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  • HomePod mini 2 rumors: Expect tiny Apple speaker to get smarter

    HomePod mini 2 rumors: Expect tiny Apple speaker to get smarter

    Apple is reportedly preparing a new HomePod mini version, the first upgrade to the affordable smart speaker in five years. HomePod mini 2 rumors suggest a considerable jump in features, including support for Apple Intelligence.

    Here’s what the rumors say about HomePod mini 2, which is supposedly coming soon.

    HomePod mini 2 rumors: More smarts

    Apple’s HomePod mini is a compact smart speaker designed to deliver room-filling sound despite its small size. Beyond simply playing music and podcasts, it’s powered by Siri and serves as a smart home hub, allowing users to control HomeKit devices, send intercom messages, set reminders and get quick answers using just their voice.

    The original launched in 2020 to generally positive reviews. Half a decade later, an upgrade is supposedly finally on the way, according to the latest HomePod mini 2 rumors.

    After so long, it’s no surprise the processor at the heart of the smart speaker is in for an upgrade. It is “set to get a new chip to also support the new Siri and Apple Intelligence features,” according to an unconfirmed report from Bloomberg.

    Apple promised an AI-enhanced version of Siri that’s expected in spring 2026, making the voice assistant considerably more useful than the (lame) current version. This might even include an AI chatbot.

    Better audio and wireless capabilities

    HomePod mini 2 rumors also promise a new wireless chip to improve the smart speaker’s Wi-Fi performance. Also supposedly incoming is a new ultra-wide band chip, which is used when handing off audio from a nearby iPhone.

    Naturally, the Bloomberg report mentions “improved audio quality.” After five years, Apple has undoubtedly developed new audio tech for its speakers.

    The current HomePod mini comes in a range of colors, from black and white to orange, yellow and blue. Apple is reportedly considering some new ones, including red.

    HomePod mini 2 price and launch date?

    Unfortunately, the rumors don’t yet give an exact launch date for HomePod mini 2. That said, it’s definitely expected soon. It could debut at Tuesday’s Awe Dropping event, which means it could come out at the same time as the iPhone 17 series.

    Price also remains a mystery. The current version goes for $99.


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  • OPEC+ Speeds Up Return of Next Tier of Halted Oil Production

    OPEC+ Speeds Up Return of Next Tier of Halted Oil Production

    OPEC+ agreed to accelerate the return of another chunk of oil that it’s been withholding from the market, as the group sticks with a strategy of prioritizing market share over prices.

    In a virtual monthly meeting that lasted just 11 minutes, key alliance members approved returning 137,000 barrels a day from October. It’s the first sliver of a bigger 1.65 million barrels a day tranche of supply that was meant to be held back until the end of next year, suggesting cautious optimism about the market.

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  • Japan’s Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba steps down, responding to party pressure

    Japan’s Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba steps down, responding to party pressure

    TOKYO (AP) — Japan’s Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba announced Sunday that he will resign, following growing calls from within his party to take responsibility for a historic defeat in July’s parliamentary election.

    Ishiba, who took office in October, said he was stepping down as prime minister and as the head of his conservative Liberal Democratic Party.

    Ishiba, a 68-year-old centrist, had resisted demands from opponents further to the right within his own party to resign. He argued that he wanted to avoid a political vacuum at a time when Japan faces key domestic and international challenges, including U.S. tariffs, rising prices and growing tensions in the Asia-Pacific.

    Ishiba explained at a news conference Sunday night that he had intended for some time to take responsibility for his party’s summer election loss, but was first determined to make progress in tariff negotiations with the United States. He described it as matter of the national interest.

    “Who would seriously negotiate with a government whose leader says he is stepping down?” Ishiba said.

    He said the moment had arrived with an order by U.S. President Donald Trump on Friday to lower tariffs on Japanese cars and other products from 25% to 15%.

    “Having reached a milestone in the U.S. tariff negotiations, I decided now is the time to make way for a successor,” Ishiba said.

    Pressure from the party

    The resignation came one day before Ishiba’s party was to decide whether to hold an early leadership election, which would have amounted to a virtual no-confidence motion against him if approved.

    He said he made the “painful decision to resign” to avert that step because “it would cause a critical division within the party, and that is absolutely not my intention.”

    Ishiba said he would instead start a process to hold a party leadership vote to choose his replacement, which is expected to be held in October. He is to remain as prime minister until a new leader is elected and endorsed by the parliament.

    Ishiba’s leadership that lasted only one year underscores the instability of Japan’s minority government.

    A maverick who won the leadership in his fifth attempts, Ishiba said he regrets he could not live up to voters’ expectations for change. “As a result, I failed to go my own way, and I wonder how I could have done better,” he said.

    He said he is not going to run in the next leadership race, even though he regrets leaving behind unfinished business, such as measures for salary increases, agricultural reforms and further strengthening Japan’s security. He asked his future successor to tackle the issues he cherished.

    Loss after loss

    In July, Ishiba’s ruling coalition failed to secure a majority in the 248-seat upper house in a crucial parliamentary election, weakening his government. The loss followed a defeat in the more powerful lower house, where the party-led coalition lost its majority in October, only two weeks after Ishiba took over.

    Liberal Democratic lawmakers who support the prime minister said those who lost seats were largely ultra-conservatives who were linked to corruption scandals before Ishiba took office. Public polling showed that pressure on Ishiba to resign had the reverse effect and caused his support to grow.

    Calls for Ishiba to step down grew after the Liberal Democratic Party last week called for a “complete overhaul” of the party following its losses.

    Taro Aso, a conservative heavyweight known for his anti-Ishiba stance, and a minister and several deputy ministers in the Ishiba Cabinet requested an early vote, prompting others to follow suit.

    Former Health Minister Norihisa Tamura said on a talk show of the public broadcaster NHK earlier Sunday that the best way to heal party divisions and move forward is for Ishiba “to settle” the dispute before Monday’s vote. The party has already been distracted from necessary work on economic measures and on figuring out ways to gain opposition support in the next parliamentary session, Tamura said.

    Possible candidates to replace Ishiba include Agriculture Minister Shinjiro Koizumi, as well as ultra-conservative former economic security minister Sanae Takaichi and Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi, a moderate and the protege of former Prime Minister Fumio Kishida.

    Lacking a majority in both houses, the next party leader will have to work with the main opposition parties to get bills passed, experts say, or else face constant risks of no-confidence motions.

    The opposition parties, however, are too splintered to form a coalition to topple the government.

    Voters say they want to see the party move forward and get down to work but they worry about uncertainty.

    Office worker Takahiro Uchi welcomed Ishiba’s resignation, as he hopes for change, “but at the same time, there is also uncertainty and concern about who will take over next.” Masataka Nishioka, who works for a dental equipment company, said, “I really hope for a kind of politics that makes life easier for everyone.”

    ___

    AP video journalist Ayaka McGill in Tokyo contributed.


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  • London underground workers set to start week of strike action – Reuters

    1. London underground workers set to start week of strike action  Reuters
    2. London tube users warned to plan for disruption as strike action escalates  The Guardian
    3. London’s subway system is grinding to a halt as Underground staff go on strike  The Washington Post
    4. Travel disruption for Tube passengers because of strikes  uk.finance.yahoo.com
    5. Tube strikes begin in London  feeds.bbci.co.uk

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  • Aumolertinib Plus Chemotherapy Improves PFS in EGFR-Mutated NSCLC

    Aumolertinib Plus Chemotherapy Improves PFS in EGFR-Mutated NSCLC

    EGFR-Mutated NSCLC |Image by Ashling Wahner

    & MJH Life Sciences Using AI

    Frontline treatment with aumolertinib combined with chemotherapy demonstrated a statistically significant improvement in the median progression-free survival (PFS) compared with aumolertinib monotherapy in patients with EGFR-mutated non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) harboring concomitant tumor suppressor gene (TSG) alterations, according to findings from the phase 3 ACROSS 2 study (NCT04500717).1

    At a median follow-up of 25.3 months, PFS events occurred in 53.4% of patients (n = 63). The investigator-assessed median PFS was 19.8 months with the addition of carboplatin/pemetrexed to aumolertinib vs 16.5 months with aumolertinib alone (HR, 0.55; 95% CI, 0.34-0.91; P = .021).

    The combination of aumolertinib with carboplatin-pemetrexed results in statistically significant improvement of median PFS compared with monotherapy in these patients,” lead study Jie Wang, MD, PhD, shared in a presentation of the data at the International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer 2025 World Conference on Lung Cancer.

    Wang is the vice chief of Medical Oncology at the Cancer Hospital of Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College in Beijing, China.

    ACROSS 2 Study Breakdown

    The ACROSS 2 trial is a phase 3, prospective, multicenter, randomized study designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of aumolertinib in combination with chemotherapy compared with aumolertinib alone in patients with NSCLC harboring EGFR mutations and concomitant tumor suppressor gene alterations.

    Eligible patients include those 18 years of age or older with stage IIIB to stage IV next-generation sequencing–confirmed EGFR-mutated NSCLC who have not received prior systemic therapy for advanced disease. However, prior treatment of adjuvant, neoadjuvant treatment, and concurrent radiochemotherapy is allowed if at least 6 months have passed since the completion of therapy.2 Additionally, patients are also required to have an ECOG performance status of 0 or 1 and could have asymptomatic central nervous system metastases.1

    Furthermore, patients on the study were randomly assigned 1:1. In the experimental arm, patients receive aumolertinib at 110 mg orally once daily in combination with pemetrexed (500 mg/m² intravenously [IV] on day 1 of each 3-week cycle) plus carboplatin (area under the curve 5 on day 1 of each cycle) for 4 to 6 cycles. This is followed by maintenance therapy with pemetrexed until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. In the control arm, patients receive aumolertinib at 110 mg orally once daily as monotherapy, continued until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity.

    The primary end point is investigator-assessed PFS per RECIST 1.1 criteria. Secondary end points include overall survival (OS), objective response rate (ORR), duration of response (DOR), disease control rate (DCR), and safety/tolerability outcomes.

    Subgroup Analysis

    By mutational subgroup, patients with TP53 co-mutations achieved a median PFS of 18.7 months with aumolertinib plus carboplatin/pemetrexed vs 16.3 months with aumolertinib monotherapy (HR, 0.55; 95% CI, 0.33-0.93; P = .024). In those with EGFR exon 19 deletions (19DEL), median PFS was not reached with the combination vs 16.3 months with monotherapy (HR, 0.46; 95% CI, 0.21-0.99; P = .055). For patients harboring EGFR L858R mutations, the median PFS was 18.7 months with the combination vs 16.5 months with aumolertinib alone (HR, 0.63; 95% CI, 0.33-1.20; P = .154).

    Across the study population, the ORR was 70.4% in the combination arm compared with 67.2% in the monotherapy arm. The DCR was 92.6% vs 98.4%, respectively.

    Safety Findings

    In the combination arm (n = 54), the most common treatment-emergent adverse effects (TEAEs) observed in at least 20% of patients included anemia (any-grade, 61.1%; grade ≥3, 7.4%), decreased white blood cell count (53.7%; 9.3%), increased aspartate aminotransferase (AST; 51.9%; 1.9%), increased alanine aminotransferase (ALT; 48.1%; 5.6%), and decreased neutrophil count (44.4%; 20.4%). Other frequently reported TEAEs were increased creatine kinase (any-grade, 27.8%), rash (27.8%), nausea (24.1%), decreased platelet count (22.2%), increased serum creatinine (22.2%), and constipation (20.4%).

    Patients treated with aumolertinib monotherapy (n = 64) had lower rates of TEAEs overall. Specifically, the most common any-grade TEAEs observed included increased creatine kinase (42.2%), increased AST (26.6%), rash (20.3%), and increased ALT (18.8%).

    References

    1. Wang J. Aumolertinib plus chemotherapy for NSCLC with EGFR and concomitant tumor suppressor genes (ACROSS 2): phase III study. Presented at: IASLC 2025 World Conference on Lung Cancer; September 6-9, 2025; Barcelona, Spain. Abstract 2205.
    2. Aumolertinib plus chemotherapy as first-line treatment in patients with EGFR concomitant tumor suppressor gene mutation (ACROSS2). ClinicalTrials.gov. Updated August 5, 2020. Accessed September 7, 2025. https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT04500717

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  • Google Starts Silently Tracking Your iPhone—One Click Stops It

    Google Starts Silently Tracking Your iPhone—One Click Stops It

    Is your iPhone listening to you — no, well not exactly. But that doesn’t stop millions assuming it is. What is happening is a new form of silent tracking that identifies your phone across all the websites you visit, without you ever knowing it’s happening.

    This is called digital fingerprinting. Google has warned “this subverts user choice and is wrong.” That’s because “unlike cookies, users cannot clear their fingerprint, and therefore cannot control how their information is collected.”

    But Google suddenly changed its mind.

    ForbesFBI Warning—Major Problem With Apple’s iPhone Encryption

    Just as with its decision to unkill tracking cookies, Google has also brought back digital fingerprinting this year. And it’s not just browsers any more — all your smart devices can be part of this tracking ecosystem built around your life.

    But browsers are at the heart of any tracking — because this is where you visit websites that neatly define your life, job, interests and habits. This is where you shop, work, play, research and hang out. None of us would choose to make our internet history public.

    Digital fingerprinting collates an array of data from your phone — your IP address, device model and OS, time zone, setup and anything else if can get — to create a unique identifier in aggregate, even if each individual data snippet us useless on its own.

    If you’re interacting with Google on your iPhone you’re leaving a fingerprint, even if you use Safari and avoid Google’s own Chrome browser on privacy grounds. But Apple is fighting back with iOS 26 to stop this working as Google might like. And you can enable this now — and reclaim some of the privacy lost to this invasive new tracking.

    In the Safari settings on your iPhone, under “Advanced,” you will see an option called “Advanced Tracking and Fingerprinting Protection.” By default this is currently toggled to “Private Browsing,” but will default to “All Browsing” in iOS 26.

    This setting essentially confuses digital fingerprinting by pushing out a raft of useless data or chaff to mask what’s real, making it difficult — albeit not impossible — for trackers to isolate your device from hundreds of millions of others.

    This is important because while Safari blocks tracking cookies, which offer opt-outs, digital fingerprinting is pervasive and silent and you can’t opt out. As one regulator warns, this means it’s “not a fair means of tracking” and is likely “to reduce people’s choice and control over how their information is collected.”

    ForbesGoogle Confirms Android Attacks—No Fix For 1 Billion Phones

    In theory, toggling this on for all browsing might create some oddities as you use the web, but I haven’t seen any. Go ahead and make that change now. This is just for Safari, so remember fingerprinting is being used across other apps, platforms and devices, and that now means smart TVs and game consoles as well as phones and computers.

    Something to keep in mind as you live your normal life.

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  • Sirens fail as Houthi drone hits arrivals hall at Ramon Airport in southern Israel, authorities say

    Sirens fail as Houthi drone hits arrivals hall at Ramon Airport in southern Israel, authorities say


    Jerusalem
     — 

    A drone launched from Yemen by Houthi rebels hit the arrivals hall at Ramon Airport in southern Israel on Sunday, the Israeli military and the Israel Airports Authority said.

    No sirens were sounded, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said, adding that the incident was under review.

    It is rare for sirens not to warn of incoming projectiles in Israel, which has a multi-layered system to defend against missiles and drones. The vast majority of drones fired by the Houthis in Yemen have been intercepted before striking Israel.

    The Israeli Air Force said an initial inquiry found that the drone was detected but was not classified as hostile, allowing it to fly through air defenses.

    “There is no indication of a technical malfunction in the existing detection systems,” the military said in a statement on Sunday, adding that an “extensive investigation” is expected. Several other drones on Sunday were intercepted, the military said.

    A spokesperson for the Israel Airports Authority said the southern airspace over Ramon Airport was closed to air traffic after the incident, but reopened after about 90 minutes.

    Ramon Airport is one of the few international airports in Israel, primarily serving the city of Eilat at the southern tip of the country on the Red Sea.

    Videos shared on social media showed shattered windows and glass-covered floors at the airport’s arrivals hall.

    Magen David Adom (MDA), Israel’s emergency response service, said that they received a report at 2:35 p.m. local time about a drone that had come down in the Ramon Airport area. Two people sustained minor injuries as a result of the attack, MDA said.

    The Houthi-controlled Yemeni Armed Forces issued a statement after the attack warning airlines that “the airports inside occupied Palestine are not safe and will be continuously targeted.”

    The rebel group said the drone “directly hit the airport and caused the airport to shut down, halting air traffic.”

    Israel and the Houthis have engaged in an escalating long-range conflict since the Iran-backed rebel group began targeting Israel in what the group’s leaders say is solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza. The Houthis have also targeted shipping in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, some of the world’s most critical waterways.

    In early May, a ballistic missile fired by the Houthis penetrated Israel’s air defenses and struck Ben Gurion international airport near Tel Aviv, halting flights for about 30 minutes. Israel’s long-range Arrow interceptor missile failed to stop the Houthi projectile before it hit. It marked the first time the Houthis had managed to strike such a well-defended target.

    After the Houthis fired a ballistic missile armed with a new type of cluster warhead in late August, Israel carried out a strike that killed the group’s prime minister and other senior officials. An Israeli security official said the strike, carried out in the Yemeni capital of Sana’a, killed “a majority of the leadership,” including the foreign minister, minister for security affairs, and others.

    Asked if the Houthi’s military chief and defense minister were killed, the official said, “If they are not dead, we will continue to hunt them down.”

    Israel has also carried out strikes against Houthi military targets and civilian infrastructure the IDF says is used by the rebel group.


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  • Intel Preps Wildcat Lake Display Support For Linux 6.18, “enable_panel_replay” Option

    Intel Preps Wildcat Lake Display Support For Linux 6.18, “enable_panel_replay” Option

    In addition to the Intel Xe kernel graphics driver updates sent out this week in advance of the Linux 6.18 kernel, there was also a batch of drm-intel-next updates also submitted for predominantly display-related changes to the open-source Intel driver.

    Notable with the drm-intel-next pull ahead of Linux 6.18 are the patches enabling Wildcat Lake display support. Intel engineers in recent months have been quite busy preparing for Wildcat Lake as a cut-down alternative to upcoming Panther Lake that will be catering to budget laptops/devices. With Linux 6.17 was initial iGPU support for Wildcat Lake while for Linux 6.18 is the enablement patches for actually being able to drive displays.

    The drm-intel-next pull this week also includes a number of USB Type-C and DisplayPort code changes, a fix for real-time (PREEMPT_RT) kernels, Panel Self Refresh (PSR) fixes, and other display fixes.

    As part of this Intel display work is also introducing a new “enable_panel_replay” module parameter. The “enable_panel_replay” option can be used for enabling or disabling Panel Replay support. By default the per-chip default will be used for Panel Replay while the “enable_panel_replay” option can be used to force enable/disable it. Panel Replay is a display power savings feature that is supported by the Intel Linux driver on recent hardware generations.

    More details on all of the Intel DRM-Next changes prepped this week ahead of Linux 6.18 can be found via this pull request.

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  • Study Finds Women Face 45 Percent Higher Risk Than Men on Beta-Blockers After Heart Attack – geneonline.com

    Study Finds Women Face 45 Percent Higher Risk Than Men on Beta-Blockers After Heart Attack – geneonline.com

    1. Study Finds Women Face 45 Percent Higher Risk Than Men on Beta-Blockers After Heart Attack  geneonline.com
    2. Beta-Blockers Post-MI: A Clear Clinical Message  Medscape
    3. A Common Heart Drug Taken by Millions May Often Be Useless – or Even Risky  ScienceAlert
    4. Popular Heart Attack Drug May Raise Risk Of Death For Some Women  yahoo.com
    5. Heart attack patients: do you still need beta blockers? A cardiologist explains  The Conversation

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  • Ayaneo announces Konkr Pocket Fit Elite B.Duck edition with 24GB of RAM and 1TB storage

    Ayaneo announces Konkr Pocket Fit Elite B.Duck edition with 24GB of RAM and 1TB storage

    The Ayaneo Konkr Pocket Fit Elite B.Duck Edition will be a bit more expensive than the other colors. (Image source: Ayaneo)

    The Konkr Pocket Fit Elite will be available in a special edition tied to the popular character, B.Duck. This version of the handheld will have a purple finish and be available in the highest configuration. However, it will cost a bit more than the other colors with the same RAM and storage.

    Ayaneo already revealed that the Konkr Pocket Fit Elite will be available in three colors, but during its last livestream, it showed off a fourth special edition color way that will also be available for purchase both in China and globally.

    The Konkr Pocket Fit Elite will be available in Mystic Black, Snow White, and Dragon Yellow. They will also be joined by a fourth color option called B.Duck. The name, B.Duck, shouldn’t be unfamiliar to those who are conversant with Ayaneo, as the manufacturer has announced some products themed after the character, including a special edition of the Retro Mini PC AM01S.

    The Konkr Pocket Fit Elite B.Duck edition ditches yellow for purple. (Image source: Ayaneo)
    The Konkr Pocket Fit Elite B.Duck edition ditches yellow for purple. (Image source: Ayaneo)

    Instead of choosing B.Duck’s signature yellow, Ayaneo has opted for purple in this special edition. This makes sense since the handheld already comes in yellow. There are two shades of purple on the Konkr Pocket Fit Elite B.Duck — a lighter shade used for the shell and some buttons, and a darker shade used for the D-pad, ABXY buttons, thumbsticks, triggers, shoulder buttons, back buttons, power button, and volume rocker. The special edition color way also has graffiti-like text in different colors plastered across both sides.

    Ayaneo says the Konkr Pocket Fit Elite B.Duck edition will be available in China via its website, and globally via Indiegogo. However, it will be limited to the highest configuration, which has 24GB of RAM and 1TB of storage. Pricing starts at $539 for the super early bird price, which will be available for one week only. It will go up to $559 for the early bird price, while those who purchase the Android handheld after it has been released will have to pay $599.

    The Konkr Fit Elite B.Duck edition will cost more than the other color options. (Image source: Ayaneo)
    The Konkr Fit Elite B.Duck edition will cost more than the other color options. (Image source: Ayaneo)

    Save for the color difference, the B.Duck edition has the same specs as the other colors. Buyers will get an Android 15-powered handheld with a 6-inch LCD display with a 144Hz refresh rate and a 1080p resolution. It will have a Snapdragon 8 Elite processor and pack an 8,000mAh battery capacity with support for fast charging. Shipping for the handheld is expected to begin in December.

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