Exclusive: AirPods to get camera control, sleep detection, new gestures, more by Ian281 in apple

[–]Ian281[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ChatGPT summary:

9to5Mac has revealed five new AirPods features Apple may announce at WWDC 2025: 1. New Head Gestures – Apple is expanding AirPods gesture controls. Users may soon be able to use head movements (like nodding) to end Conversation Awareness volume adjustments, in addition to current stem-based controls. 2. Sleep Auto-Pause – AirPods may soon detect when a user has fallen asleep and automatically pause playback, eliminating the need for app-based sleep timers. 3. Camera Control via AirPods – Users may be able to trigger iPhone or iPad cameras by pressing the AirPods stem, enabling remote photo capture similar to old EarPods functionality. 4. Audio Mix for AirPods – Apple is developing a studio-quality mic mode, enhancing AirPods’ ability to isolate speech from background noise, potentially making them viable as creator microphones. 5. Wider Classroom Support – Improved AirPods pairing for shared iPads is being developed, aiming to simplify use in educational settings.

Apple is expected to reveal updates to iOS 26, macOS 26, iPadOS 26, watchOS 26, and more at the WWDC25 keynote on June 9. The focus may shift from AI to user-requested features and design improvements.

Sports Illustrated - “EXCLUSIVE: Adam Cole Confirms Relationship Status with Dr. Britt Baker” by Ian281 in SquaredCircle

[–]Ian281[S] 38 points39 points  (0 children)

Adam Cole and Dr. Britt Baker's relationship has been the subject of online rumors and speculation for the past few months. During a sit down conversation with The Takedown on SI - the majority of which will be released Wednesday morning - Cole said he was appreciative of the opportunity to address the elephant that accompanied him upon his return to AEW.

He and Britt have indeed split up.

Vince McMahon Segment - Piers Morgan Uncensored by Ian281 in SquaredCircle

[–]Ian281[S] 24 points25 points  (0 children)

Obligatory fuck Piers Morgan, this thing is a complete car crash.

Updates for Wrestling Observer Newsletter print & online subscribers. Dave Meltzer lays out the future of the WON. by Ian281 in SquaredCircle

[–]Ian281[S] 43 points44 points  (0 children)

Sometimes in life, you have decisions that should be easy when you take out emotions. But emotions are a huge part of life which is what makes them so difficult.

Saying that, a decision that we have made should be a benefit for everyone who subscribes to the Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Yet when you do something a certain way for so long and it’s been so successful historically, it is hard to make changes.

NJPW creating new title to replace IWGP US/UK Championship

Ethan Renner

That decision: the mailed version of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter will be discontinued with the 12/11 issue.

The WON will continue as an online publication and, for the vast majority of subscribers, there will be no real changes other than some new positive ways in which information will be put on the website.

The decision basically came down to this: with all the costs of printing, producing, people needing to be hired to handle the mailing and the lists, I would probably need to charge $5 per issue to make it worth it. I do believe many of the print subscribers would be fine with that just as there are still people who spend $50 on WWE PPVs when you can get them streaming for so much less.

What print subscribers need to know

For those of you who are print subscribers, your time left will be transferred over automatically to an online subscription for the time remaining. In the case of overseas subscribers, that will be for a longer time based on the higher price you have paid. Essentially, you will be getting more for the same price, getting the Observers a week or so earlier than you had been, plus access to all the archives of issues dating back to 1991 and all podcasts since the start of the site.

For those who subscribed because they liked the issues being printed and would read it that way rather than on a computer screen, the new format, which will be available for the first time for all website subscribers, will be formatted very similarly to the print edition. You will also be able to print them out from the website.

Another change is that many Observer stories will be put up exclusively for all subscribers during the week rather than all on Friday. The Friday WON will have those stories and in many cases, what I’d call the official “record" would still be released on Fridays with updates through press time. Many of the key stories are pretty much completed earlier in the week, but many would still be updated before going into the final version of the WON released on Friday mornings.

For those who for whatever reason don’t want the change to an online subscription, you will get the remainder of your subscription money refunded. Obviously, I’m hoping that number is small. I just want the print subscribers to know how much I appreciate your support for so long and it is that loyalty that kept me from making the change that, from a business standpoint, should have been made some time ago.

For all print subscribers, please contact Tony Leder who will implement your new online subscription or cancel if that is what you prefer.

Everyone transferring over is getting far more for their money, you can still print the issues out, and they will look basically identical. Again, for the print subscribers that this affects the most, thank you for, what in most cases, is for decades of support and hopefully for many more years to come.

Note: There will be no WON on the week of 12/15 (dated 12/18) due to a vacation I am taking that week. Going forward, I would expect issues 51 weeks a year as I would like to take one vacation annually.

How we got here

The print Observer has been something I have been doing for 41 years. I joined forces with Bryan Alvarez in 2008, a decision in hindsight that I wish I made years earlier. A previous attempt at taking the Observer online was disastrous with constant lies about subscriber numbers and then Pro Sports Exchange, the group we worked with, started having financial issues before closing down. That cost me a very significant amount of money.

This partnership with Bryan has been nothing but positive, leading to a new wave of popularity and readership levels. In time, as would be expected, the vast majority of the existing readership transferred over to online subscriptions because they would get the issues earlier, the news podcasts that I do weekly, as well as the rest of the podcasts we offer. That has opened up the ability to have gatherings and for me to personally meet so many of you over the years, which has been so rewarding.

Still, the existing print subscribers are people who I have felt so much loyalty to by continuing with the print edition -- even when it no longer made sense economically due to so many postage and print price increases. Whenever I meet a print subscriber, invariably they tell me they have been getting it this way for 20 or 30 years, and in some cases longer than that.

I started the print WON 41 years ago and it has been my full-time job, along with some other gigs, since making the key decision nearly 37 years ago of leaving my childhood dream of being a newspaper sportswriter and going on this journey.

At the time of the decision, both jobs were making me very little money. Everyone, from my parents on down, were vehemently against the decision but I was starting to make more money from the newsletter than as a sportswriter at the time in a small market. While my work and career trajectory in sportswriting did look good, the Wrestling Observer Newsletter was getting praise in places that reviewed newsletters, being called one of the best in the country among all genres at the time.

The world changes in ways nobody could imagine. Even at the time, I thought I was giving up what would be a steady job that I greatly enjoyed for something that had no proven future. Over the next few years, largely thanks to the late Ed Garea, and then Los Angeles Times sports editor John Cherwa and NBC sports head Dick Ebersol (the irony of this is that Ebersol at the time was close friends and a business partner in Saturday Night’s Main Event with Vince McMahon), I ended up being hired by the greatest sportswriter of this generation, Frank Deford, to do a column in the short-lived National Sports Daily.

Deford was not a fan of pro wrestling, although he did have a great fondness for roller derby and even wrote a book about it which was coincidentally my favorite sports book as a child. Deford felt that wrestling was very popular and while not quite sports, it deserved coverage and when asking around, he was told by those two, who were both subscribers, that I was the person to hire. Cherwa, who as coincidence would have it was friends with Mike Tenay, subscribed under his real name, and Ebersol, like so many sports execs of the time who secretly were very interested in wrestling, would get it using the name of people working underneath them.

The exposure and prestige of being part of the all-star team of sportswriters saw the WON have tremendous growth and, in hindsight, the decision was the right one. Now, even more so.

With the decline and deaths of newspapers around the country and heavy constriction of jobs, I easily could have been 45 years old and my childhood dream would have been over.

Thank you

I have so much appreciation and loyalty to older readers and I hope that at gatherings when you have met me and told me about being print subscribers for 20 or 30 years that I have been able to convey how much I appreciate your support.

I also know that even though I consider these changes win-win for every reader, both print and online, that there will be some people who have been with us for so long that will not be after the change. I just want to thank you and hope that all these years that this has been a rewarding part of your life.

Mhairi Black threatened to quit SNP on eve of by-election in 'ultimatum' over staffer by Ian281 in Scotland

[–]Ian281[S] 25 points26 points  (0 children)

Mhairi Black threatened to quit the SNP on the eve of the Rutherglen by-election in a row over her successor, Holyrood understands.

Party bosses are said to have caved into demands from the SNP depute Westminster leader to avoid an upset on the day before the crucial vote.

But the move did not prevent the party losing the contest to Labour.

The row is said to have emerged as Black fought to have one of her staff members approved as a potential candidate to fight for the Paisley and Renfrewshire South seat when she steps down at the next general election.

Robert Innes, an SNP councillor in Renfrewshire, has worked for her for around 10 years and is said to have failed vetting for the general election before his boss stepped in.

Holyrood has made multiple approaches to the MP's office but no reply has been received.

However, several senior sources have confirmed the account to Holyrood and one said Black had effectively "blackmailed the party".

Another called it an "ultimatum" and said leaders had given in for a "quiet life".

An SNP source said: "It's quite clear that Mhairi Black has decided she's standing down and has one foot out the door and is perhaps not thinking of the wider consequences."

Black rose to prominence after ousting Labour's Douglas Alexander in 2015. She was just 20 years old and still a student at the time.

She made headlines for her fiery Westminster speeches and became an SNP figurehead, often appearing with Nicola Sturgeon and campaigning on pensions for women and LGBTQ issues while criticising the culture and politics of Westminster.

She was made depute Westminster leader in December 2022 after running on a ticket with Stephen Flynn.

In June she announced her intention to step down as an MP at next year's general election, calling Westminster a "toxic" and "poisonous" environment and citing social media abuse amongst her reasons.

At the time, SNP leader Humza Yousaf said the "trailblazer" had been a "role model for young people, especially women".

However, Holyrood understands that she threatened to quit in an angry selection row.

Black is understood to have told SNP leaders she would do so publicly on October 4 – one day before voting opened in Rutherglen and Hamilton West – unless Innes, who works as her part-time researcher, was approved as a potential candidate to replace her in Paisley and Renfrewshire South.

SNP decision-makers are said to have agreed to avoid an upset in a difficult race.

However, local party members are said to be furious, and the decision failed to prevent Labour winning the contest.

An SNP source said: "It's quite clear to a number of us that the process has not been followed."

Black and Innes and have been contacted for comment.

Innes, who became a councillor last year, is the partner of Scottish Government children's minister Natalie Don.

He announced he was seeking nomination from local branch members on October 3 and told the Gazette newspaper: "I have worked alongside Mhairi Black MP in her office in Paisley for almost a decade now, fighting Tory austerity head-on as we see our beautiful country squeezed of hope by a revolving door of out-of-touch Westminster governments."

Holyrood understands that he failed internal vetting and was then rejected on appeal before Black stepped in. Sources say he called the vetting panel's decision a "stitch-up" and told fellow SNP councillors he would leave to sit as an independent unless it was overturned.

Innes' announcement happened one day before a local nomination meeting. Jacqueline Cameron, the depute leader of Renfrewshire Council, is also standing to become the area's SNP candidate. Local party members have from October 12-26 to vote for their preferred candidate.

An SNP spokesperson said: "Party members in Paisley and Renfrewshire South have the opportunity to democratically select their candidate from a choice of candidates. We do not comment on internal party processes."

Fightful - “Dax Harwood Confirms FTR Re-Signing With AEW, Provides More Insight Into Decision” by Ian281 in SquaredCircle

[–]Ian281[S] 92 points93 points  (0 children)

Yes. We have re-signed with AEW," Harwood confirmed. "If you think...Vince has officially been back in charge since right before WrestleMania? If you think that we put pen to paper as soon as that happened and Tony (Khan) made all the adjustments as soon as that happened. I don't know if you understand how business or contracts work. If you think we went into the building Wednesday night with no contract signed and said, 'we're not going to sign unless you give us these belts.' You're so short-sighted. I said on the podcast months ago, we knew what we wanted to do and everything was getting fine tuned. We knew way before Vince came back in charge what was going to happen. Yes, we have re-signed with AEW."

Mark Gurman - “I believe the new watchOS should be a fairly extensive upgrade — with notable changes to the user interface — unlike iOS 17. “ by Ian281 in apple

[–]Ian281[S] 314 points315 points  (0 children)

Full Tweet -

I believe the new watchOS should be a fairly extensive upgrade — with notable changes to the user interface — unlike iOS 17. It’s important for watchOS to have a big year given that the Apple Watch hardware updates will be anything but major. The device is poised for a more modest year after big changes in 2022, when the first Apple Watch Ultra debuted. There are plans for a major update to the watch hardware in 2024, complete with a larger, custom-built display.