BAFTA Nominations 2026: List of All the Nominees in Film

‘One Battle After Another,’ ‘Hamnet’ and ‘Sinners’ dominated the British Academy Film Awards nominations. See the full list of nominees right here.

‘One Battle After Another,’ ‘Hamnet’ and ‘Sinners’ dominated the British Academy Film Awards nominations. See the full list of nominees right here. 

The Morning After: Apple’s new louder, high-precision AirTag

Between the new Macs, iPhones and rumored AI gadgets, Apple surprised us with an upgraded, second-generation AirTag. It has Apple’s latest Ultra Wideband chip — the same one used in the iPhone 17 lineup and the Apple Watch Ultra 3. It also uses Precision Finding to reach items up to 50 percent further away than the previous AirTag model. This feature will now work with any Apple Watch Series 9, Ultra 2 or newer.

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Apple

Apple says the new tag is 50 percent louder and features a “distinctive new chime.” So you can show off that you’ve got the new kind of AirTag. Sadly, there’s still no keyring hole, so you might want to invest in a holder… with a keyring. There are cheaper options than Apple’s leather version, fortunately. I personally like Elevation Lab’s AirTag Wallet Holder.

— Mat Smith

The biggest tech stories.

Watch the new trailer for The Super Mario Galaxy Movie, now with Yoshi

The best winter tech to help get you through the coldest months 

People are uninstalling TikTok and downloading an indie competitor

Resident Evil Requiem gives series fans the best of both action and survival horror

With its two protagonists, the game alternates between gory action and tension.

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Capcom

Capcom is attempting a delicate balancing act with Resident Evil Requiem. The ninth mainline entry seems to split between the gory action of Resident Evil 4 and the claustrophobic dread of Resident Evil 7. After a four-hour hands-on, the distinction is clear: Leon Kennedy handles the heavy lifting with (mostly) violence, while newcomer Grace navigates a high-stakes game of cat-and-mouse in a hospital filled with zombies and other monstrosities.

Requiem introduces “nuanced” zombies who retain fragments of their past lives — think blind patients or territorial chefs you can distract. 

Continue reading.

A TikTok US power outage caused a ‘cascading systems failure’

There were a lot of bugs.

TikTok says it’s still working to fix the “multiple bugs” in its US service following a power outage at one of its data centers. Users are having issues logging in and uploading videos and are seeing strange behavior from the “for you” algorithm. Some creators have also noticed that new uploads seem to be getting no views or likes.

The company released a statement yesterday saying a power outage had caused a “cascading systems failure” that is still affecting the app. The statement, however, didn’t address reported issues with the app’s recommendation algorithm. Since Sunday, users have reported seeing a wave of generic videos flood their feeds, which are usually hyper-personalized to the user.

Continue reading.

Apple may have its Gemini-powered Siri ready by February

It will reportedly show off the revamped Siri in ‘the second half of February.’

According to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman, Apple plans to reveal its new Siri in “the second half of February,” demonstrating some new Gemini-powered capabilities — whatever they may be. 

After this, Gurman said the new Siri will be available in iOS 26.4, which is also slated to enter beta testing in February before its public release in March or early April. It’s been a long time coming; Apple teased its next-gen Siri back at WWDC 2024, but it’s still not made it to devices.

Continue reading.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/general/the-morning-after-apples-new-louder-high-precision-airtag-120500942.html?src=rss 

People are uninstalling TikTok and downloading an indie competitor

TikTok’s newly formed US entity is off to a very bumpy start. As the app continues to face technical issues affecting the recommendation algorithm, view counts and other features, TikTok is also seeing a wave of frustrated users uninstalling it, according to new data.

Analytics firm Sensor Tower, which tracks downloads and other app store-related metrics, told CNBC that there has been a 150 percent rise in uninstalls of the TikTok app in the United States compared with the last three months. TikTok has blamed a power outage at a data center for causing issues, but hasn’t said when users can expect a fix or explained how a power outage could be responsible for nuking users’ video views or drastically changing their recommendation algorithm. 

At the same time, an independent app called UpScrolled has seen a surge in interest over the last few days. The app is currently the ninth most-downloaded app in the US App Store and the second most popular social app (Meta’s Threads is currently in the number one spot for social apps). The app has also reached the top five in the UK and Australian app stores. In the United States, its sudden popularity seems to be closely tied to recent changes at TikTok. 

UpScrolled has seen 41,000 total downloads between Thursday (the day the US joint venture was formalized) and Saturday, according to estimates from App Figures. The app, which was first released last June, has been downloaded about 140,000 times between Apple and Google’s app stores, according to App Figures. Prior to last Thursday, the app was averaging less than 500 downloads a day, according to the company. The rapid increase in downloads has apparently caused some issues for the company which asked users to “bear with us” on Monday.

Well, this is new…
You showed up so fast our servers tapped out. Frustrating? Yes. Emotional? Also yes.
We’re a tiny team building what Big Tech stopped being. Right now we’re scaling on caffeine to keep up with what YOU started.
Bear with us. We’re on it. pic.twitter.com/OAlYcN6t5q

— UpScrolled (@realUpScrolled) January 26, 2026

Created by an Australian developer, UpScrolled looks a bit like Instagram. Users can share photos and shortform videos. The app defaults to a chronological “following” feed, though it does also recommend content to users. The app is “privately funded by its founder, Issam Hijazi, together with a small group of individual investors who share our mission and values,” according to an FAQ on UpScrolled’s website. It currently has no ads, though the company says it “probably” will in the future. 

This isn’t the first time turmoil at TikTok has benefitted a previously little-known app. Chinese app RedNote briefly became the top app in the United States early last year as TikTok faced a potential ban. RedNote’s popularity proved to be short-lived, though, as the 2025 TikTok “ban” ended up lasting only a couple of hours. 

But with new owners at TikTok and growing frustration over technical issues with the app, there could be an opportunity for a new shortform video service that’s not controlled by a huge corporation. And that’s what UpScrolled seems to be betting on. “Too often, users are left uncertain about whether their voices will be heard or quietly suppressed,” the company writes on its website. “UpScrolled changes that by ensuring every post has a fair chance to be seen, creating an environment that is authentic, unfiltered, and equitable for all.”

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/people-are-uninstalling-tiktok-and-downloading-an-indie-competitor-233345222.html?src=rss 

Google agrees to $68 million settlement in voice assistant privacy lawsuit

Google has agreed to a $68 million settlement regarding claims that its voice assistant inappropriately spied on smartphone users. Plaintiffs claimed that the company’s Google Assistant platform began listening to them after it misheard conversations that sounded like its wake words. The suit argued that private information that Google Assistant shouldn’t have heard was then used to deliver those individuals targeted ads. 

Reuters reported that Google denied wrongdoing in the suit, but according to court papers, the company agreed to a settlement in order to avoid the risk and costs of litigating the issue. The preliminary class action settlement was filed on Friday and now awaits approval from U.S. District Judge Beth Labson Freeman.

Google has been transitioning away from the Google Assistant platform in the past year, replacing it with its Gemini tool. Not that AI chatbots should be trusted as paragons of privacy either.

Apple faced a very similar allegations around its Siri voice assistant in 2019; that class-action suit ended in a $95 million settlement in January 2025. Not sure if a reward of $20 per device feels sufficient when these companies are accidentally overhearing deeply personal conversations and details, but that’s how the justice system shakes out some times.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/google-agrees-to-68-million-settlement-in-voice-assistant-privacy-lawsuit-222405727.html?src=rss 

Google aims to take the sting out of scheduling meetings with a new Gemini feature

Google is rolling out a Gemini feature that could turn out to be pretty useful for many folks. It’s a Google Calendar tool that can help figure out the best time to schedule a meeting, taking into account attendees’ schedules. When creating a meeting, you can click the “Suggested times” option and Gemini will look at the availability that people have marked on their calendar and potential conflicts. You’ll then be able to choose from a list of suggested time slots.

But the time you pick may not work for everyone. So if multiple people decline the meeting invite, you can reschedule by going to the event. You’ll see a time when everyone is available and you can quickly update the invite.

There are a few catches here. Naturally, this will only work properly when meeting organizers have access to attendees’ calendars. It’s also limited to paid users who are on Google Workspace Business (Standard and Plus) and Enterprise (Standard and Plus) plans, as well as those with the Google AI Pro for Education add-on. The feature is available now on Rapid Release domains and it’ll start rolling out to Scheduled Release domains on February 2.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/google-aims-to-take-the-sting-out-of-scheduling-meetings-with-a-new-gemini-feature-204853761.html?src=rss 

Ubisoft proposes even more layoffs after last week’s studio closures and game cancellations

It looks like Ubisoft is planning even more layoffs to accompany last week’s studio closures and game cancellations, according to reporting by IGN. The company is planning a massive reduction of the workforce in its Paris headquarters. It has proposed the loss of up to 200 jobs, which is nearly 20 percent of the current staff.

This will be organized under France’s Rupture Conventionnelle Collective (RCC) process, in which staff can agree to form a collective, voluntary mutual termination agreement. It’s not a done deal just yet, with a company spokesperson saying “at this stage, this remains a proposal and no decision will be final until a collective agreement is reached.”

The RCC process is voluntary, which is good for Ubisoft Paris employees, but the company hasn’t made any statement regarding what it would do if it doesn’t get 200 willing participants. The company recently introduced a mandate for employees to return to the office for five days each week, which could entice staffers with one foot out the door.

This is just the latest cost-cutting measure by Ubisoft, as the company has been experiencing difficulties for months. It shut down its Halifax studio just 16 days after employees entered into a unionization agreement. Last week, it shuttered its Stockholm studio and announced various restructuring efforts at several other developers under its umbrella.

It also announced the cancellation of six games, including the long-awaited Prince of Persia: Sands of Time remake. It didn’t reveal the other five games that were scrapped. Ubisoft did announce, however, that seven additional games were being delayed. Inexplicably, Beyond Good and Evil 2 wasn’t cancelled, so we have that to (one day) look forward to.

Ubisoft’s stock has absolutely plunged in the past several years. The company was riding high at $20 per share in 2021, but now the stock rests at around $1 per share.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/ubisoft-proposes-even-more-layoffs-after-last-weeks-studio-closures-and-game-cancellations-192703241.html?src=rss 

Winter Olympics: How to watch, schedule of events, and everything else you need to know about the 2026 Milano Cortina games

The Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics are coming up. (Mattia Ozbot/Getty Images)

Mattia Ozbot via Getty Images

The 2026 Winter Olympics are taking place in Italy this year, with all the action taking place in Milan and the Alpine city of Cortina. This year marks the fourth time Italy has hosted the Winter Games; most recently, Turin hosted in 2006. Of the 16 sports that will be featured at the Winter Olympics, there will be 15 returning favorites, including figure skating, Alpine skiing, curling, ice hockey, speedskating, snowboarding, freestyle skiing and ski jumping, and one entirely new sport, snow mountaineering. (Will it be as big a hit as the 2024 Summer Games’ new addition, breaking? It remains to be seen.)

Live coverage of every event at the Olympic Winter Games Milano Cortina 2026 will be available to stream on Peacock — though thanks to the time difference between Italy and the U.S., to watch many of the events live, you’ll have to wake up (or stay up) until 2AM or 3AM ET. Primetime replays and select live coverage will air on NBC. The games officially kick off with the opening ceremony on Feb. 6, 2026.

Here’s what else you need to know about watching the 2026 Winter Olympics.

How to watch the 2026 Winter Olympics

Dates: Feb. 6 – Feb. 22

TV channel: NBC

Streaming: Peacock

When are the 2026 Winter Olympics?

The Winter Olympics officially begin with the opening ceremony on Feb. 6, although some events will start as early as Feb. 4). The Milano Cortina 2026 games will run through Feb. 22. The closing ceremony of the 2026 Winter Olympics will take place in the Arena di Verona on Feb. 22.

Where are the Winter Olympics this year?

The 2026 Winter Olympics will be held in Northern Italy, primarily in Milan and also the Alpine mountain resort town of Cortina d’Ampezzo, where events like bobsled, skeleton, alpine skiing, curling, para snowboard, and more will take place.

What channel are the Olympics on?

The 2026 Winter Olympics will air on NBC and stream live on Peacock.

How to watch the 2026 Winter Olympics without cable

When is the Winter Olympics opening ceremony?

The Milano Cortina 2026 opening ceremony will be held on Feb. 6, 2026. Due to the time difference, the ceremony will kick off around 2PM ET/11AM PT.

Winter Olympics time difference

This year’s Olympic Games are in Italy, which is 6 hours ahead of U.S. Eastern Time. Meaning that some events will start bright and early for U.S. viewers, and live coverage will likely wrap up around 4PM ET each day. NBC will have primetime replays of the biggest moments each night.

2026 Winter Olympics TV/streaming schedule:

All times Eastern.

Wednesday, Feb. 4 (early competition starts)

Curling (round robin) – 2AM (Peacock – Live)

Curling (round robin) – 8AM (Peacock – Live)

Alpine skiing training – 3–6AM (Peacock – Live)

Thursday, Feb. 5

Curling (round robin) – 2AM (Peacock – Live)

Curling (round robin) – 8AM (Peacock – Live)

Freestyle skiing qualifications – 4AM (Peacock – Live)

Snowboard qualifications – 6AM (Peacock – Live)

Friday, Feb. 6 – opening ceremony

Curling (round robin) – 2AM (Peacock – Live)

Figure skating (team event short programs) – 6AM (Peacock – Live)

Snowboard slopestyle qualifications – 6AM (Peacock – Live)

Speedskating (early distances) – 8AM (Peacock – Live)

opening ceremony – 2PM (Peacock – Live)

opening ceremony – 8PM (NBC – Primetime)

Saturday, Feb. 7

Alpine skiing (men’s downhill) – 3AM (Peacock – Live)

Snowboard slopestyle finals – 6AM (Peacock – Live)

Speedskating medals – 7AM (Peacock – Live)

Figure skating (team free programs) – 8AM (Peacock – Live)

Hockey (group play begins) – 10AM (Peacock – Live)

Sunday, Feb. 8

Alpine skiing (women’s downhill) – 3AM (Peacock – Live)

Freestyle skiing moguls finals – 6AM (Peacock – Live)

Figure skating (pairs short program) – 8AM (Peacock – Live)

Luge (singles runs) – 9AM (Peacock – Live)

Hockey (group play) – 12PM (Peacock – Live)

Monday, Feb. 9

Biathlon sprint – 5AM (Peacock – Live)

Speedskating medals – 7AM (Peacock – Live)

Figure skating (pairs free skate – medals) – 8AM (Peacock – Live)

Curling (round robin) – 9AM (Peacock – Live)

Skeleton (heat 1–2) – 11AM (Peacock – Live)

Tuesday, Feb. 10

Alpine skiing (giant slalom) – 4AM (Peacock – Live)

Snowboard halfpipe qualifications – 6AM (Peacock – Live)

Figure skating (men’s short program) – 8AM (Peacock – Live)

Curling (round robin) – 10AM (Peacock – Live)

Wednesday, Feb. 11

Nordic combined – 4AM (Peacock – Live)

Freestyle skiing aerials finals – 6AM (Peacock – Live)

Figure skating (men’s free skate – medals) – 8AM (Peacock – Live)

Speedskating medals – 11AM (Peacock – Live)

Thursday, Feb. 12

Alpine skiing (slalom) – 4AM (Peacock – Live)

Snowboard halfpipe finals – 6AM (Peacock – Live)

Figure skating (ice dance rhythm dance) – 8AM (Peacock – Live)

Curling (medal round qualifiers) – 10AM (Peacock – Live)

Friday, Feb. 13

Biathlon pursuit – 5AM (Peacock – Live)

Figure skating (ice dance free dance – medals) – 8AM (Peacock – Live)

Skeleton finals – 10AM (Peacock – Live)

Hockey (quarterfinals) – 12PM (Peacock – Live)

Saturday, Feb. 14

Alpine skiing (team combined) – 4AM (Peacock – Live)

Cross-country skiing distance race – 6AM (Peacock – Live)

Figure skating (women’s short program) – 8AM (Peacock – Live)

Speedskating medals – 11AM (Peacock – Live)

Sunday, Feb. 15

Snowboard cross finals – 6AM (Peacock – Live)

Figure skating (women’s free skate – medals) – 8AM (Peacock – Live)

Luge relay – 11AM (Peacock – Live)

Hockey (semifinals) – 1PM (Peacock – Live)

Monday, Feb. 16

Freestyle skiing dual moguls – 6AM (Peacock – Live)

Cross-country skiing team sprint – 8AM (Peacock – Live)

Curling (medal games) – 10AM (Peacock – Live)

Tuesday, Feb. 17

Biathlon relay – 5AM (Peacock – Live)

Speedskating team pursuit – 7AM (Peacock – Live)

Hockey (placement games) – 12PM (Peacock – Live)

Wednesday, Feb. 18

Alpine skiing (final technical events) – 4AM (Peacock – Live)

Freestyle skiing big air – 6AM (Peacock – Live)

Curling (gold medal match) – 9AM (Peacock – Live)

Thursday, Feb. 19

Cross-country skiing marathon – 6AM (Peacock – Live)

Snowboard parallel events – 8AM (Peacock – Live)

Hockey (bronze medal games) – 1PM (Peacock – Live)

Friday, Feb. 20

Biathlon mass start – 6AM (Peacock – Live)

Speedskating final medals – 8AM (Peacock – Live)

Figure skating gala – 1PM (Peacock – Live)

Saturday, Feb. 21

Men’s hockey gold medal game – 12PM (Peacock – Live)

Women’s hockey gold medal game – 3PM (Peacock – Live)

Men’s hockey gold medal game – 8PM (NBC – Primetime)

Sunday, Feb. 22 – closing ceremony

Cross-country skiing final event – 6AM (Peacock – Live)

closing ceremony – 2PM (Peacock – Live)

closing ceremony – 8PM (NBC – Primetime)

More ways to watch the 2026 Winter Olympics on NBC

While Peacock is the best way to watch the Winter Olympics, there are other options if you restrict yourself to the NBC broadcasts. As our guide to the best live TV streaming services to cut cable notes, both YouTube TV and Hulu + Live TV are excellent options, but you’ll want to skip Fubo until and unless the service resolves its contract dispute with Comcast, as NBC channels remain unavailable for now.  

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/winter-olympics-how-to-watch-schedule-of-events-and-everything-else-you-need-to-know-about-the-2026-milano-cortina-games-172409424.html?src=rss 

TikTok says a power outage is causing issues with the app in the US

If your TikTok feed has felt a little off lately, it’s not just you. TikTok says it’s working to fix its service in the US following a power outage at one of its data centers that’s caused widespread issues in the app. TikTok users have reported problems logging in and uploading videos, as well as with the app’s “for you” algorithm.

“Since yesterday we’ve been working to restore our services following a power outage at a U.S. data center impacting TikTok and other apps we operate,” the company wrote in a statement Monday. “We’re working with our data center partner to stabilize our service. We’re sorry for this disruption and hope to resolve it soon.”

Since yesterday we’ve been working to restore our services following a power outage at a U.S. data center impacting TikTok and other apps we operate. We’re working with our data center partner to stabilize our service. We’re sorry for this disruption and hope to resolve it soon.

— TikTok USDS Joint Venture (@tiktokusdsjv) January 26, 2026

The issues come just days after TikTok finalized a deal to spin off its US business into a separate entity largely controlled by US investors. That timing hasn’t gone unnoticed by users, many of whom are already suspicious of the company pushing a terms of service and privacy policy in the hours after the deal was finalized. 

The problems affecting the app’s recommendation algorithm have also raised questions about TikTok USDS Joint Venture’s plans to “retrain” TikTok’s central feature. Since Sunday, users have reported seeing a wave of generic videos flood their feeds, which are typically hyper-personalized. Other users have reported seeing the same few videos repeated over and over again. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/tiktok-says-a-power-outage-is-causing-issues-with-the-app-in-the-us-173426617.html?src=rss 

Ball x Pit’s first update brings an endless mode and much more to the chaos

It’s time to jump back into the pit. Ball x Pit is one of the very best games of 2025 and there’s now even more to play around with in the brick-busting roguelite. The first major free update for the game (one of three that’s on the cards this year) just arrived on all platforms. It added a bunch more stuff to the mix, including two new characters, eight extra special balls with powerful abilities and an endless mode.

Developer Kenny Sun wrote on the PlayStation Blog that because fans demanded it so much, endless mode jumped right to the top of the to-do list. After you beat a level’s boss, you can keep going as long as you can stay alive and really put your builds to the test.

The Regal Update brought two more playable hunters to the mix as well. Opt to use The Falconer, and you’ll fire balls from two birds, one at each side of the screen. When balls return to The Carouser, they orbit around him to deal extra damage. Sun added that this character “twists ball trajectories with a personal gravity field that pulls shots off their usual paths.”

Then there are the new balls. The Stone Ball is powerful, but disintegrates as it bounces. Two of the latest balls deal spins on fire damage and the Fireworks Ball seems like it’ll add even more chaotic visual flair. The update added a trio of passives too. I enjoy creating builds around baby balls (a secondary type of ball that doesn’t have a special ability), so I’m eager to try out Iron Onesie. This passive scales up the damage of special balls depending on how many baby balls are in play.

Finally, the update introduced support for more languages. You can play Ball x Pit in Spanish (Latin America), Polish, Italian, Thai, Turkish and Ukrainian.

In anticipation of the update, I jumped back into Ball x Pit over the weekend for a quick refresher. Before I knew it, four hours had gone by. This game is once again going to be an existential threat to my time.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/ball-x-pits-first-update-brings-an-endless-mode-and-much-more-to-the-chaos-174306548.html?src=rss 

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