this appears to be an isolated bug that may well get ironed out in a few days—but it's frustrating to have these features launch and then not work properly. I've had the same experience with Gemini Omni too, so maybe it's just me.

Google AI Mode
Thank you, AI Mode, for my updates. Credit: Lifehacker

What did work was telling the information agents to give me a daily summary at a specific time. When I did this, I did indeed get a delivery of the latest World Cup news and everything that had happened in the tournament over the past 24 hours, both in the Google app and as an update to my conversation with AI Mode.

In fact, this might be a better way to use this rather than expecting updates at random times throughout the day. I can definitely see myself using it for big news topics I'm interested in, and to pick up stories I might otherwise miss, though it doesn't seem to be set up for important breaking news.



This Is Why Your Ad Blocker No Longer Works on Chrome

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Google has been phasing out popular ad blocking extensions on its Chrome browser for several years, and it appears that the kill switch might finally be flipped with an update coming this summer. As 9to5Google reports, Chrome 150 and 151 are expected to finalize the transition to Google's Manifest V3 extensions platform, effectively ending support and workarounds for continued use of MV2 extensions like uBlock Origin.

Reporting suggests that Chrome 150 is expected to be released on June 30, with Chrome 151 to follow sometime in July. If your ad blocking extension stops working entirely in the coming weeks, these updates are why.

Why Google is killing ad blockers

As we've written, this change has been in the works for Chrome since 2019. The move to Manifest V3 was intended to make extensions more secure, but it also severs access to the Web Request API that ad blockers use to block traffic to and from malicious sites. The resulting restrictions on developers are expected to make ad blockers' content filtering capacity worse on MV3 compared to MV2, which is why some users relied on workarounds to turn disabled extensions back on for as long as possible.

Other Chromium-based browsers like Microsoft Edge and Opera have been expected to follow suit, as they run on the same underlying technology as Google Chrome. However, Opera representatives told Neowin that the platform intends to continue supporting MV2 extensions for "as long as it's technically reasonable," with the potential to phase out "less-used MV2 extensions" eventually while transitioning to MV3.

What to do if your Chrome ad-blocking extension dies

One possible solution: Switch to an updated version of an older ad blocker. Popular options with Manifest V3 versions include uBlock Origin Lite, Adblock, Adblock Plus, Adguard, and Ghostery. These may not meet everyone's needs, but you'll have to try them out to be sure.

Alternatively, you could leave Chrome (and Edge) altogether. Firefox, which has its own engine called Gecko, is a more privacy-focused browser that still allows extensions, though it's not without a few downsides. Brave, meanwhile, has a built-in ad blocker and other solid privacy features, and DuckDuckGo is a solid option too.

A reminder that while ad blockers have plenty of benefits, they're not perfect. In addition to cutting revenue for creators you might want to support, they can actually come with their own privacy concerns. To mitigate this, make sure you know what data is being collected by your chosen extension and how it is used.



These Nothing Earbuds With Built-In ChatGPT Are 33% Off Right Now

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These Nothing Ear (a) earbuds launched at $109, which always felt a little ambitious for a midrange pair trying to punch above its weight. But at their current sale price of $53.20 for Prime members right now—their lowest price to date, according to price trackers—they’re in a range where the design, sound quality, and software finally make sense for the money. For more details on this year's Prime Day deals and shopping tips, check out our Prime Day 2026 coverage.

The Ear (a) look unmistakably Nothing, with a transparent shell that shows off the internals. They fit snugly without much fiddling, and the IP54 rating means sweat, dust, and light rain won’t be a problem. The case itself is only IPX2, so it can handle splashes but not much else.

Sound is where these earbuds mostly earn their keep. The 11mm dynamic drivers deliver a bass-forward presentation that still manages to stay relatively balanced. Low-end hits with real weight, especially at moderate to higher volumes, and doesn’t immediately swallow vocals or guitars, notes this PCMag review. You can tweak things further in the Nothing app, either by choosing preset EQ modes or manually adjusting bass, mids, and highs. Codec support is strong for the money, with AAC, SBC, and LDAC all on board over Bluetooth 5.3, plus multipoint for two devices at once. Noise cancellation is effective for the price, particularly on the default High setting. It reduces low-frequency rumble and busy background sounds well, though rivals from Sony or Bose still do more heavy lifting in this area.

The controls are stem-based pinches and feel consistent once you learn them. Playback, calls, track skipping, and noise modes are all handled without needing to pull out your phone, and the app lets you customize most gestures. There’s even a pinch-to-speak ChatGPT feature if you’re using a Nothing phone. Battery life lands around 9.5 hours with ANC off or 5.5 hours with it on, with the case extending that to roughly 33 or 19 hours, respectively. Those numbers will drop if you use higher-quality codecs or listen at a loud volume, but they’re competitive.


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mardi 16 juin 2026

I Tried the Upgraded Apple Photos 'Clean Up' Tool, and It's Actually Pretty Good Now

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Along with the brand new Siri AI, Apple is introducing a number of new Apple Intelligence features—including a trio of new AI tools in the Photos app. We've been here before: Apple previously released AI-powered image editing features like Clean Up, which didn't necessarily hit the mark compared to similar tools from competitors like Google or Samsung. But this year appears to be a bit different: Apple's newest models, including those that work off-device, are improving existing features and powering new tools. For the most part, it seems to be a step in the right direction.

Apple’s Clean Up tool is much better

The new Clean Up tool is perhaps the most important update here. In iOS 26, Clean Up used Apple's on-device AI models to remove objects, but it was hit-or-miss. Clean Up was okay at basic tasks, but I found it couldn't remove surrounding shadows, nor could it replace an object with something that looked like it was originally part of the image.

Clean Up now uses a hybrid approach. For simple tweaks, like removing a small object, it uses an on-device model, just like in iOS 26. But, for bigger, more complex tasks (like removing an obstruction around your face), it hands off the task to Apple’s powerful Foundation models hosted on Apple’s own Private Cloud Compute servers. These servers, according to Apple, are completely private and encrypted. Apple says it doesn’t have access to your photos, and it doesn’t use your data for training.

To find these new tools, tap Edit on a photo, then choose Tools at the end of the toolbar. Here, tap Clean Up. By default, the feature is in Auto mode, which is the hybrid approach discussed above. From here, you can also switch to High Quality to force Apple to use the cloud models.

Using new Clean Up tools in iOS 27.
Middle: Cleaning up using only the on-device Fast model (same as iOS 26). Right: Using Apple's new Cloud models in iOS 27. Credit: Khamosh Pathak

Then, it’s business as usual. Use your fingers to highlight the object or part of the image that you want to remove. If you’re using Fast, the on-device option, the cleanup process will begin instantly. If you’re using High Quality, you’ll need to tap Clean Up and wait until Apple’s models do their thing. In my experience, the wait time can even stretch to minutes if you’re asking for clear, large objects.

After using this feature for cleaning up multiple images, here's the best tip I can give you: always use High Quality. Fast is the same as last year's feature, and while it removes the image, its replacement is lacking, as you can see with the mismatched tabletop in the image above. Even if you are removing a distinct object from a table, High Quality does a better job of replicating the tabletop, as well as shadows falling from other objects.

Clean Up tool in iOS 26 vs iOS 27.
Left and Middle: Clean up tool using on-device AI on iPhone 16 Pro. Right: Clean Up tool using Apple's cloud models on iPhone 16 Pro. Credit: Khamosh Pathak

The improvements continue when dealing with faces. The new iOS 27 feature can use generative AI and your own photos to recreate parts of your face that are obstructed. In my test (which you can see above), Clean Up on iOS 27 got rid of 99% of my coffee mug (though a border somehow still remains). On iOS 26, though, the result is just laughably bad: a soup of surrounding colors.

Extending photos in iOS 27 works like a charm

Extending photos in iOS 27 Photos app.
Credit: Khamosh Pathak

Extend, as the name suggests, expands your photos. Let’s say you have an off-center shot, or just looks unbalanced. Tap Extend from the Tools menu, then pinch in and move the image around. As you do, the surroundings will begin to blur, indicating the areas that iOS will fill in using Apple’s generative AI models. Because Apple uses cloud models, this too might take some time. Tap Extend, and wait.

Overall, Apple’s generative AI for extending images and filling in details is quite good—with some limitations. That's not necessarily surprising, as it's trained on Gemini’s own models, which are excellent at image manipulation. I tested the feature by extending the frame in nature, and in indoor settings. It did a good job of guessing what was around me, and even gave me a hand and a leg that weren't in the original shot. That said, it completely overexposed the image, so while you get more in the frame, you lose the sky entirely. In a photo I took of a coffee shop, the Photos app took the coffee bags that were on the shelf and just repeated them in the extended shot. This is quite a smart way to make the extended image look more realistic.

Extending photos in iOS 27 Photos app.
I took this image at Bookatico Bookstore & Cafe in Vadodara, India. Credit: Khamosh Pathak

Apple's Reframe feature needs a bit of work

The Reframe tool lets you change the angle or the perspective of the photo. You might wish you had moved your phone just a bit to the right before taking that snap of your partner, and while the moment is gone, the angle might be saved. With Reframe, you can swipe around on the image to change the perspective, as if you were adjusting the angle when originally taking the photo. The app shows you a live preview of what things will look like (as this is just a preview, it will show some unnatural bending, but that won’t be in the final result). Then, tap Reframe, and let Apple’s cloud models do their thing. After some time, the reframed image will be ready.

reframing a coffee cup to mixed results
Credit: Khamosh Pathak

In my testing, I found this to be the most jarring tool. It does the job, but it struggles with faces quite a lot. It’s best to use it for slight angle changes, and not much else. To stress test, I pushed the angle as far as the Photos app would allow. The result was an image with a slanted face, that looked more 2D than 3D (I will save you the horror of looking at my face with the eyes scrambled). As Apple works on improving the cloud models, though, this can get better.

Remember: All of these features are currently in beta testing. Apple may continue to improve the experience with subsequent betas and with iOS 27's official release in the fall.



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