Beyond the Glitz: How Personal Injury Lawyers Handle Celebrity Mishaps and Failed Stunts

Celebrity life often looks glamorous, but behind the red carpets and headlines, accidents, PR mishaps, and even paparazzi chases can leave lasting injuries and emotional scars. What the public rarely sees is the legal battle that follows—where accountability and justice must be fought for against powerful studios, agencies, and insurers. In such cases, working with…

Celebrity life often looks glamorous, but behind the red carpets and headlines, accidents, PR mishaps, and even paparazzi chases can leave lasting injuries and emotional scars. What the public rarely sees is the legal battle that follows—where accountability and justice must be fought for against powerful studios, agencies, and insurers. In such cases, working with… 

Celebrity Reactions to Charlie Kirk’s Death: Read Statements From Chris Pratt, Jimmy Kimmel & More

Kirk was fatally shot while speaking to a crowd at Utah Valley University, and numerous celebrities from various political beliefs shared their condolences for his family.

Kirk was fatally shot while speaking to a crowd at Utah Valley University, and numerous celebrities from various political beliefs shared their condolences for his family. 

Live Translation with AirPods won’t come to EU-based Apple users

Europe, the bloc with 24 official languages and 287 spoken in total, won’t get Apple’s Live Translation with AirPods feature for now. “Live Translation with AirPods is not available if you are in the EU and your Apple Account Country or Region is also in the EU,” the company said on its iOS feature availability page. No reason was given, but it may have to do with the EU’s strict rules around artificial intelligence and how it impacts privacy.

If that’s the case, Apple may be waiting for the EU to approve or examine the feature before implementing it in the region. The AI Act is most strictly applied to “high-risk use cases” involving the potential for discrimination or violation of users’ privacy. To that end, the EU may want to ensure that date stored when using the app is kept securely and locally in the bloc.

Apple’s phrasing about availability seems to indicate that it will work for North American and other users visiting the bloc and possibly vice-versa. Only users with an Apple Europe account who are also in Europe won’t be able to access the feature.

Live Translation lets users with AirPods communicate naturally with speakers of other languages. If the other party also has AirPods, the conversation is translated and heard by both people. If you’re speaking with someone without AirPods, speech is translated onto your phone where it can be either be read or heard by the other party. 

Live Translation was first introduced at WWDC as part of iOS 26 and unveiled as a key feature for the AirPods Pro 3 during Apple’s “Awe Dropping” event on Tuesday. It will work on iPhone 15 and later devices running Apple Intelligence, and be available with the AirPods Pro 3, AirPods Pro 2 and AirPods 4 once iOS 26 arrives on September 15.

Right now, Live Translation supports real-time translation between English, French, German, Portuguese (Brazil), and Spanish. However, Apple plans to add Italian, Japanese, Korean, and Chinese (simplified) support later in 2025.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/mobile/live-translation-with-airpods-wont-come-to-eu-based-apple-users-125410519.html?src=rss 

Amazon is reportedly developing separate AR glasses for customers and its drivers

Amazon may be muscling into the field of augmented reality glasses. According to a report by The Information, sources claimed that the company is working on AR glasses for consumers, allegedly with plans to release the product in late 2026 or early 2027.

Insiders told the publication that the project, internally dubbed Jayhawk, would equip AR glasses with microphones, speakers, a camera and a full-color display in one eye. Amazon is reportedly using Chinese company Meta-Bounds for the AR tech.

Amazon is also working on a separate model of AR glasses specifically for its delivery drivers under the codename Amelia. This productivity-focused option, which would reportedly shave seconds off drivers’ times, could be ready by the second quarter of 2026, according to The Information‘s sources.

If Amazon does release these AR sets, it will primarily be in competition with Meta, which already sells simpler smart glasses with Ray-Ban. The social media company is expected to launch a new product currently dubbed Hypernova at its Connect conference next week, a set that pushes more into a true augmented reality experience with a similar one-eye AR concept.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ar-vr/amazon-is-reportedly-developing-separate-ar-glasses-for-customers-and-its-drivers-230826640.html?src=rss 

HBO Max is going to get a lot more expensive, CEO promises

David Zaslav, the CEO of Warner Bros. Discovery, plans to make HBO more expensive, and passwords a lot harder to share, according to The Hollywood Reporter. Zaslav shared his general outlook on the state of television at the Goldman Sachs Communacopia + Technology Conference, with the main theme being that HBO Max’s content is good and Zaslav thinks he should be charging a lot more for it.

“The fact that this is quality — and that’s true across our company, motion picture, TV production and streaming quality — we all think that gives us a chance to raise prices,” Zaslav said. “We think we’re way underpriced.” HBO Max most recently raised prices in 2024, back when it was temporarily called Max. As of right now you can get an entry-level Basic with Ads plan for $9.99 per month, while the ad-free Premium plan costs $20.99 per month. Zaslav clearly thinks he can get more, though.

Warner Bros. Discovery has been more open about its plans to address password-sharing. During an earnings call in August, the company said it wanted to close all loopholes for sharing passwords by the end of the year. While it’s great that people continue to be drawn to HBO content, “it’s all tricky with the password sharing,” Zaslav said. “We’re going to begin to push on that.”

Price hikes and password sharing crackdowns have been thoroughly normalized by Netflix and other streamers. HBO Max following suit should be more than expected. Stating those plans so plainly doesn’t improve the image of Zaslav as a Hollywood villain, but that’s the least of his worries given the planned break-up of Warner Bros. Discovery.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/streaming/hbo-max-is-going-to-get-a-lot-more-expensive-ceo-promises-221656560.html?src=rss 

As Apple pursues AI, spare a thought for the poor HomePod

When the video kicking off Apple’s “Awe dropping” event began yesterday, I was pleased to see a HomePod in the opening shot. I hadn’t given any thought to Apple’s beleaguered smart home speaker in ages, so I was all set for Tim Cook and crew to deliver an actual surprise and reveal new stuff for HomePod. When the entire presentation then passed without another peep about the product, I was disappointed, but resigned.

HomePod has always been behind the curve. When smart speakers first came on the scene, the sector was quickly dominated by Amazon and Google, with Sonos as the boutique third-party option. Apple announced the HomePod in June 2017, almost three years after Amazon unveiled its original Echo speaker. 

The HomePod arrived too slow and cost too much, and (in an echo of the company’s current woes) Siri was too unhelpful, for the smart speaker to really claw back much market share from its rivals. The Mini iteration came out in late 2020, and the second-generation HomePod in February 2023 added support for Thread smart home standard. Not exactly pushing the boundaries of smart speaker innovation.

And things got worse for the poor HomePod as voice-controlled AI assistants have transitioned away from being centered around dedicated speakers. AI is now being integrated ever-more tightly into our smartphones and computers, with less need for a separate intermediary device. Which brings us to the ongoing issue of Apple’s shaky foothold in the AI race.

Apple has been promising a big overhaul to Siri for awhile, with the new and improved version currently not due until spring 2026. To show off that new AI assistant, Apple is reportedly working on an interactive smart home hub that is expected to have HomePod-like audio capabilities baked in, but won’t be ready for launch until at least 2027. What’s a company to do in the interim?

It makes sense for Apple to hold back on any big developments to its existing Siri-centric smart home speaker. I get it. But I could have been hyped to see a stripped down HomePod that focused more on being a speaker than on being smart. I have a Sonos that I love, and part of me assumed that I would eventually upgrade to an Apple offering. The AirPods are such a great element in the Apple ecosystem, and I use mine almost daily. Having a powerful, high-quality home speaker that delivers the easy interconnectivity that’s such a big part of Apple’s value proposition might have helped bridge the time gap, keeping Apple in people’s minds as a player in home tech while the company works on its next, more innovative move. Take one step back to take three steps forward.

In practice, though, it feels like the window for the HomePod to become a star in Apple’s lineup has shrunk to almost nothing. As I now look at the recent trends in AI and home tech, I don’t see an obvious space for a smart speaker. That’s not limited to Apple; it’s also pretty telling that both Amazon and Google haven’t been giving much love to their smart speakers either. In fact, a majority of Engadget’s favorite smart speakers this year are from specialist Sonos as the big tech names have put their focus on AI instead of audio. We’ll still have smart speakers, but they’ll be folded into multi-purpose gadgets and pitched as general smart-home aids. 

To be clear, there’s been no indication that Apple will sunset the HomePod. But my personal prediction is that HomePod will stay on the sidelines for now and get pushed even farther away from the spotlight when the new smart home products are unveiled, receiving only occasional attention until Apple officially and quietly pulls the plug for good. And so will end the life of a star-crossed product that never got the chance to shine at its full potential. Here’s hoping I’m wrong.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/home/smart-home/as-apple-pursues-ai-spare-a-thought-for-the-poor-homepod-223250670.html?src=rss 

Glow Like a Star: How Dr. Chobanian Helps Women Reclaim the Spotlight at Every Age

The Return of the Glow-Up From TikTok beauty filters to the rise of glow-up trends, this is an era of intentional transformation. More than ever, women aren’t trying to change who they are—they want their natural glow to match their energy, style, and evolving identity. Picture this: You’re scrolling through your social feed, seeing glow-ups…

The Return of the Glow-Up From TikTok beauty filters to the rise of glow-up trends, this is an era of intentional transformation. More than ever, women aren’t trying to change who they are—they want their natural glow to match their energy, style, and evolving identity. Picture this: You’re scrolling through your social feed, seeing glow-ups… 

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