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Apple TV teases horror-comedy series ‘Widow’s Bay’ set in New England

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A new Apple TV series starring Emmy Award-winning actor Matthew Rhys, set and filmed in New England, received its first promotional snippet this week.

“Widow’s Bay” takes place in “a quaint island town 40 miles off the coast of New England,” Apple TV said in a description of the horror-comedy series. “But something lurks beneath the surface.”

The show spans 10 episodes and will debut on Wednesday, April 29, 2026 with its first three episodes, according to Apple TV.

From then on, one new episode release each Wednesday through June 17, the streaming platform — home to other series like “Severance,” “Ted Lasso” and “Pluribus” — added.

Welsh actor Rhys is known for his role in the FX series “The Americans.” In “Widow’s Bay” he plays Mayor Tom Loftis, who is struggling to revive his community.

On the island, there is no wireless internet, spotty cell signals and superstitious locals under the impression that the island community is cursed, according to Apple TV.

“Loftis is determined to build a better future for his teenage son and turn the island into a tourist destination,” Apple TV said.

“Miraculously, he succeeds: tourists are finally coming. Unfortunately, the locals were right,” it added. “After decades of calm, the old stories that seemed too ludicrous to be true start happening again.”

Actors Kate O’Flynn, Stephen Root, Kingston Rumi Southwick, Kevin Carroll and Dale Dickey round out the cast.

The show filmed at several locations in Massachusetts earlier this year such as in Essex and Gloucester, per The Local News, in Worcester, per The Telegram & Gazette, and in Rockport, per WBZ News Radio.

You can watch the teaser trailer for the new series below, or by clicking here to watch on YouTube.



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Photographer, film producer and activist : NPR

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The photographer, film producer and activist was killed alongside her husband, director and actor Rob Reiner on Sunday.



MARY LOUISE KELLY, HOST:

The world lost a pair of Hollywood luminaries with the deaths of Rob Reiner and his wife on Sunday. Compared to her movie director spouse, Michele Singer Reiner was less in the public eye. But as NPR’s Chloe Veltman reports she was a formidable photographer, movie producer and social justice activist.

CHLOE VELTMAN, BYLINE: When Michele Singer Reiner and her husband Rob stood together onstage to accept a lifetime achievement award from a gay civil rights group in 2011, he tried his best to coax her up to the mic.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

ROB REINER: You want to tell them?

MICHELE SINGER REINER: No, you tell them. This is good…

REINER: Well…

(LAUGHTER)

VELTMAN: So the movie director explained that his wife was the driving force behind their advocacy for equal marriage rights. It was a question of simple equality. Plus, he joked…

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

REINER: Because we kept hearing Brad Pitt say that he wouldn’t marry Angelina Jolie until everyone had the right to get married. So basically, we’re doing it for Brad Pitt.

(LAUGHTER)

VELTMAN: Singer Reiner was quiet at public events. But at home, her husband said, she was very outspoken.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

REINER: Yeah. And thank God she is outspoken because I wouldn’t be doing what I’m doing without her.

SINGER REINER: That’s right.

REINER: Yes, that’s…

(LAUGHTER)

REINER: See? See, there you go.

JOURNEY GUNDERSON: Michele wasn’t seeking the spotlight. She seemed to always be helping behind closed doors.

VELTMAN: Journey Gunderson is the executive director of the National Comedy Center, which houses the archives of Rob’s famous father, Carl Reiner.

GUNDERSON: But it wasn’t as though her voice wasn’t strong or on equal footing.

VELTMAN: In a 2018 interview with CNN, Rob Reiner credited his wife with figuring out what to do after Alec Baldwin dropped out of the director’s 2017 thriller “Shock And Awe” two days before shooting.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

REINER: And my wife, Michele, who produced the film with me, she said, well, why don’t you do it?

VELTMAN: Reiner added that she gave him one piece of acting advice.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

REINER: She says to me, just try to make it less Jewish.

VELTMAN: Michele Singer first gained acclaim in the 1980s as a photographer. She shot the cover portrait for Donald Trump’s 1987 book, “The Art Of The Deal.” She and Reiner met when she was taking pictures on the set of his rom-com, “When Harry Met Sally…” in 1989.

(SOUNDBITE OF FILM, “WHEN HARRY MET SALLY…”)

BILLY CRYSTAL: (As Harry Burns) The first time we met, we hated each other.

MEG RYAN: (As Sally Albright) No, you didn’t hate me. I hated you.

VELTMAN: The film was supposed to end with the central couple never getting together. But Reiner chose a happy ending after meeting his future wife on set. Rob and Michele married and raised a family. Friends describe the closeness of the couple’s home life.

BARRY MARKOWITZ: One big family full of love.

VELTMAN: Cinematographer Barry Markowitz collaborated with the Reiners on such movies as the 2015 feature “Being Charlie” and was a close friend. He told NPR he bonded with Singer Reiner over their shared Jewish heritage. Both had parents who survived Auschwitz.

MARKOWITZ: Michele is what we call a balabusta. She’s the king, the queen. She makes sure everything’s right and the food and the people. And, you know, she was incredible.

VELTMAN: Markowitz, who’s based in Israel, always stayed with the family on his visits to Los Angeles.

MARKOWITZ: It would be like an insult to the Reiners if I went somewhere else.

VELTMAN: He added, that’s the kind of love that was in that house.

Chloe Veltman, NPR News.

(SOUNDBITE OF ALEXIS FFRENCH’S “BLUEBIRD”)

Copyright © 2025 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

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Adobe hit with proposed class-action, accused of misusing authors’ work in AI training

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Like pretty much every other tech company in existence, Adobe has leaned heavily into AI over the past several years. The software firm has launched a number of different AI services since 2023, including Firefly — its AI-powered media-generation suite. Now, however, the company’s full-throated embrace of the technology may have led to trouble, as a new lawsuit claims it used pirated books to train one of its AI models.

A proposed class-action lawsuit filed on behalf of Elizabeth Lyon, an author from Oregon, claims that Adobe used pirated versions of numerous books — including her own — to train the company’s SlimLM program.

Adobe describes SlimLM as a small language model series that can be “optimized for document assistance tasks on mobile devices.” It states that SlimLM was pre-trained on SlimPajama-627B, a “deduplicated, multi-corpora, open-source dataset” released by Cerebras in June of 2023. Lyon, who has written a number of guidebooks for non-fiction writing, says that some of her works were included in a pretraining dataset that Adobe had used.

Lyon’s lawsuit, which was originally reported on by Reuters, says that her writing was included in a processed subset of a manipulated dataset that was the basis of Adobe’s program: “The SlimPajama dataset was created by copying and manipulating the RedPajama dataset (including copying Books3),” the lawsuit says. “Thus, because it is a derivative copy of the RedPajama dataset, SlimPajama contains the Books3 dataset, including the copyrighted works of Plaintiff and the Class members.”

“Books3” — a huge collection of 191,000 books that have been used to train GenAI systems — has been an ongoing source of legal trouble for the tech community. RedPajama has also been cited in a number of litigation cases. In September, a lawsuit against Apple claimed the company had used copyrighted material to train its Apple Intelligence model. The litigation mentioned the dataset and accused the tech company of copying protected works “without consent and without credit or compensation.” In October, a similar lawsuit against Salesforce also claimed the company had used RedPajama for training purposes. 

Unfortunately for the tech industry, such lawsuits have, by now, become somewhat commonplace. AI algorithms are trained on massive datasets and, in some cases, those datasets have allegedly included pirated materials. In September, Anthropic agreed to pay $1.5 billion to a number of authors who had sued it and accused it of using pirated versions of their work to train its chatbot, Claude. The case was considered a potential turning point in the ongoing legal battles over copyrighted material in AI training data, of which there are many.



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The best AirPods for 2026

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Apple’s AirPods have become the default choice for many people, whether you want simple wireless earbuds that work without fuss or premium options with features like noise cancellation and spatial audio. The lineup has grown over the years, so there is now a model for almost every type of listener. Some pairs are built for all-day comfort, others focus on isolation and richer sound, and Apple’s over-ear option offers a more immersive experience for movies and music.

If you spend most of your time on an iPhone or iPad, all AirPods share one big advantage: they connect instantly and switch between Apple devices seamlessly. With new models always on the horizon and longtime favorites still holding up well, we rounded up the best AirPods to help you decide which ones match your listening style.

Table of contents

What you need to know about AirPods

When it comes to Apple’s earbuds and headphones, there are several things you’ll want to keep in mind before making your final decision. First, the standard AirPods are the open-design earbuds with no tip that allow some environmental noise to come into your ears at all times. The Apple AirPods Pro are the model with tips that completely close off your ear canal, which enables features like more powerful noise cancellation and the hearing test. Lastly, the Apple AirPods Max are the company’s over-ear noise-canceling headphones preferred by audiophiles, and currently the company’s only option for wireless headphones at all that aren’t made by Beats.

There are a few features that are available across all models as they’ve become inherent to the AirPods experience. First, you can expect connectivity perks like Automatic Switching between Apple devices that are synced with your iCloud account. This means that a pair of AirPods will automatically change to your phone when you get a call while you’re listening to music on a MacBook or laptop, for example. It’s functionally similar to multipoint Bluetooth, but the feature isn’t limited to two devices like most earbuds and headphones. Second, hands-free access to Siri is the default, allowing you to ask the assistant for help without touching your AirPods. And lastly, Personalized Spatial Audio with dynamic head tracking is available across the entire lineup, even on the most affordable version and the new AirPods, including AirPods 4 with active noise cancellation.

If you don’t think any of the AirPods options are right for you, consult our recommendations on the best wireless earbuds and best wireless headphones for some alternatives.

Best AirPods for 2026

Image for the large product module

Billy Steele for Engadget

Read our full Apple AirPods Pro 3 review

Battery life: 8 hours, up to 24 hours with charging case | Water resistance: IP57 | Noise cancellation: Yes | Automatic Switching: Yes

Apple’s latest AirPods Pro offer the company’s most robust set of features ever. Live Translation and hear-rate sensing get top billing, but improvements to ANC and sound quality are significant as well. Plus, Apple’s existing hearing health and other advanced earbuds features are available here as well. And the company managed to do all of this without raising the price.

Pros

  • Impressive ANC updates
  • Improved sound quality
  • Live Translation finally arrives
  • Extended battery life on a single charge
Cons

  • New fit takes some getting used to
  • Total battery life is actually less than before
  • Live Translation languages are limited at launch

$199 at Amazon

Image for the large product module

Engadget

Read our full AirPods 4 review

Battery life: 5 hours, up to 30 hours with charging case | Water resistance: IP54 | Noise cancellation: No | Automatic Switching: Yes

Apple gave its “regular” earbuds a big overhaul in 2024, most notably adding ANC to its open-wear design for the first time. Of course, the addition of noise cancellation raises the price, so the non-ANC version of the AirPods 4 is the most affordable option in Apple’s ecosystem. This model still packs Apple’s H2 audio chip though for enhanced audio performance, so you can expect several of the company’s most recent features onboard.

H2-powered tools on the AirPods 4 include Voice Isolation, Personalized Spatial Audio with dynamic head tracking, Personalized Volume and Adaptive EQ. They lack Conversation Awareness, Adaptive Audio and Transparency mode from the core specs on the AirPods 4 with ANC and AirPods Pro 2. Unlike those other two models, the AirPods 4 charging case doesn’t offer MagSafe or Qi-compatible wireless charging, nor does the accessory have a built-in speaker for Find My. However, they now feature USB-C charging, bringing them in line with Apple’s latest device lineup.

You’ll get all the benefits of a refined shape on the AirPods 4, which offers a more secure and comfortable fit. Like the third-gen AirPods, this model still doesn’t have touch controls for volume, but instead offers force touch options for playback controls, noise modes and taking calls. A key downside to the open design is that you won’t get access to Apple’s hearing health tools. Since the AirPods 4 don’t seal off your ear canal or have the requisite ANC, the company’s hearing test wouldn’t be accurate, hearing aid wouldn’t be helpful and hearing protection wouldn’t adequate defense in loud environments.

Pros

  • Improved fit and comfort
  • Better sound quality
  • Advanced features from pricier models
  • Still pretty affordable
Cons

  • No onboard volume controls
  • No ANC
  • No wireless charging
  • No Conversation Awareness

$74 at Amazon

Image for the large product module

Engadget

Read our full AirPods Max review

Battery life: 20 hours | Water resistance: None | Noise cancellation: Yes | Automatic Switching: Yes

If you prefer over-ear noise-canceling headphones to earbuds, there’s only one option for you in Apple’s lineup. The AirPods Max debuted in 2020 and the company offered a minimal update in September 2024 that swapped the Lightning port for USB-C (and added five new colors). While the design still feels current, the tech inside this model has been a generation behind since the AirPods Pro 2 arrived in 2022. The AirPods Max are still powered by the H1 chip, which means Apple’s more advanced audio features aren’t available here.

Since the Max doesn’t have the newer H2 silicon, features like Adaptive Audio, Personalized Volume, Conversation Awareness and Voice Isolation aren’t available on these headphones. However, you can still expect hands-free access to Siri, Personalized Spatial Audio with dynamic head tracking, Adaptive EQ and a very natural-sounding Transparency mode. Noise cancellation works well with most sources of constant noise, but like a lot of headphones, it struggles with human voices. Automatic Switching is here as well, so you can expect the Max to swap between iCloud-connected devices quickly.

And then there’s the design. The AirPods Max feel lightweight and comfortable, even though the ear cups feel a bit thin after hours of constant use. Physical controls for playback, volume and noise modes center around a rotating crown akin to what’s on the Apple Watch and a single button – both situated on the right side. That excellent Transparency mode keeps you from getting shouty on calls, and the voice pickup is good enough for you to use them during important virtual meetings without fear of audio quality issues.

Pros

  • Excellent balanced sound
  • Solid ANC Handy features
  • Unique but reliable controls
  • Solid battery life
Cons

  • Expensive
  • Still uses older H1 chipset
  • The “case” offers little protection
  • No high-res music streaming service support

$450 at Amazon

Best AirPods specs comparison chart

Spec

AirPods 4

AirPods Pro 2

AirPods Max

Price

$129

$249

$549

Design

In-ear

In-ear

Over-ear

H2 chip

Yes

Yes

Yes

ANC

No

Yes

Yes

Spatial audio with dynamic head tracking

Yes

Yes

Yes

Hearing test

No

Yes

No

Rated battery life

5 hours

8 hours

20 hours

Durability

Dust, sweat, and water resistant (IP54)

Dust, sweat, and water resistant (IP57)

N/A

Other AirPods we tested

AirPods 4 with ANC

The AirPods 4 with ANC represent the first time active noise cancellation has been available on the open-wear, “regular” AirPods. Design-wise, they’re the same as the non-ANC model, so the difference is entirely in the features list. This more expensive version adds Adaptive Audio, Transparency mode, Conversation Awareness and a wireless charging case. The ANC isn’t as powerful as the AirPods Pro 2, partially due to the fact that the AirPods 4 doesn’t completely seal off your ears. The noise-canceling performance is definitely useful though, working best with constant, low-frequency annoyances like fans and white noise machines. Lastly, you won’t get access to Apple’s hearing test and hearing aid features, partially due to the fact that the AirPods 4 with ANC doesn’t seal off your ears, which would affect accuracy and effectiveness.



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Google Pixel adds ‘Dolly Zoom’ animation for folders

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Android 16 QPR3 launched today for Google Pixel devices, bringing some interesting tweaks to round out the later stages of this software build. The newest update brings a smooth new folder animation to the forefront, along with a couple of customization changes for the home screen.

The latest beta update to Android 16 QPR3 brings a breath of fresh air to the home screen in the form of a new animation. In previous versions, tapping an app folder would trigger the folder to expand. It was smooth, but lacked that little “oomph.”

The new animation pulls a sort of “Hitchcock zoom” where the folder expands, but the background shrinks in unison. The result is very clean and feels like quintessential Android. The difference between the folder animation in stable Android 16 and QPR3 is night and day.

Along with that change to folders in Android 16 QPR3, Google has moved the themed icons option after adjusting the feature presentation to match the existing icon shape selection in QPR2. The icon options are still “default” and “minimal,” but that option is in the same section as the shape selection page. The two options are now a little easier to flip between in wallpaper customization.

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Beyond that change, the number of icon shapes hasn’t been changed, and still sits at five separate choices. The shapes still do not take effect in the app drawer, unfortunately.

Android 16 QPR3 is rolling out now to eligible devices on Google’s beta program. For a summary on every change we’ve found so far, check out our breakdown coverage.

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Mass. casino winner: Jackpot won off $5 slot machine bet

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Nearly $50,000 were won after a $5 bet on a slot machine at a Massachusetts casino in December.

The Encore Boston Harbor casino player won $49,777.57 off of the game “Screaming Links” after betting $5 on Dec. 5.

Encore Boston Harbor casino, which is located in Everett, has more than 2,700 slot machines and more than 175 table games.

Players must be 21 years or older.

In November, there were 15,989 slot jackpots won, totaling $41,572,812.83. The largest jackpot prize was won on Nov. 5 after a $150 bet on the game “Dancing Cash – Happy & Prosperous” won $116,153.64.

There were also 132 table game jackpots won, totaling $967,640.53. The largest jackpot prize from a table game was off of the game Three Card Poker. A $5 side bet ended in a $128,955.25.

And give sports jackpots totaled $53,947.85 in November.

Encore Boston Harbor set a new record for jackpot payouts in August, distributing more than $46.3 million to lucky winners across its gaming floor.

The casino paid out $46,395,287.66 across 16,628 total jackpots during the month, marking the highest payout total in the venue’s history. The vast majority came from slot machine wins, with 16,490 slot jackpots totaling over $45.3 million.

Table games contributed 135 jackpots worth approximately $1 million, while sports betting accounted for three jackpots totaling $15,296.53.

The single largest winner in August hit a $134,778.50 jackpot from a $225 bet on a slot machine called “Huff n More Puff” on Aug. 2.

The record August figures represented a significant increase from July, when the casino paid out $39,627,206.20 across 15,101 jackpots. The payout amounts have remained high in subsequent months, with September seeing $42,122,246.90 distributed across 15,187 jackpots and October reaching $43,173,022.60 across 15,827 wins.

For those who need help with responsible gaming, call the helpline at 1-800-327-5050 or go to GameSenseMA.com.

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Pulitzer Prize-winning correspondent Peter Arnett has died : NPR

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Associated Press correspondent Peter Arnett, left, marches with Vietnamese troops in Vietnam, Nov. 11, 1965.

Associated Press correspondent Peter Arnett, left, marches with Vietnamese troops in Vietnam, Nov. 11, 1965.

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LOS ANGELES — Peter Arnett, the Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter who spent decades dodging bullets and bombs to bring the world eyewitness accounts of war from the rice paddies of Vietnam to the deserts of Iraq, has died. He was 91.

Arnett, who won the 1966 Pulitzer Prize for international reporting for his Vietnam War coverage for The Associated Press, died Wednesday in Newport Beach and was surrounded by friends and family, said his son Andrew Arnett. He had been suffering from prostate cancer.

“Peter Arnett was one of the greatest war correspondents of his generation — intrepid, fearless, and a beautiful writer and storyteller. His reporting in print and on camera will remain a legacy for aspiring journalists and historians for generations to come,” said Edith Lederer, who was a fellow AP war correspondent in Vietnam in 1972-73 and is now AP’s chief correspondent at the United Nations.

As a wire-service correspondent, Arnett was known mostly to fellow journalists when he reported in Vietnam from 1962 until the war’s end in 1975. He became something of a household name in 1991, however, after he broadcast live updates for CNN from Iraq during the first Gulf War.

While almost all Western reporters had fled Baghdad in the days before the U.S.-led attack, Arnett stayed. As missiles began raining on the city, he broadcast a live account by cellphone from his hotel room.

“There was an explosion right near me, you may have heard,” he said in a calm, New Zealand-accented voice moments after the loud boom of a missile strike rattled across the airwaves. As he continued to speak air-raid sirens blared in the background.

“I think that took out the telecommunications center,” he said of another explosion. “They are hitting the center of the city.”

Reporting from Vietnam

It was not the first time Arnett had gotten dangerously close to the action.

In January 1966, he joined a battalion of U.S. soldiers seeking to rout North Vietnamese snipers and was standing next to the battalion commander when an officer paused to read a map.

“As the colonel peered at it, I heard four loud shots as bullets tore through the map and into his chest, a few inches from my face,” Arnett recalled during a talk to the American Library Association in 2013. “He sank to the ground at my feet.”

He would begin the fallen soldier’s obituary like this: “He was the son of a general, a West Pointer and a battalion commander. But Lt. Colonel George Eyster was to die like a rifleman. It may have been the colonel’s leaves of rank on his collar, or the map he held in his hand, or just a wayward chance that the Viet Cong sniper chose Eyster from the five of us standing in that dusty jungle path.”

Arnett had arrived in Vietnam just a year after joining AP as its Indonesia correspondent. That job would be short-lived after he reported Indonesia’s economy was in shambles and the country’s enraged leadership threw him out. His expulsion marked only the first of several controversies in which he would find himself embroiled, while also forging an historic career.

At the AP’s Saigon bureau in 1962, Arnett found himself surrounded by a formidable roster of journalists, including bureau chief Malcolm Browne and photo editor Horst Faas, who between them would win three Pulitzer Prizes.

He credited Browne in particular with teaching him many of the survival tricks that would keep him alive in war zones over the next 40 years. Among them: Never stand near a medic or radio operator because they’re among the first the enemy will shoot at. And if you hear a gunshot coming from the other side, don’t look around to see who fired it because the next one will likely hit you.

Arnett would stay in Vietnam until the capital, Saigon, fell to the Communist-backed North Vietnamese rebels in 1975. In the time leading up to those final days, he was ordered by AP’s New York headquarters to begin destroying the bureau’s papers as coverage of the war wound down.

Instead, he shipped them to his apartment in New York, believing they’d have historic value someday. They’re now in the AP’s archives.

A star on cable news

Arnett remained with the AP until 1981, when he joined the newly-formed CNN.

Ten years later he was in Baghdad covering another war. He not only reported on the front-line fighting but won exclusive, and controversial, interviews with then-President Saddam Hussein and future 9/11 mastermind Osama bin Laden.

In 1995 he published the memoir, “Live From the Battlefield: From Vietnam to Baghdad, 35 Years in the World’s War Zones.”

Arnett resigned from CNN in 1999, months after the network retracted an investigative report he did not prepare but narrated alleging that deadly Sarin nerve gas had been used on deserting American soldiers in Laos in 1970.

He was covering the second Gulf War for NBC and National Geographic in 2003 when he was fired for granting an interview to Iraqi state TV during which he criticized the U.S. military’s war strategy. His remarks were denounced back home as anti-American.

After his dismissal, TV critics for the AP and other news organizations speculated that Arnett would never work in television news again. Within a week, however, he had been hired to report on the war for stations in Taiwan, the United Arab Emirates and Belgium.

In 2007, he took a job teaching journalism at China’s Shantou University. Following his retirement in 2014, he and his wife, Nina Nguyen, moved to the Southern California suburb of Fountain Valley.

Born Nov. 13, 1934, in Riverton, New Zealand, Peter Arnett got his first exposure to journalism when he landed a job at his local newspaper, the Southland Times, shortly after high school.

“I didn’t really have a clear idea of where my life would take me, but I do remember that first day when I walked into the newspaper office as an employee and found my little desk, and I did have a — you know — enormously delicious feeling that I’d found my place,” he recalled in a 2006 AP oral history.

After a few years at the Times, he made plans to move to a larger newspaper in London. En route to England by ship, however, he made a stop in Thailand and fell in love with the country.

Soon he was working for the English-language Bangkok World, and later for its sister newspaper in Laos. There he would make the connections that led him to the AP and a lifetime of covering war.

Arnett is survived by his wife and their children, Elsa and Andrew.

“He was like a brother,” said retired AP photographer Nick Ut, who covered combat in Vietnam with Arnett and remained his friend for a half century. “His death will leave a big hole in my life.”



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Instacart’s AI-driven pricing tool attracted attention — now the FTC has questions

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According to Reuters, Instacart is currently getting the regulatory equivalent of a throat-clearing from the FTC, which has sent the grocery delivery platform a civil investigative demand regarding its AI-powered pricing tool, Eversight. Put another way, the agency wants to know why some people are paying substantially more for their organic granola than others.

The issue came to light after a study revealed that shoppers are seeing fairly different prices for identical groceries from the same stores — up to 23% higher prices in some cases. Instacart says these price tests were randomized, not ties to an algorithm that targets customers based on their browsing history. But when people are already anxious about affording eggs, that distinction probably doesn’t mean much.

Dynamic pricing isn’t new or necessarily nefarious. Harvard Business School will tell you it’s how digital platforms stay competitive. Airlines use it, hotels use it, Uber famously uses it. Companies argue that it helps balance supply and demand, maximizes profitability, and creates win-win scenarios.

But there’s a difference between paying surge pricing for a ride home from the bar and paying extra for groceries (food isn’t optional). So while the investigation doesn’t prove wrongdoing, it’s hardly shocking that the FTC — which has investigated data-driven pricing strategies by other companies — is reportedly asking questions. In an economy where everyone’s feeling squeezed, AI-driven price testing of kitchen essentials was bound to attract attention.



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Dolby and LG introduce a modular home audio system for CES 2026

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LG is teaming up with Dolby for a new collection of speakers that the companies are unveiling ahead of CES 2026. The LG Sound Suite features a modular lineup the H7 soundbar, M7 and M5 wireless surround speakers and the W7 subwoofer. The speakers can be combined in more than two dozen different configurations, from a pair to a full 13.1.7 channel surround sound home theater setup.

The main pitch of the LG Sound Suite is its application of Dolby Atmos FlexConnect. This is the audio brand’s tech for optimizing sound from wherever wireless speakers are placed. It’s meant to deliver optimal sound even from unusual locations, even when you’re limited by outlet locations, furniture placement or other quirks of a room’s layout. The collaboration with LG brings FlexConnect to a soundbar for the first time. When the H7 soundbar is used as the lead device, the suite will bring Dolby Atmos FlexConnect audio to any television. In a future software update, LG will also bring support for Dolby Atmos FlexConnect directly to some of its premium TVs, including select 2025 models.



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Here’s everything new in Android 16 QPR3 Beta 1 [Gallery]

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Android 16 QPR3 is the next notable quarterly update coming in March 2026, and Beta 1 is rolling out today for Pixel devices.

Over the coming hours, we’ll dive into all of Android 16 QPR3 Beta 1’s new features and every single change. (The newest updates will be at the top of this list. Be sure to check back often and tell us what you find in the comments below.) Android 16 QPR2 Beta 3 screenshots appear on the left and QPR3 Beta 1 on the right.

If you want to quickly install Android 16 QPR3 Beta 1 on your compatible Pixel 6, Pixel 6 Pro, Pixel 7, Pixel 7 Pro, Pixel 7a, Pixel Tablet, Pixel Fold, Pixel 8, Pixel 8 Pro, Pixel 8a, Pixel 9, Pixel 9 Pro, Pixel 9 Pro XL, Pixel 9 Pro Fold, Pixel 9a, Pixel 10, Pixel 10 Pro, Pixel 10 Pro XL, and Pixel 10 Pro Fold be sure to check out our step-by-step guide.

Updating…

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Pixel adds Samsung’s navigation button layout

Adjustable Flashlight Strength

At a Glance lockscreen/AOD tweaks

  • Day/date and weather are flipped

QPR2 vs. QPR3 Beta 1

Remove At a Glance from homescreen

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