news updates

AppWizard
December 2, 2025
Android 16 introduces a shift from annual feature releases to continuous updates. Key features include a "Notification organizer" that groups and silences low-priority notifications, and AI tools that summarize lengthy messages and chat threads. Themed icons can now be applied across all apps for a consistent look. The update also includes a centralized Family Link hub for managing screen time and app usage on children's devices. These changes are currently rolling out to eligible Pixel devices.
AppWizard
November 23, 2025
Silksong has been released by Team Cherry, meeting community expectations and establishing its own identity as both a sequel and a self-contained adventure. The developers have indicated a commitment to this duality in future projects within the Hollow Knight universe. Team Cherry's development approach is characterized by a relaxed and exploratory pace, leading fans to speculate about potential future titles. The excitement surrounding their innovative spirit suggests ongoing discussions about their projects will continue for years to come.
AppWizard
November 10, 2025
Android powers nearly 70% of the world's smartphones but lacks proper support for many essential web services and applications. A Google Finance app could provide real-time stock alerts and personalized widgets. CamelCamelCamel would improve price tracking for Amazon by allowing users to access price history directly through an app. Have I Been Pwned could enhance user security with push notifications for data breaches. Google Travel needs a unified app for trip planning and real-time notifications. AeroLOPA could offer detailed seat maps and offline access for travelers. Native applications on Android would provide essential features like push alerts and offline reliability, addressing the current gaps in user experience.
AppWizard
October 15, 2025
The Tropical Hurricane Tracker (THT) app provides near real-time updates on tropical storms and disturbances, utilizing data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the National Hurricane Center (NHC). It features a home page that displays active storms, NOAA advisories, and historical data, with detailed information available for each storm, including its Saffir-Simpson scale strength and wind speed. THT includes tabs for various ocean basins, allowing global storm tracking, and offers educational resources on storm preparedness and safety practices. The app also features a Buoy Data page for atmospheric data and a notification system for timely updates. THT is designed to complement standard weather apps, focusing on specialized information during hurricane season.
AppWizard
October 7, 2025
An undercover operation by the Boynton Beach Police Department resulted in the arrest of 48-year-old Jesse Jacobs, who was allegedly attempting to engage in inappropriate conduct with a minor. The operation involved a detective posing as a 15-year-old on the messaging app 'MeetMe', where Jacobs solicited sexual acts and requested explicit photographs while acknowledging the age of the individual. He suggested meeting at the Nova hotel but later indicated he would pick up the minor and take her to his home. Police arrested Jacobs at his residence, where he admitted to the exchanges but claimed he did not intend to follow through with the meeting. He was charged with soliciting a minor for sexual conduct and unlawful use of a two-way communications device.
AppWizard
August 26, 2025
The Maw has consumed another Monday, and a recent article about a "bank holiday" was a public relations strategy to prevent a stock market downturn. Mark has been on a theoretical holiday since last Wednesday but is actually marooned in the Cretaceous period. James is in a state of limbo, neither at Gamescom nor back at his desk. New PC game releases include: 1. NG Y' STOOD L' SAND OT GN'TH: A cosmic horror experience. 2. Pizza Bandit: A shooter combining culinary creativity with alien defense. 3. Watertight: A free horror adventure set in a troubled submarine exploring the Titanic wreck. 4. good: A minigame collection about a teenager avoiding education. 5. The Supper: New Blood: A point-and-click adventure with a dinner party theme. 6. Pixel Starships 2: An MMO for designing and managing spaceships. 7. Eyes Of Hellfire: A haunted house experience published by Blumhouse. 8. Neon Village: A hybrid game blending match-3, town-building, and roguelike elements. 9. Shinobi: Art Of Vengeance: A revival of a classic Sega side-scroller. The author plans to work on an interview-driven feature and a piece on liminality, while James is expected to handle impressions articles and interviews. Mark may return to regular updates and a review if he escapes his situation.
AppWizard
June 27, 2025
Rita El Khoury recommends several investment apps based on her extensive experience in finance: - Koyfin: Her favorite for comprehensive market data, including financial records and analyst projections. It is user-friendly and free, with a subscription for additional features. - Yahoo Finance: A widely used app known for its extensive financial data and robust news section, crucial for timely market reactions. It offers a free version and an ad-free premium plan. - TradingView: Best for technical analysis, featuring superior charting capabilities and a community for sharing insights. While Rita focuses on a buy-and-hold strategy, it is valuable for active traders. - Investing.com: Covers a wide range of assets and includes features like watchlists, fundamental data, and alert notifications. It offers a free version and a premium option. - MarketWatch: Provides timely news and analysis, particularly on earnings announcements. It combines news, financial data, and charting but is less robust than Koyfin. It is free, with a premium subscription for more articles. Rita has also tried other services like FinViz and TIKR but found them limited due to the lack of dedicated mobile apps.
AppWizard
June 17, 2025
Messaging app WhatsApp has introduced advertisements for the first time, changing its previous ad-free policy. Ads will initially appear only in the Updates tab, specifically in the Status section, and will not interfere with personal messaging. The company emphasized that personal messages, calls, and statuses remain end-to-end encrypted, and it will not sell or share users' phone numbers with advertisers. Ads will be targeted based on user location, language, and previous ad interactions, and users linked to the Accounts Center may see ads influenced by their activity on other Meta platforms. WhatsApp's founders previously expressed their commitment to an ad-free experience in a 2012 blog post, arguing that advertising detracts from the user experience. WhatsApp was not always free; it originally charged an annual subscription fee of [openai_gpt model="gpt-4o-mini" prompt="Summarize the content and extract only the fact described in the text bellow. The summary shall NOT include a title, introduction and conclusion. Text: Messaging app WhatsApp has taken a significant step by introducing advertisements for the first time, marking a notable shift from its original stance against ads. Historically, the app, known for its distinctive bright green interface, prided itself on being ad-free, a rarity among major tech platforms. In a 2012 blog post, WhatsApp co-founders expressed their commitment to a user-focused experience, famously quoting Tyler Durden from Fight Club: “Advertising has us chasing cars and clothes, working jobs we hate so we can buy shit we don’t need.” However, the recent announcement titled “Helping you Find More Channels and Businesses on WhatsApp” reveals that the app will now feature ads, albeit initially limited to the Updates tab. This means users can expect to see advertisements in the Status section, akin to the 24-hour Stories feature found on other Meta platforms like Instagram and Facebook, without disrupting their private messaging experience. What’s new? Adverts (Picture: Shutterstock) WhatsApp reassured users that those who primarily use the app for personal communication will not notice any changes to their messaging experience. This transition aligns WhatsApp more closely with its parent company Meta’s other applications, which are heavily ad-supported. How will apps be targeted? Meta has emphasized that the introduction of ads will be handled with privacy in mind. The company stated that personal messages, calls, and statuses will remain end-to-end encrypted, ensuring that no one, including Meta, can access them. Ads will be tailored based on factors such as location, language, and user interactions with previous advertisements. Additionally, users who have linked their WhatsApp accounts to the Accounts Center may receive ads influenced by their activity across other Meta platforms. How the new ads will look (Picture: Meta) Meta has committed to never selling or sharing users' phone numbers with advertisers and has assured that personal messages will not be utilized for targeted advertising. What did WhatsApp say about ads previously? Reflecting on its past, WhatsApp’s founders articulated their aversion to advertising in a 2012 blog post, stating, “No one wakes up excited to see more advertising.” They emphasized their dedication to enhancing user experience rather than focusing on ad revenue, arguing that the presence of ads detracts from the core mission of providing reliable messaging. They maintained that their engineering efforts were directed towards improving the app rather than mining user data. The blog post from June 2012 (Picture: WhatsApp) ‘The beginning of deeper data collection’? Despite assurances from Meta regarding user privacy, some industry experts express concerns that this move could signal a broader shift towards increased data collection. Marijus Briedis, Chief Technology Officer at NordVPN, remarked that the introduction of ads in messaging apps often precedes more invasive data practices. He cautioned that while Meta claims chats remain private, its business model fundamentally relies on data-driven surveillance. Briedis urged European users to remain vigilant, as the gradual introduction of ads could lead to a future where private messaging becomes monetized and monitored. Changes are coming (Picture: Meta) Was WhatsApp always free? WhatsApp was not always a free service; it originally charged an annual subscription fee of [cyberseo_openai model="gpt-4o-mini" prompt="Rewrite a news story for a business publication, in a calm style with creativity and flair based on text below, making sure it reads like human-written text in a natural way. The article shall NOT include a title, introduction and conclusion. The article shall NOT start from a title. Response language English. Generate HTML-formatted content using tag for a sub-heading. You can use only , , , , and HTML tags if necessary. Text: What’s new? Adverts (Picture: Shutterstock) Messaging app WhatsApp has introduced adverts for the first time, a departure from the anti-ad ethos it had when first set up. The famous bright green app had been unusual in major tech apps in not allowing adverts on the platform. ‘We don’t sell ads’, they said in a 2012 blog post quoting Tyler Durden from Fight Club: ‘Advertising has us chasing cars and clothes, working jobs we hate so we can buy shit we don’t need.’ Now, even they will be sending us to chase cars, clothes, doggy sunglasses, and mini washing machines for underwear that fit on your bedside table. A new post titled, euphemistically, ‘Helping you Find More Channels and Businesses on WhatsApp’, revealed the change yesterday. For now, ads will only be seen in the Updates tab. This means you won’t see ads for vitamins or foot scrubs popping up in between your private messages. How the new ads will look (Picture: Meta) The company said: ‘If you only use WhatsApp to chat with friends and loved ones there is no change to your experience at all.’ But it marks a shift towards becoming more like Meta’s ad-heavy other big apps, Instagram and Facebook. For now, ads will only appear in Status, which is similar to the 24-hour Stories function on their other apps. How will apps be targeted? Meta said they had built these features ‘in the most private way possible’: ‘Your personal messages, calls, and statuses remain end-to-end encrypted, meaning no one (not even us) can see or hear them.’ They said they would use information like country or city, language, Channels followed, and previous ad interaction to guide which ads are shown. Changes are coming (Picture: Meta) Those who had added WhatsApp to Accounts Center could be shown ads based on information from across their other Meta accounts too. They promised they would ‘never sell or share your phone number to advertisers’ and personal messages and calls would not be used for targeted ads. What did WhatsApp say about ads previously? A 2012 blog post from founders Jan Koum and Brian Acton said: ‘No one wakes up excited to see more advertising, no one goes to sleep thinking about the ads they’ll see tomorrow. ‘We know people go to sleep excited about who they chatted with that day (and disappointed about who they didn’t). We want WhatsApp to be the product that keeps you awake… and that you reach for in the morning. No one jumps up from a nap and runs to see an advertisement. The blog post from June 2012 (Picture: WhatsApp) ‘Advertising isn’t just the disruption of aesthetics, the insults to your intelligence and the interruption of your train of thought. ‘At every company that sells ads, a significant portion of their engineering team spends their day tuning data mining, writing better code to collect all your personal data, upgrading the servers that hold all the data and making sure it’s all being logged and collated and sliced and packaged and shipped out… And at the end of the day the result of it all is a slightly different advertising banner in your browser or on your mobile screen. ‘Remember, when advertising is involved you the user are the product. ‘At WhatsApp, our engineers spend all their time fixing bugs, adding new features and ironing out all the little intricacies in our task of bringing rich, affordable, reliable messaging to every phone in the world. That’s our product and that’s our passion. Your data isn’t even in the picture. We are simply not interested in any of it. ‘When people ask us why we charge for WhatsApp, we say “Have you considered the alternative?’ ‘The beginning of deeper data collection’? Meta has insisted that personal messages will be unchanged, but some fear this move could be opening the door to more significant changes later. Marijus Briedis, Chief Technology Officer at NordVPN, said: ‘Ads in WhatsApp aren’t just a distraction – they’re a signal of what may come next. ‘When advertising enters a messaging app, it often marks the beginning of deeper data collection. Meta says your chats are private, but its business model relies on data-driven surveillance. This isn’t just about pop-ups; it’s about protecting your privacy. Ads will be kept away from personal messages – at least for now (Picture: Meta) ‘Europe’s data protection laws were created to guard against exactly this kind of gradual overreach. Meta’s so-called ‘optional’ data-sharing is rarely as optional as it sounds – there’s often a trade-off, and too often, that trade-off is your personal information. ‘We’ve seen this pattern before, with small updates that pave the way for much bigger changes. The introduction of ads could signal a wider shift away from private messaging toward monetised, monitored communication. European users should pay close attention – your messages may not stay as private as you think.’ Was WhatsApp always free? No. In its early years, there was an annual subscription fee of $0.99 (which worked out at around 64p to 69p in the UK). Imposed after the first year (which was free), this was part the reason they could afford to go without ads. When Facebook bought the company in 2016, they scrapped the charge to focus on growth, saying some users were worried about losing access if they didn’t have a debit or credit card number. They still didn’t introduce ads at the time, saying they wanted to explore other ways of making money from WhatsApp, like making the app a tool to communicate information with businesses and organisations such as banks and airlines. Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk. For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: Eminem’s music company ‘sues Meta for $109,000,000 over 243 of his songs’ MORE: Family business ‘£10,000 out of pocket’ after Meta blocks their accounts for 12 weeks News Updates Stay on top of the headlines with daily email updates." temperature="0.3"].99 after the first year of use. This model allowed the app to operate without advertisements. Following Facebook's acquisition of WhatsApp in 2016, the subscription fee was eliminated to promote user growth, with the company exploring alternative revenue streams, such as facilitating communication for businesses and organizations. " max_tokens="3500" temperature="0.7" top_p="1.0" best_of="1" presence_penalty="0.1" frequency_penalty="frequency_penalty"].99 before Facebook acquired the company in 2016 and eliminated the fee to encourage growth.
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