Oura rolls out new features for pregnancy and perimenopause

One downside to a fitness trackers is that they’re rarely able to understand the context in which their users live. It’s an issue Oura is looking to remedy by launching two sets of features intended to help people during pregnancy and when they reach perimenopause. Given both processes are liable to take a toll, causing physical, mental and emotional changes, having a smart ring that understands what’s going on is vital.

For the former, the Oura app will now monitor your biometrics throughout pregnancy and reference that against broader population data. You’ll also get deep dive trend analysis showing how your health and fitness has evolved through your pregnancy. Not to mention that the app, and the AI advisor, will not tell you off if your lifestyle becomes a little more sedentary towards the end of your pregnancy.

Perimenopause is the period of changes occurring in the run-up to the menopause, which can cause mood swings, depression, brain fog, muscle soreness and difficulty sleeping. Data from earlier this year suggests that one third of people have little to no knowledge of the condition, its symptoms, or treatment.

It’s something Oura is looking to address with Perimenopause Check-in, as part of its Cycle Insights feature. The company says users will be able to answer a 12-question assessment to rate the severity of their symptoms to quantify the impact on their quality of life. Users can turn this into a downloadable report that can be sent to healthcare providers to help explain how the symptoms are affecting them. Plus, the Oura app will integrate with various healthcare providers including Evernow, Maven and Progyny to get guidance on treatment including hormone therapy.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/wearables/oura-rolls-out-new-features-for-pregnancy-and-perimenopause-130000405.html?src=rss 

Fortnite is coming back to iOS in Australia after legal win against Apple

Epic has spent the last five years fighting Apple’s in-app purchase policies. Now, after half a decade, the Epic Games Store and Fortnite will once again be available on iOS in Australia. A judge has found Apple’s conduct likely diminished competition, in part for not allowing alternative payment methods, the Australian Financial Review reports.

In a post on X (formerly Twitter), Epic announced, “An Australian court just found that Apple and Google abuse their control over app distribution and in-app payments to limit competition. There are 2,000+ pages of findings that we’ll need to dig into to fully understand the details. This is a win for developers and consumers in Australia!” 

The Epic Games Store and Fortnite will come to iOS in Australia! An Australian court just found that Apple and Google abuse their control over app distribution and in-app payments to limit competition. There are 2,000+ pages of findings that we’ll need to dig into to fully…

— Epic Games Newsroom (@EpicNewsroom) August 12, 2025

Epic started this battle when it bypassed Apple’s in-app purchasing method, using its own. The move meant Apple lost its 30 percent cut of all sales. Apple banned Epic and a lengthly legal back-and-forth followed. In April, a judge in the US ruled that Apple could no longer collect commissions on purchases not paid through the App Store. Epic Games and Fortnite returned to the US App Store in May.

It’s unclear when exactly Epic Games and Fortnite will return to iOS in Australia and if this battle is finally coming to an end. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/fortnite-is-coming-back-to-ios-in-australia-after-legal-win-against-apple-120041043.html?src=rss 

Elon Musk feels Apple favors OpenAI over xAI in App Store rankings

Elon Musk has accused Apple of committing an “unequivocal antitrust violation” by favoring OpenAI in the App Store rankings. In a post on X, he claimed that Apple has made it impossible for other AI companies to reach number one in those rankings and that xAI “will take immediate legal action.” Musk didn’t clarify what he meant by that, and he also didn’t provide evidence that would prove Apple’s supposed antitrust violation. 

In an earlier post on X that’s currently pinned to the top of his profile, however, he tagged Apple, asking the company why it “[refuses] to put either X or Grok in [its] “Must Have” section. He said X is “the #1 news app in the world,” while Grok is ranked number five among all apps. “Are you playing politics? What gives?” he continued. We’ve asked Apple for a comment, but the company has yet to respond. 

Meanwhile, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman posted a response to Musk’s accusation on X, calling it a “remarkable claim,” given that he has heard allegations that Musk manipulates “X to benefit himself and his own companies and harm his competitors and people he doesn’t like.” To note, Chinese AI chatbot DeepSeek became the top-rated free app on Apple’s App Store back in January, overtaking even ChatGPT. 

Apple is behaving in a manner that makes it impossible for any AI company besides OpenAI to reach #1 in the App Store, which is an unequivocal antitrust violation.

xAI will take immediate legal action.

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) August 12, 2025

While Musk didn’t mention it, Apple has an ongoing partnership with OpenAI. The company has integrated ChatGPT into Apple Intelligence to power cloud-based queries for its platforms. More recently, the company said that Apple Intelligence will leverage the capabilities of OpenAI’s GPT-5 in iOS 26, iPadOS 26 and macOS Tahoe 26, which are set to arrive sometime in September. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/elon-musk-feels-apple-favors-openai-over-xai-in-app-store-rankings-123034234.html?src=rss 

The Morning After: The best Switch 2 games (so far)

A couple of months since the Switch 2 launched, we’ve all got to grips with the new magnetic-latching Joy-Cons, the jump in graphic fidelity and (honestly) the wait for a next-gen Zelda or Mario title. With the arrival of Donkey Kong Bananza, the new console has its first entirely new breakout platformer hit, we asked the Engadget team for the must-have games on the Switch 2.

CD Projekt Red

With a leap in processing power, the Switch 2 can now handle ostensibly huge games like Hitman and Cyberpunk 2077. In fact, the latter’s release on Nintendo’s console nudged me into finally playing the game. I last played it on Google’s Stadia cloud gaming service (RIP), and gave up at the tutorial. Already, I’m having a more successful playthrough. I can even share my save between Switch 2 and PS5 — because I’m that lunatic who owns the game on both.

I’m also playing my way through the Switch 2 edition of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom, which now runs incredibly smoothly. This time, perhaps, I’ll finish it.

Read on for the full list — we’ll be updating it as more games arrive.

— Mat Smith

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The news you might have missed

YouTuber recreates a floppy disk from scratch

Sony Bravia Theater Bar 6 review: Great sound, greater frustration

Here’s the absolutely massive Tamagotchi Paradise

Ford is developing a $30,000 mid-sized EV pickup

It’s part of the company’s new Universal EV Platform.

Ford has announced a new family of products will share its new Universal EV Platform will be shared by a new family of products, and the first of those will be a mid-sized pickup with a starting price of around $30,000. It could be similar in configuration to the Ford 2022 Maverick.

A unified EV platform is a pretty dry announcement, but Ford’s only two EVs are the F-150 Lightning and Mustang Mach-E, both of which use one-off platforms. With the Universal EV Platform, Ford will be able to build multiple vehicles, including vans, cars and pickups, which should be easier to build and, crucially, cheaper.

Continue reading.

AOL’s dial-up internet still exists (for one more month)

Might be time to upgrade.

AOL

Did you know AOL is part of the company that owns Engadget?. Yeah, it’s… intriguing. AOL, a company that brought the internet to millions (including my family), says it will discontinue its dial-up service on September 30, marking the end of an era. First spotted by PC Gamer, the surprising AOL announcement was in a post buried oin its AOL Help page.

Continue reading.

Paramount knocks out PPV UFC fights for $7.7 billion

Now it’ll stream them.

Paramount just acquired the US rights to UFC for seven years in a deal worth $7.7 billion. The deal covers the organization’s full slate of 13 marquee bouts and 30 Fight Night events, starting in 2026. Notably, this means the end of the pay-per-view (PPV) model ESPN+ has favored for premium UFC events. If you think that’s a crazy amount of money, how about this: Skydance Media officially acquired all of Paramount and its subsidiaries for $8 billion.

Continue reading.

DJI puts its drones’ obstacle detection tech into robot vacuums

Its ROMO cleaners are launching in China first.

DJI

DJI entered the smart home world with a range of robot vacuums called ROMO. After drones, gimbals and action cameras, it had to be vacuum cleaners, right? The same system that helps DJI drones avoid crashes when recording video apparently translates into a robot vacuum that can navigate a home without running into furniture. DJI is offering the ROMO in three models: the entry-level ROMO S, which starts at around $650;, the mid-range ROMO A, with a transparent vacuum design that goes for around $750,; and the top-of-the-line ROMO P, which has both a transparent vacuum and a base station for at least $950.

Continue reading.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/general/the-morning-after-engadget-newsletter-111555898.html?src=rss 

Intel’s CEO has successfully wooed President Trump

It sounds like President Trump no longer thinks Intel’s CEO should resign. Trump has revealed on Truth Social that he met with Lip-Bu Tan, Howard Lutnick, the Secretary of Commerce, and Howard Lutnick, the Secretary of the Treasury. He didn’t discuss the details of their meeting, but he described it as “a very interesting one.” Trump added: “His success and rise is an amazing story.” If you’ll recall, Trump alleged that Tan was “highly conflicted” due to his investments in hundreds of Chinese firms and should resign. Reuters had previously reported that some of those companies had links to the Chinese military. “Mr. Tan and my Cabinet members are going to spend time together, and bring suggestions to me during the next week,” Trump said in his post.

According to a report by the Financial Times, Tan wrote a letter to Intel employees about the issue, telling that there had been a lot of misinformation about the roles he’d held. “I wanted to be absolutely clear… I have always operated within the highest legal and ethical standards,” he reportedly wrote in the letter. He also said that Intel was communicating with the White House “to address the matters that have been raised and ensure they have the facts.”

Trump’s call for Tan to resign reportedly came about due a letter from Tom Cotton, the Republican head of the Senate Intelligence Committee, to the Intel CEO. Cotton apparently expressed concerns aout the “security and integrity of Intel’s operations” due to Tan’s ties with China. Tan was named the CEO of Intel in March, taking over a company that was losing money due to its foundry business being unable to secure big customers and lagging behind rivals like Taiwan Semiconductor. Since taking over, Tan has enforced several cost-cutting measures, including cutting jobs with the goal of reducing its workforce by 22 percent by the end of the year. He also recently told investors that Intel could abandon the development of its next-gen manufacturing technology if it fails to secure a large client. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/intels-ceo-has-successfully-wooed-president-trump-035339132.html?src=rss 

Claude can now reference past chats, if you want it to

Claude is getting a better, if selective, memory. Rather than acting as perfect catalog of everything you’ve talked about or shared, Anthropic says the AI chatbot now has the ability to reference past chats when asked, so you don’t have to re-explain yourself.

The feature seems like it could help you pick up a work project after time away, or query Claude for the details of a past research session that you don’t quite remember. The key point is that Claude has to be prompted: It doesn’t call on past chats unless you specifically ask it to. Anthropic also says that Claude’s ability to reference chats is specific to the workspace and project you’re working in.

Anthropic’s implementation is much more limited in scope compared to how ChatGPT’s memory feature works. OpenAI updated ChatGPT in April to save all conversations you have with it, and rely on those records to personalize answers to any new question or prompt you send. The basic idea is that every conversation could improve the chatbot’s responses. Google lets Gemini similarly recall past conversations and has also tested using Google Search history to further personalize AI responses.

In contrast to both, Claude is really only performing a search of past conversations when asked, not referencing a profile of past chats. It’s more privacy-minded by default and you can disable Claude’s ability to do it at all via a settings toggle. 

If you’re subscribed to the Max, Team or Enterprise plans, Claude’s new ability should be rolling out now, according to Anthropic. The company says the feature will expand to other plans soon.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/claude-can-now-reference-past-chats-if-you-want-it-to-211806343.html?src=rss 

Trump delays China tariff increases by another 90 days

President Donald Trump has signed an executive order extending lower tariffs with China for another 90 days, CNBC reports. The new executive order was signed before the previous agreement was set to end on August 12 at midnight.

The extension will maintain the current 30 percent tariff on goods from China while representatives from both countries negotiate a new trade deal. The previous agreement lowered US tariffs down from 145 percent to 30 percent, and Chinese tariffs down from 145 percent to 10 percent.

At the time, it was unclear how the move would impact the price of electronics manufactured in China, but for at least some companies, it’s still led to higher costs. While the price of the Switch 2 is remaining the same, Nintendo announced at the beginning of August that the price of the Switch 1 would increase by $40 or more. Sonos has said that some of its products would increase in price, but hasn’t shared details. Both DJI and Microsoft announced price hikes on some of their products back in May, too.

For companies manufacturing products abroad, the sudden swerves in Trump administration trade policy seem almost as difficult to deal with as the tariffs themselves. That erratic protectionism is reshaping global trade, and it’s also won concessions from companies trying to do business as normal. Apple committed to spending an extra $100 billion on US manufacturing last week to avoid being subjected to tariffs. And early today, both AMD and NVIDIA reportedly agreed to pay the US 15 percent of their profits to be allowed to sell GPUs in China.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/trump-delays-china-tariff-increases-by-another-90-days-201443024.html?src=rss 

AI summaries can downplay medical issues for female patients, UK research finds

The latest example of bias permeating artificial intelligence comes from the medical field. A new study surveyed real case notes from 617 adult social care workers in the UK and found that when large language models summarized the notes, they were more likely to omit language such as “disabled,” “unable” or “complex” when the patient was tagged as female, which could lead to women receiving insufficient or inaccurate medical care.

Research led by the London School of Economics and Political Science ran the same case notes through two LLMs — Meta’s Llama 3 and Google’s Gemma — and swapped the patient’s gender, and the AI tools often provided two very different patient snapshots. While Llama 3 showed no gender-based differences across the surveyed metrics, Gemma had significant examples of this bias. Google’s AI summaries produced disparities as drastic as “Mr Smith is an 84-year-old man who lives alone and has a complex medical history, no care package and poor mobility” for a male patient, while the same case notes with credited to a female patient provided: “Mrs Smith is an 84-year-old living alone. Despite her limitations, she is independent and able to maintain her personal care.” 

Recent research has uncovered biases against women in the medical sector, both in clinical research and in patient diagnosis. The stats also trend worse for racial and ethnic minorities and for the LGBTQ community. It’s the latest stark reminder that LLMs are only as good as the information they are trained on and the people deciding how they are trained. The particularly concerning takeaway from this research was that UK authorities have been using LLMs in care practices, but without always detailing which models are being introduced or in what capacity.

“We know these models are being used very widely and what’s concerning is that we found very meaningful differences between measures of bias in different models,” lead author Dr. Sam Rickman said, noting that the Google model was particularly likely to dismiss mental and physical health issues for women. “Because the amount of care you get is determined on the basis of perceived need, this could result in women receiving less care if biased models are used in practice. But we don’t actually know which models are being used at the moment.”

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/ai-summaries-can-downplay-medical-issues-for-female-patients-uk-research-finds-202943611.html?src=rss 

Revel is ending its ridesharing operation to focus on EV charging

Revel Transit is shutting down its rideshare operation in NYC, as reported by Bloomberg. The company will instead focus its efforts on EV charging. It’s also seeking buyers for its fleet, including the 165 for-hire vehicle license plates it owns.

“At the end of the day, rideshare is a very competitive market and asset-heavy. It’s low margin,” CEO Frank Reig said. “We have made the difficult decision that the best way we can keep the EV transition moving forward is by ending our rideshare service and focusing on building the fast-charging infrastructure our biggest cities need to keep going electric.”

Revel closing its rideshare business in NYC.
–it was great alternative to Uber focused on EVs. mostly tesla 3&Ys.
–paid salaries to their drivers. pic.twitter.com/MHsUuL0P3h

— Steven Spencer (@sspencer_smb) August 11, 2025

The company was the first in NYC to operate an all-electric ridehailing fleet, launching with just 50 vehicles but eventually growing to 500 vehicles. However, that’s a drip in the bucket compared to rivals like Uber and Lyft. Revel averages about 100,000 rides per month, but Uber and Lyft complete more than 20 million trips each month.

Revel did find success with its EV chargers, after unveiling the platform back in 2021. It operates more than 100 chargers across five stations in NYC, along with a dozen or so more chargers in San Francisco. These stations are primarily used by Uber and Lyft drivers. It hopes to have 400 charging stalls by the end of next year and 2,000 by 2030 in markets like NYC, Los Angeles and San Francisco. 

“Uber and Lyft are electrifying fast and they’re providing a ton of utilization for our chargers on a much larger scale than even two or three years ago,” Reig said.

This is just the latest pivot by Revel. The company once operated a moped rental service, but that was shuttered last year. It also laid off drivers to transition to a contractor-based model like Uber and Lyft.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/transportation/evs/revel-is-ending-its-ridesharing-operation-to-focus-on-ev-charging-181814989.html?src=rss 

YouTuber recreates a floppy disk from scratch

There’s nothing quite like the drive to build something just to see if you can. YouTuber polymatt set out to create a floppy disk drive, the favored storage medium of yesteryear, from scratch, because why not. For anyone born too late to have regularly used one, a floppy disk is a magnetically coated, flexible polyester disk encased in a protective shell. Insert it into a floppy drive, and a magnetic head reads or writes data on the disk. If you’ve ever wondered why the “save” icon looks the way it does, it’s based on the shape of a floppy disk.

To start, polymatt measured and recreated the disk enclosure and other pieces in Shapr3D and MakeraCAM, then cut the aluminum pieces on a Carvera Air CNC machine. The magnetic disk itself was made by laser-cutting a piece of PET film and coating it with a suspension of iron oxide powder. After assembling all the components and a few touch-and-go moments, he was actually able to magnetize the floppy disk and write to it, albeit at a very basic level.

We declared the floppy disk dead in 2010, and in the years since then even those that clung on the longest have abandoned it. The Japanese government finally said goodbye to the floppy disk in 2024, and the German Navy moved on from the format in the same year. The US government only just stopped using 8-inch floppy disks to coordinate the launch of nukes in 2019.

Polymatt’s project was a wonderful dive into nostalgic tech and engineering prowess. Maybe next time he can make a compact disc from scratch.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/youtube/youtuber-recreates-a-floppy-disk-from-scratch-183045582.html?src=rss 

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