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Apple brings Apple Intelligence to the iPhone screen

Apple brings Apple Intelligence to the iPhone screen

Apple said it’s bringing Visual Intelligence, its AI-powered image analysis tech, to the iPhone screen in iOS 26.

Visual Intelligence will now make it easier and faster to do more with the content on your iPhone, Apple says, and it works automatically with any app. For example, if you open a social media app and see a gray jacket, you can use Visual Intelligence — which can be accessed by pressing the same button you use to take a screenshot — to do an image search for the jacket in Google Search and other apps you use frequently.

Visual Intelligence on the iPhone’s screen offers other shortcut options, like quickly adding an event to your calendar, based on context. It can extract the date, time, and location and pre-populate them in a calendar entry. There’s also an option to upload a screenshot to ChatGPT for analysis and additional information.

Apple’s head of software engineering, Craig Federighi, said that developers can integrate Apple Intelligence into their apps.

“For developers, you can use app intents to integrate search capabilities from your apps into this experience,” Federighi said onstage at WWDC 2025. “We’re also making it possible for you to search visually across your most-used apps using Visual Intelligence with the iPhone camera.”

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#Apple #brings #Apple #Intelligence #iPhone #screen

On Monday, OpenAI announced something called “Daybreak,” a project that CEO Sam Altman says is meant to “accelerate cyber defense and continuously secure software.“

 

The OpenAI blog post announcing Daybreak doesn’t mention the word “project” at all, perhaps to make readers slightly less apt to compare it to Anthropic’s Project Glasswing, but watch this: this sounds mighty similar to Anthropic’s Project Glasswing. Like Project Glasswing, it’s a program in which a frontier AI company seeks to partner with corporate and government entities to root out security vulnerabilities using OpenAI’s most advanced models in the hopes of “seeing risk earlier, acting sooner, and helping make software resilient by design.”

Glasswing rolled out last month alongside Anthropic’s announcement of its Claude Mythos Preview model, famously the model so capable—according to its creators at least—that it posed a danger to the world. As Anthropic’s system card for the model, explained:

Claude Mythos Preview’s large increase in capabilities has led us to decide not to make it generally available. Instead, we are using it as part of a defensive cybersecurity program with a limited set of partners.

In other words, because it’s “the most cyber-capable model” Anthropic had ever built, it needs to be locked away for now, unless you’re a VIP. Influential software developer Daniel Stenberg has called this an “amazingly successful marketing stunt for sure.”

Two days after that announcement, reports started materializing about a similar project at OpenAI. An anonymously sourced Axios story described it as “a product with advanced cybersecurity capabilities that it plans to release to a small set of partners.”

The Daybreak announcement is much more public-facing than that, and comes across as significantly less ominous and secretive than Project Glasswing. The top of the page has two buttons: “Request a vulnerability scan” and “Contact sales.” When you click, “Request a vulnerability scan” you get a brief and unchallenging form:

‘Daybreak’: OpenAI’s Answer to Anthropic’s Project Glasswing Has Arrived
                On Monday, OpenAI announced something called “Daybreak,” a project that CEO Sam Altman says is meant to “accelerate cyber defense and continuously secure software.“  OpenAI is launching Daybreak, our effort to accelerate cyber defense and continuously secure software. AI is already good and about to get super good at cybersecurity; we’d like to start working with as many companies as possible now to help them continuously secure themselves. — Sam Altman (@sama) May 11, 2026    The OpenAI blog post announcing Daybreak doesn’t mention the word “project” at all, perhaps to make readers slightly less apt to compare it to Anthropic’s Project Glasswing, but watch this: this sounds mighty similar to Anthropic’s Project Glasswing. Like Project Glasswing, it’s a program in which a frontier AI company seeks to partner with corporate and government entities to root out security vulnerabilities using OpenAI’s most advanced models in the hopes of “seeing risk earlier, acting sooner, and helping make software resilient by design.” Glasswing rolled out last month alongside Anthropic’s announcement of its Claude Mythos Preview model, famously the model so capable—according to its creators at least—that it posed a danger to the world. As Anthropic’s system card for the model, explained:

  Claude Mythos Preview’s large increase in capabilities has led us to decide not to make it generally available. Instead, we are using it as part of a defensive cybersecurity program with a limited set of partners.   In other words, because it’s “the most cyber-capable model” Anthropic had ever built, it needs to be locked away for now, unless you’re a VIP. Influential software developer Daniel Stenberg has called this an “amazingly successful marketing stunt for sure.” Two days after that announcement, reports started materializing about a similar project at OpenAI. An anonymously sourced Axios story described it as “a product with advanced cybersecurity capabilities that it plans to release to a small set of partners.”

 The Daybreak announcement is much more public-facing than that, and comes across as significantly less ominous and secretive than Project Glasswing. The top of the page has two buttons: “Request a vulnerability scan” and “Contact sales.” When you click, “Request a vulnerability scan” you get a brief and unchallenging form:

 © OpenAI Altman said in his X post that OpenAI would “like to start working with as many companies as possible now,” and in fairness, that’s how the effort comes across. Compared to way Project Glasswing rolled out, with frightened governments scurrying around behind the scenes like agitated ants, it’s refreshing. The announcement says Daybreak makes use of Codex Security, which was announced as a research preview back in March, to create a “threat model” of a given system that outlines its functions, who is trusted by the system, and what the vulnerabilities therefore are. With that as its context, it then digs into your actual codebase for the real world exploits. Then, in theory, it Daybreak patches them.      #Daybreak #OpenAIs #Answer #Anthropics #Project #Glasswing #ArrivedArtificial intelligence,Cybersecurity,OpenAI
© OpenAI

Altman said in his X post that OpenAI would “like to start working with as many companies as possible now,” and in fairness, that’s how the effort comes across. Compared to way Project Glasswing rolled out, with frightened governments scurrying around behind the scenes like agitated ants, it’s refreshing.

The announcement says Daybreak makes use of Codex Security, which was announced as a research preview back in March, to create a “threat model” of a given system that outlines its functions, who is trusted by the system, and what the vulnerabilities therefore are. With that as its context, it then digs into your actual codebase for the real world exploits.

Then, in theory, it Daybreak patches them.

#Daybreak #OpenAIs #Answer #Anthropics #Project #Glasswing #ArrivedArtificial intelligence,Cybersecurity,OpenAI">‘Daybreak’: OpenAI’s Answer to Anthropic’s Project Glasswing Has Arrived
                On Monday, OpenAI announced something called “Daybreak,” a project that CEO Sam Altman says is meant to “accelerate cyber defense and continuously secure software.“  OpenAI is launching Daybreak, our effort to accelerate cyber defense and continuously secure software. AI is already good and about to get super good at cybersecurity; we’d like to start working with as many companies as possible now to help them continuously secure themselves. — Sam Altman (@sama) May 11, 2026    The OpenAI blog post announcing Daybreak doesn’t mention the word “project” at all, perhaps to make readers slightly less apt to compare it to Anthropic’s Project Glasswing, but watch this: this sounds mighty similar to Anthropic’s Project Glasswing. Like Project Glasswing, it’s a program in which a frontier AI company seeks to partner with corporate and government entities to root out security vulnerabilities using OpenAI’s most advanced models in the hopes of “seeing risk earlier, acting sooner, and helping make software resilient by design.” Glasswing rolled out last month alongside Anthropic’s announcement of its Claude Mythos Preview model, famously the model so capable—according to its creators at least—that it posed a danger to the world. As Anthropic’s system card for the model, explained:

  Claude Mythos Preview’s large increase in capabilities has led us to decide not to make it generally available. Instead, we are using it as part of a defensive cybersecurity program with a limited set of partners.   In other words, because it’s “the most cyber-capable model” Anthropic had ever built, it needs to be locked away for now, unless you’re a VIP. Influential software developer Daniel Stenberg has called this an “amazingly successful marketing stunt for sure.” Two days after that announcement, reports started materializing about a similar project at OpenAI. An anonymously sourced Axios story described it as “a product with advanced cybersecurity capabilities that it plans to release to a small set of partners.”

 The Daybreak announcement is much more public-facing than that, and comes across as significantly less ominous and secretive than Project Glasswing. The top of the page has two buttons: “Request a vulnerability scan” and “Contact sales.” When you click, “Request a vulnerability scan” you get a brief and unchallenging form:

 © OpenAI Altman said in his X post that OpenAI would “like to start working with as many companies as possible now,” and in fairness, that’s how the effort comes across. Compared to way Project Glasswing rolled out, with frightened governments scurrying around behind the scenes like agitated ants, it’s refreshing. The announcement says Daybreak makes use of Codex Security, which was announced as a research preview back in March, to create a “threat model” of a given system that outlines its functions, who is trusted by the system, and what the vulnerabilities therefore are. With that as its context, it then digs into your actual codebase for the real world exploits. Then, in theory, it Daybreak patches them.      #Daybreak #OpenAIs #Answer #Anthropics #Project #Glasswing #ArrivedArtificial intelligence,Cybersecurity,OpenAI

 

The OpenAI blog post announcing Daybreak doesn’t mention the word “project” at all, perhaps to make readers slightly less apt to compare it to Anthropic’s Project Glasswing, but watch this: this sounds mighty similar to Anthropic’s Project Glasswing. Like Project Glasswing, it’s a program in which a frontier AI company seeks to partner with corporate and government entities to root out security vulnerabilities using OpenAI’s most advanced models in the hopes of “seeing risk earlier, acting sooner, and helping make software resilient by design.”

Glasswing rolled out last month alongside Anthropic’s announcement of its Claude Mythos Preview model, famously the model so capable—according to its creators at least—that it posed a danger to the world. As Anthropic’s system card for the model, explained:

Claude Mythos Preview’s large increase in capabilities has led us to decide not to make it generally available. Instead, we are using it as part of a defensive cybersecurity program with a limited set of partners.

In other words, because it’s “the most cyber-capable model” Anthropic had ever built, it needs to be locked away for now, unless you’re a VIP. Influential software developer Daniel Stenberg has called this an “amazingly successful marketing stunt for sure.”

Two days after that announcement, reports started materializing about a similar project at OpenAI. An anonymously sourced Axios story described it as “a product with advanced cybersecurity capabilities that it plans to release to a small set of partners.”

The Daybreak announcement is much more public-facing than that, and comes across as significantly less ominous and secretive than Project Glasswing. The top of the page has two buttons: “Request a vulnerability scan” and “Contact sales.” When you click, “Request a vulnerability scan” you get a brief and unchallenging form:

‘Daybreak’: OpenAI’s Answer to Anthropic’s Project Glasswing Has Arrived
                On Monday, OpenAI announced something called “Daybreak,” a project that CEO Sam Altman says is meant to “accelerate cyber defense and continuously secure software.“  OpenAI is launching Daybreak, our effort to accelerate cyber defense and continuously secure software. AI is already good and about to get super good at cybersecurity; we’d like to start working with as many companies as possible now to help them continuously secure themselves. — Sam Altman (@sama) May 11, 2026    The OpenAI blog post announcing Daybreak doesn’t mention the word “project” at all, perhaps to make readers slightly less apt to compare it to Anthropic’s Project Glasswing, but watch this: this sounds mighty similar to Anthropic’s Project Glasswing. Like Project Glasswing, it’s a program in which a frontier AI company seeks to partner with corporate and government entities to root out security vulnerabilities using OpenAI’s most advanced models in the hopes of “seeing risk earlier, acting sooner, and helping make software resilient by design.” Glasswing rolled out last month alongside Anthropic’s announcement of its Claude Mythos Preview model, famously the model so capable—according to its creators at least—that it posed a danger to the world. As Anthropic’s system card for the model, explained:

  Claude Mythos Preview’s large increase in capabilities has led us to decide not to make it generally available. Instead, we are using it as part of a defensive cybersecurity program with a limited set of partners.   In other words, because it’s “the most cyber-capable model” Anthropic had ever built, it needs to be locked away for now, unless you’re a VIP. Influential software developer Daniel Stenberg has called this an “amazingly successful marketing stunt for sure.” Two days after that announcement, reports started materializing about a similar project at OpenAI. An anonymously sourced Axios story described it as “a product with advanced cybersecurity capabilities that it plans to release to a small set of partners.”

 The Daybreak announcement is much more public-facing than that, and comes across as significantly less ominous and secretive than Project Glasswing. The top of the page has two buttons: “Request a vulnerability scan” and “Contact sales.” When you click, “Request a vulnerability scan” you get a brief and unchallenging form:

 © OpenAI Altman said in his X post that OpenAI would “like to start working with as many companies as possible now,” and in fairness, that’s how the effort comes across. Compared to way Project Glasswing rolled out, with frightened governments scurrying around behind the scenes like agitated ants, it’s refreshing. The announcement says Daybreak makes use of Codex Security, which was announced as a research preview back in March, to create a “threat model” of a given system that outlines its functions, who is trusted by the system, and what the vulnerabilities therefore are. With that as its context, it then digs into your actual codebase for the real world exploits. Then, in theory, it Daybreak patches them.      #Daybreak #OpenAIs #Answer #Anthropics #Project #Glasswing #ArrivedArtificial intelligence,Cybersecurity,OpenAI
© OpenAI

Altman said in his X post that OpenAI would “like to start working with as many companies as possible now,” and in fairness, that’s how the effort comes across. Compared to way Project Glasswing rolled out, with frightened governments scurrying around behind the scenes like agitated ants, it’s refreshing.

The announcement says Daybreak makes use of Codex Security, which was announced as a research preview back in March, to create a “threat model” of a given system that outlines its functions, who is trusted by the system, and what the vulnerabilities therefore are. With that as its context, it then digs into your actual codebase for the real world exploits.

Then, in theory, it Daybreak patches them.

#Daybreak #OpenAIs #Answer #Anthropics #Project #Glasswing #ArrivedArtificial intelligence,Cybersecurity,OpenAI">‘Daybreak’: OpenAI’s Answer to Anthropic’s Project Glasswing Has Arrived

On Monday, OpenAI announced something called “Daybreak,” a project that CEO Sam Altman says is meant to “accelerate cyber defense and continuously secure software.“

 

The OpenAI blog post announcing Daybreak doesn’t mention the word “project” at all, perhaps to make readers slightly less apt to compare it to Anthropic’s Project Glasswing, but watch this: this sounds mighty similar to Anthropic’s Project Glasswing. Like Project Glasswing, it’s a program in which a frontier AI company seeks to partner with corporate and government entities to root out security vulnerabilities using OpenAI’s most advanced models in the hopes of “seeing risk earlier, acting sooner, and helping make software resilient by design.”

Glasswing rolled out last month alongside Anthropic’s announcement of its Claude Mythos Preview model, famously the model so capable—according to its creators at least—that it posed a danger to the world. As Anthropic’s system card for the model, explained:

Claude Mythos Preview’s large increase in capabilities has led us to decide not to make it generally available. Instead, we are using it as part of a defensive cybersecurity program with a limited set of partners.

In other words, because it’s “the most cyber-capable model” Anthropic had ever built, it needs to be locked away for now, unless you’re a VIP. Influential software developer Daniel Stenberg has called this an “amazingly successful marketing stunt for sure.”

Two days after that announcement, reports started materializing about a similar project at OpenAI. An anonymously sourced Axios story described it as “a product with advanced cybersecurity capabilities that it plans to release to a small set of partners.”

The Daybreak announcement is much more public-facing than that, and comes across as significantly less ominous and secretive than Project Glasswing. The top of the page has two buttons: “Request a vulnerability scan” and “Contact sales.” When you click, “Request a vulnerability scan” you get a brief and unchallenging form:

‘Daybreak’: OpenAI’s Answer to Anthropic’s Project Glasswing Has Arrived
                On Monday, OpenAI announced something called “Daybreak,” a project that CEO Sam Altman says is meant to “accelerate cyber defense and continuously secure software.“  OpenAI is launching Daybreak, our effort to accelerate cyber defense and continuously secure software. AI is already good and about to get super good at cybersecurity; we’d like to start working with as many companies as possible now to help them continuously secure themselves. — Sam Altman (@sama) May 11, 2026    The OpenAI blog post announcing Daybreak doesn’t mention the word “project” at all, perhaps to make readers slightly less apt to compare it to Anthropic’s Project Glasswing, but watch this: this sounds mighty similar to Anthropic’s Project Glasswing. Like Project Glasswing, it’s a program in which a frontier AI company seeks to partner with corporate and government entities to root out security vulnerabilities using OpenAI’s most advanced models in the hopes of “seeing risk earlier, acting sooner, and helping make software resilient by design.” Glasswing rolled out last month alongside Anthropic’s announcement of its Claude Mythos Preview model, famously the model so capable—according to its creators at least—that it posed a danger to the world. As Anthropic’s system card for the model, explained:

  Claude Mythos Preview’s large increase in capabilities has led us to decide not to make it generally available. Instead, we are using it as part of a defensive cybersecurity program with a limited set of partners.   In other words, because it’s “the most cyber-capable model” Anthropic had ever built, it needs to be locked away for now, unless you’re a VIP. Influential software developer Daniel Stenberg has called this an “amazingly successful marketing stunt for sure.” Two days after that announcement, reports started materializing about a similar project at OpenAI. An anonymously sourced Axios story described it as “a product with advanced cybersecurity capabilities that it plans to release to a small set of partners.”

 The Daybreak announcement is much more public-facing than that, and comes across as significantly less ominous and secretive than Project Glasswing. The top of the page has two buttons: “Request a vulnerability scan” and “Contact sales.” When you click, “Request a vulnerability scan” you get a brief and unchallenging form:

 © OpenAI Altman said in his X post that OpenAI would “like to start working with as many companies as possible now,” and in fairness, that’s how the effort comes across. Compared to way Project Glasswing rolled out, with frightened governments scurrying around behind the scenes like agitated ants, it’s refreshing. The announcement says Daybreak makes use of Codex Security, which was announced as a research preview back in March, to create a “threat model” of a given system that outlines its functions, who is trusted by the system, and what the vulnerabilities therefore are. With that as its context, it then digs into your actual codebase for the real world exploits. Then, in theory, it Daybreak patches them.      #Daybreak #OpenAIs #Answer #Anthropics #Project #Glasswing #ArrivedArtificial intelligence,Cybersecurity,OpenAI
© OpenAI

Altman said in his X post that OpenAI would “like to start working with as many companies as possible now,” and in fairness, that’s how the effort comes across. Compared to way Project Glasswing rolled out, with frightened governments scurrying around behind the scenes like agitated ants, it’s refreshing.

The announcement says Daybreak makes use of Codex Security, which was announced as a research preview back in March, to create a “threat model” of a given system that outlines its functions, who is trusted by the system, and what the vulnerabilities therefore are. With that as its context, it then digs into your actual codebase for the real world exploits.

Then, in theory, it Daybreak patches them.

#Daybreak #OpenAIs #Answer #Anthropics #Project #Glasswing #ArrivedArtificial intelligence,Cybersecurity,OpenAI
Often written about and reviewed on WIRED, OnePlus is a favorite device maker among Android enthusiasts who want the kind of clean design you get with an iPhone. Carrying several types of phones, tablets, keyboards, and other tech gear, OnePlus uses an Android-based operating system, is universally unblocked and works with all US carriers. We know how important your tech purchases are (duh, we’re WIRED) and we have a OnePlus promo code to help you save.

Offers Now Available for OnePlus 15 and OnePlus 13

The anticipated OnePlus 15 has launched with new buzz-worthy features and improvements on the already-polished tech from techy fan favorite, OnePlus. It’s true what they say: the early bird gets the worm. When you subscribe today for OnePlus newsletters and information about the latest drops, you can get $50 off or a chance to win the OnePlus Pad 3 for free. And, if you decide on the OnePlus 13 instead, you can get a Black Eclipse12 GB RAM with 256 GB ROM for $900, and get a free gift with purchase.

OnePlus Phone: OnePlus 12 Now Available

As mentioned, we at WIRED love OnePlus because of the affordable price point while maintaining solid quality. The newest iteration of the OnePlus 12 impressed us. One of the biggest drawbacks in previous models was the camera quality, but OnePlus has done a lot of work to improve it in the past few years and it’s now on level with competitors like Samsung. Our senior reviews editor and tech overlord Julian Chokkattu called the newest iteration a “Very Good Phone” (high praise from him). It also charges with blazing speed.

We also made a bold statement about the OnePlus Pad, whose existence we (perhaps polarizing) said “proves that Android tablets don’t have to suck”—and still think it’s a worthy iPad alternative, especially at a fair price point in the $400 range. Plus, we love their fun folding phone, the OnePlus Open, and recommend the OnePlus Keyboard 81 Pro if you’re a huge computer nerd.

OnePlus Promo: 30% Off OnePlus Buds 4

Looking to upgrade your sound experience for less? The OnePlus Buds 4 are a great choice for most people, with 11mm audio drivers for balanced, true-to-life acoustics for an unmatched sound. The high-resolution audio features LHDC 5.0 technology and Bluetooth 5.4 connectivity for super sound quality. Plus, they feature active noise cancellation so you can tune out the world and focus on what matters most to you. The Buds 4 have even more smart features, like adaptive mode which switches between ANC and transparency modes, and an ergonomic, comfortable in-ear design.

#Top #OnePlus #Promo #Codes #Monthcoupons,shopping">Top OnePlus Promo Codes: 30% Off This MonthOften written about and reviewed on WIRED, OnePlus is a favorite device maker among Android enthusiasts who want the kind of clean design you get with an iPhone. Carrying several types of phones, tablets, keyboards, and other tech gear, OnePlus uses an Android-based operating system, is universally unblocked and works with all US carriers. We know how important your tech purchases are (duh, we’re WIRED) and we have a OnePlus promo code to help you save.Offers Now Available for OnePlus 15 and OnePlus 13The anticipated OnePlus 15 has launched with new buzz-worthy features and improvements on the already-polished tech from techy fan favorite, OnePlus. It’s true what they say: the early bird gets the worm. When you subscribe today for OnePlus newsletters and information about the latest drops, you can get  off or a chance to win the OnePlus Pad 3 for free. And, if you decide on the OnePlus 13 instead, you can get a Black Eclipse12 GB RAM with 256 GB ROM for 0, and get a free gift with purchase.OnePlus Phone: OnePlus 12 Now AvailableAs mentioned, we at WIRED love OnePlus because of the affordable price point while maintaining solid quality. The newest iteration of the OnePlus 12 impressed us. One of the biggest drawbacks in previous models was the camera quality, but OnePlus has done a lot of work to improve it in the past few years and it’s now on level with competitors like Samsung. Our senior reviews editor and tech overlord Julian Chokkattu called the newest iteration a “Very Good Phone” (high praise from him). It also charges with blazing speed.We also made a bold statement about the OnePlus Pad, whose existence we (perhaps polarizing) said “proves that Android tablets don’t have to suck”—and still think it’s a worthy iPad alternative, especially at a fair price point in the 0 range. Plus, we love their fun folding phone, the OnePlus Open, and recommend the OnePlus Keyboard 81 Pro if you’re a huge computer nerd.OnePlus Promo: 30% Off OnePlus Buds 4Looking to upgrade your sound experience for less? The OnePlus Buds 4 are a great choice for most people, with 11mm audio drivers for balanced, true-to-life acoustics for an unmatched sound. The high-resolution audio features LHDC 5.0 technology and Bluetooth 5.4 connectivity for super sound quality. Plus, they feature active noise cancellation so you can tune out the world and focus on what matters most to you. The Buds 4 have even more smart features, like adaptive mode which switches between ANC and transparency modes, and an ergonomic, comfortable in-ear design.#Top #OnePlus #Promo #Codes #Monthcoupons,shopping

reviewed on WIRED, OnePlus is a favorite device maker among Android enthusiasts who want the kind of clean design you get with an iPhone. Carrying several types of phones, tablets, keyboards, and other tech gear, OnePlus uses an Android-based operating system, is universally unblocked and works with all US carriers. We know how important your tech purchases are (duh, we’re WIRED) and we have a OnePlus promo code to help you save.

Offers Now Available for OnePlus 15 and OnePlus 13

The anticipated OnePlus 15 has launched with new buzz-worthy features and improvements on the already-polished tech from techy fan favorite, OnePlus. It’s true what they say: the early bird gets the worm. When you subscribe today for OnePlus newsletters and information about the latest drops, you can get $50 off or a chance to win the OnePlus Pad 3 for free. And, if you decide on the OnePlus 13 instead, you can get a Black Eclipse12 GB RAM with 256 GB ROM for $900, and get a free gift with purchase.

OnePlus Phone: OnePlus 12 Now Available

As mentioned, we at WIRED love OnePlus because of the affordable price point while maintaining solid quality. The newest iteration of the OnePlus 12 impressed us. One of the biggest drawbacks in previous models was the camera quality, but OnePlus has done a lot of work to improve it in the past few years and it’s now on level with competitors like Samsung. Our senior reviews editor and tech overlord Julian Chokkattu called the newest iteration a “Very Good Phone” (high praise from him). It also charges with blazing speed.

We also made a bold statement about the OnePlus Pad, whose existence we (perhaps polarizing) said “proves that Android tablets don’t have to suck”—and still think it’s a worthy iPad alternative, especially at a fair price point in the $400 range. Plus, we love their fun folding phone, the OnePlus Open, and recommend the OnePlus Keyboard 81 Pro if you’re a huge computer nerd.

OnePlus Promo: 30% Off OnePlus Buds 4

Looking to upgrade your sound experience for less? The OnePlus Buds 4 are a great choice for most people, with 11mm audio drivers for balanced, true-to-life acoustics for an unmatched sound. The high-resolution audio features LHDC 5.0 technology and Bluetooth 5.4 connectivity for super sound quality. Plus, they feature active noise cancellation so you can tune out the world and focus on what matters most to you. The Buds 4 have even more smart features, like adaptive mode which switches between ANC and transparency modes, and an ergonomic, comfortable in-ear design.

#Top #OnePlus #Promo #Codes #Monthcoupons,shopping">Top OnePlus Promo Codes: 30% Off This Month

Often written about and reviewed on WIRED, OnePlus is a favorite device maker among Android enthusiasts who want the kind of clean design you get with an iPhone. Carrying several types of phones, tablets, keyboards, and other tech gear, OnePlus uses an Android-based operating system, is universally unblocked and works with all US carriers. We know how important your tech purchases are (duh, we’re WIRED) and we have a OnePlus promo code to help you save.

Offers Now Available for OnePlus 15 and OnePlus 13

The anticipated OnePlus 15 has launched with new buzz-worthy features and improvements on the already-polished tech from techy fan favorite, OnePlus. It’s true what they say: the early bird gets the worm. When you subscribe today for OnePlus newsletters and information about the latest drops, you can get $50 off or a chance to win the OnePlus Pad 3 for free. And, if you decide on the OnePlus 13 instead, you can get a Black Eclipse12 GB RAM with 256 GB ROM for $900, and get a free gift with purchase.

OnePlus Phone: OnePlus 12 Now Available

As mentioned, we at WIRED love OnePlus because of the affordable price point while maintaining solid quality. The newest iteration of the OnePlus 12 impressed us. One of the biggest drawbacks in previous models was the camera quality, but OnePlus has done a lot of work to improve it in the past few years and it’s now on level with competitors like Samsung. Our senior reviews editor and tech overlord Julian Chokkattu called the newest iteration a “Very Good Phone” (high praise from him). It also charges with blazing speed.

We also made a bold statement about the OnePlus Pad, whose existence we (perhaps polarizing) said “proves that Android tablets don’t have to suck”—and still think it’s a worthy iPad alternative, especially at a fair price point in the $400 range. Plus, we love their fun folding phone, the OnePlus Open, and recommend the OnePlus Keyboard 81 Pro if you’re a huge computer nerd.

OnePlus Promo: 30% Off OnePlus Buds 4

Looking to upgrade your sound experience for less? The OnePlus Buds 4 are a great choice for most people, with 11mm audio drivers for balanced, true-to-life acoustics for an unmatched sound. The high-resolution audio features LHDC 5.0 technology and Bluetooth 5.4 connectivity for super sound quality. Plus, they feature active noise cancellation so you can tune out the world and focus on what matters most to you. The Buds 4 have even more smart features, like adaptive mode which switches between ANC and transparency modes, and an ergonomic, comfortable in-ear design.

#Top #OnePlus #Promo #Codes #Monthcoupons,shopping

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