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Vivo’s X300 Ultra has the best cameras in any phone

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A few months ago, I wrote that the telephoto camera is the only lens that matters any more, at least when it comes to Ultra-class flagships. As phones got better, cameras became where manufacturers tried to stand out. As cameras got better, telephoto lenses became the next point of focus. The most recent Ultra phones from Xiaomi, Oppo, and Huawei have all made the telephoto, above all, their selling point. Vivo’s X300 Ultra is doing something different.

Instead of pushing its telephoto hardware to further extremes, Vivo has mostly left it be. The company has focused its efforts on a significantly improved 35mm main camera, unique among the competition for its narrow, natural focal length. Combined with the best ultrawide camera in any phone and new pro-level video features, the result is a camera system that feels equally balanced between all three rear lenses. It’s a less flashy approach, but the total package is more versatile and useful than its rivals and my favorite to use so far.

Photo of the Vivo X300 Ultra laying on a gray stone bench.

$1829

The Good

  • Fantastic rear cameras
  • Big battery
  • 144Hz display

The Bad

  • Bland, boring design
  • Rivals have better telephotos
  • OriginOS needs improvement

The main camera is certainly the best of the three. The 200-megapixel, 1/1.12-inch-type Sony Lytia 901 sensor delivers a serious jump in both size and resolution from last year’s X200 Ultra. But it preserves that camera’s best feature: a 35mm-equivalent focal length. That’s narrower than most other phones — 23–26mm is typical — but closer to what photographers tend to look for in their default lens because it feels natural, close in scope to the human eye. It’s also closer to the focal length many phones used to use. If you’ve ever lamented the fact that your main camera feels more and more like an ultrawide, this is the phone for you.

The telephoto camera also has 200-megapixel resolution, with an 85mm focal length and 1/1.4-inch sensor, essentially the same specs as the X200 Ultra. The slightly narrower f/2.7 aperture might make the X300 look like a downgrade, but improved stabilization and sensor and processing tweaks give this iteration an edge overall.

Photo of the Vivo X300 Ultra camera module with blurred trees behind it

There are three true rear lenses here, plus a color spectrum sensor.

Photo of the Vivo X300 Ultra standing on a gray stone bench showing the Street photography mode, with the camera pointing at a red tree.

Street Photography mode is where you’ll find the camera’s film simulations.

Then there’s the ultrawide. This also hasn’t changed much year over year, but remains unique for its sensor size. It’s larger than the one on the iPhone 17 Pro’s main camera and supports optical image stabilization too. It’s in every sense a main camera spec with an ultrawide lens on top. No other ultrawide comes close.

The selfie camera is the only one that isn’t especially impressive: a 50-megapixel shooter with a comparatively small 1/2.76-inch sensor. It’s fine; the other cameras are great.

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The X300 Ultra’s main camera shoots at a natural-feeling 35mm focal length.

Photos across all three rear lenses are of remarkably comparable quality, in almost any lighting. About the only difference I could find is that the telephoto and ultrawide are more susceptible to motion blur when shooting fast subjects like cats or cars, and even then only when it’s dark. Otherwise, picking between the lenses feels like choosing the right focal length to frame a shot, without the usual worries about tradeoffs in quality. Photos are helped by naturalistic color-processing and a wide range of quite impressive film simulations. Vivo’s color science is my favorite in any phone, and this year is no exception.

Vivo hasn’t just focused on still photography. This year it’s doubled down on video, though the upgrades here are really targeted at professionals. You can now record 4K, 120fps, 10-bit Log video across all of the three rear lenses, can import custom 3D LUTs, and use a Pro Video shooting mode for full manual controls. If you don’t know what half of that means, you’re not alone! This stuff is beyond the needs of most of us, myself included.

Like rival Ultra phones, there’s also a set of camera add-ons and accessories. My colleague Allison Johnson has already spent time playing around with Vivo’s camera grip and separate 200mm and 400mm telephoto extender lenses, which can take extraordinary shots at range that no other phone could ever manage. While at MWC Barcelona 2026, I got to briefly play around with the custom SmallRig camera cage developed for the phone too, which squeezes stabilization, cooling, and a fill light into a pretty compact package. All of these are sold separately and play into Vivo’s claim that the X300 Ultra can be the base of a semi-professional camera system if you want it to.

Photo of the Vivo X300 Ultra camera laying on a gray stone bench, focusing on the camera module which has a red ring around it and is distinctively thick.

This might be the tallest camera island I’ve tested yet.

Photo of the Vivo X300 Ultra lying on a gray stone bench in the photography kit case and camera grip, with the two telephoto extender lenses next to it.

The photography kit is expensive, but that chunky 400mm lens is extraordinary.

This is a phone though, not just a camera, so I’d better talk about the rest of it too. For me the big letdown in the X300 Ultra is its drab design. My black model is a pretty dull-looking device, and while the two-tone effects on the green and white versions are better, neither is a patch on the camera-inspired aesthetics of the latest Xiaomi and Oppo phones. The X300 Ultra’s camera island is also exceptionally raised, almost as thick as the phone, and for some reason Vivo has also ditched the physical shutter button, which I miss.

Other specs are on a par with rival Ultra phones, but impressive compared to Apple and Samsung: a combined IP68 and IP69 protection rating, a colossal 6,600mAh silicon-carbon battery, and a 144Hz refresh rate for its 6.8-inch OLED display. Then there’s the standard flagship stuff, like the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chipset, up to 1TB storage and 16GB RAM, and a decent promise of five years of Android OS updates and seven years of security patches. The phone runs on Vivo’s OriginOS, much improved on its older software but still the weakest of the major players, with a bland design and too many preinstalled apps and ads.

Photo of the Vivo X300 Ultra standing on a gray stone bench showing the OriginOS 6 info screen.

OriginOS is still one of the weaker Android skins around.

Photo of the Vivo X300 Ultra standing on a gray stone bench showing the app drawer with a spammy looking “Games” app included.

That “Games” icon is really an ad for Vivo’s app store — fortunately, it can be deleted.

Photo of the Vivo X300 Ultra standing on a gray stone bench showing the homescreen.

A promise of five years of OS updates is good, but others offer seven.

Ultra flagships are as much tech demos as consumer products. They’re an excuse for phone companies not only to show off their technical abilities, but also to lay down a vision for what makes the “best” phone right now. As processors and displays and water-resistance ratings have coalesced into universal standards that have proved tricky to improve upon, it’s the cameras where manufacturers can set out their stalls. And Vivo’s pitch is clear: The best camera is the one that’s great across every lens, not just one or two.

As tech demos go, this feels like a pretty practical one, price aside. The X300 Ultra isn’t launching in either the US or UK, but is available across Asia, along with a handful of European countries including Spain, Italy, and Austria. Its €1,999 (about $2,340) price certainly isn’t cheap, and its photography accessories add on hundreds more, though it costs about the same as a 1TB iPhone 17 Pro Max in those same markets. It’s expensive, but for what you’re getting, it probably should be.

I don’t think this is the best phone you could get for that money. It is a very good phone, with an excellent display, big battery, and flagship performance through and through. But the design is bulky, and boring, and maybe just a bit ugly. Vivo’s software often annoys me too. Xiaomi’s 17 Ultra is a slightly better all-round package, with a striking design and more polished OS. But the X300 Ultra’s three extraordinary lenses are so consistent, and so consistently excellent, that when I use the camera all those other worries fall away.

If I was putting my own money down right now, I’d buy the Xiaomi. But if I just had to pick who’s winning this year’s Ultra camera contest, Vivo gets my vote.

Photography by Dominic Preston / The Verge

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BAFTA TV Awards 2026 Winners List

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The BAFTA TV Awards are officially underway in London.

Celebrating the best of British television, the ceremony is being hosted by Greg Davies and will broadcast on BBC One and iPlayer at 7 p.m. U.K. time. Netflix’s “Adolescence” looks set to sweep, with 12 nominations after taking home nine Emmys last year.

Breakout Owen Cooper is nominated for supporting actor alongside his co-star Ashley Walters, while fellow cast members Stephen Graham, Erin Doherty and Christine Tremarco also scored nominations in different categories. “Adolescence” is up for limited drama as well as the public-voted Memorable Moment Award. At the BAFTA TV Craft Awards last month, the show — about a young teen arrested for the murder of his classmate — picked up the awards for fiction director and best sound in a fiction series.

Other nominees for limited drama include “I Fought The Law,” “Trespasses” and “What It Feels Like for a Girl.” Meanwhile, in the international category, “The Bear” will go head to head with “The Diplomat,” “Pluribus,” “Severance,” “The Studio” and “The White Lotus.”

See all the winners from the BAFTA TV Awards below, updating live.

Actor in a Comedy
Jim Howick, “Here We Go”
Jon Pointing, “Big Boys”
Lenny Rush, “Am I Being Unreasonable?”
Mawaan Rizwan, “Juice”
Oliver Savell ,”Changing Ends”
Steve Coogan, “How Are You? Its Alan (Partridge)”

Actress in a Comedy
Diane Morgan, “Mandy”
Jennifer Saunders, “Amandaland”
Katherine Parkinson, “Here We Go”
Lucy Punch, “Amandaland”
Philippa Dunne, “Amandaland”
Rosie Jones, “Pushers”

Children’s: Non-Scripted
“A Real Bugs Life”
“Boosnoo!”
“Deadly 60 Saving Sharks”
“World.war.me (Sky Kids Investigates)”

Children’s: Scripted
“Crongton”
“Horrible Science”
“Shaun the Sheep”
“The Wonderfully Weird World of Gumball”

Current Affairs
“Breaking Ranks: Inside Israel’s War (Exposure)”
“The Covid Contracts: Follow the Money”
“Gaza: Doctors Under Attack”
“Undercover in the Police (Panorama)”

Daytime
“The Chase”
“Lorraine”
“Richard Osman’s House of Games”
“Scam Interceptors”

Drama Series
“A Thousand Blows”
“Blue Lights”
“Code of Silence”
“This City Is Ours”

Entertainment*
“The Graham Norton Show”
“Last One Laughing”
“Michael Mcintyre’s Big Show”
“Would I Lie to You”

Entertainment Performance
Amanda Holden and Alan Carr, “Amanda & Alan’s Spanish Job”
Bob Mortimer, “Last One Laughing”
Claudia Winkleman, “The Celebrity Traitors”
Lee Mack, “The 1% Club”
Rob Beckett, Romesh Ranganathan “Rob & Romesh Vs…”
Romesh Ranganathan, “Romesh: Can’t Knock The Hustle”

Factual Entertainment
“The Assembly”
“Go Back to Where You Came From”
“Knife Edge: Chasing Michelin Stars”
“Race Across the World”

Factual Series
“Bibaa & Nicole: Murder in the Park”
“Educating Yorkshire”
“See No Evil”
“The Undercover Police Scandal: Love and Lies Exposed”

International
“The Bear”
“The Diplomat”
“Pluribus”
“Severance”
“The Studio”
“The White Lotus”

Leading Actor
Colin Firth, “Lockerbie: A Search for Truth”
Ellis Howard, “What It Feels Like for a Girl”
James Nelson-Joyce, “This City Is Ours”
Matt Smith, “The Death of Bunny Munro”
Stephen Graham, “Adolescence”
Taron Egerton, “Smoke”

Leading Actress
Aimee Lou Wood, “Film Club”
Erin Doherty, “A Thousand Blows”
Jodie Whittaker, “Toxic Town”
Narges Rashidi, “Prisoner 951”
Sheridan Smith, “I Fought the Law”
Siân Brooke, “Blue Lights”

Limited Drama
“Adolescence”
“I Fought the Law”
“Trespasses”
“What It Feels Like for a Girl”

Live Event Coverage
“Holocaust Memorial Day 2025”
“Last Night of the Proms: Finale”
“Ve Day 80: A Celebration to Remember”

News Coverage
“BBC Newsnight: Grooming Survivors Speak”
“Channel 4 News: Israel-Iran: The Twelve Day War”
“Sky News: Gaza: Fight for Survival”

Reality
“The Celebrity Traitors”
“The Jury: Murder Trial”
“Squid Game: The Challenge”
“Virgin Island”

Scripted Comedy
“Amandaland”
“Big Boys”
“How Are You? It’s Alan (Partridge)”
“Things You Should Have Done”

Short Form
“Donkey”
“Hustle and Run”
“Rocket Fuel”
“Zoners”

Single Documentary
“Grenfell: Uncovered”
“Louis Theroux: The Settlers”
“One Day In Southport”
“Unforgotten: The Bradford City Fire”

Soap
“Casualty”
“Coronation Street”
“Eastenders”

Specialist Factual
“Belsen: What They Found”
“Simon Schama: The Road to Auschwitz”
“Surviving Black Hawk Down”
“Vietnam: The War That Changed America”

Sports Coverage
“The 2025 Ryder Cup”
“The FA Cup Final”
“UEFA Women’s Euro 2025”
“Wimbledon 2025”

Supporting Actor
Ashley Walters, “Adolescence”

Fehinti Balogun, “Down Cemetery Road”

Joshua Mcguire, “The Gold”

Owen Cooper, “Adolescence”

Paddy Considine, “Mobland”

Rafael Mathé, “The Death of Bunny Munro”

Supporting Actress
Aimee Lou Wood, “The White Lotus”
Christine Tremarco, “Adolescence”

Chyna Mcqueen, “Get Millie Black”

Emilia Jones, “Task”

Erin Doherty, “Adolescence”

Rose Ayling-Ellis, “Reunion”

P&O Cruises Memorable Moment Award (Voted For By The Public)
“Adolescence”
“Big Boys”
“Blue Lights”
“The Celebrity Traitors”
“Last One Laughing”
“What It Feels Like for a Girl”

Binance Reveals How Crypto Is Transforming Emerging Markets

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Binance Reveals How Crypto Is Transforming Emerging Markets




Binance highlighted areas where crypto has driven financial inclusion, namely access to capital markets and the democratization of private markets through tokenization.

Binance has released a report outlining how cryptocurrencies and digital asset infrastructure are improving financial access in underserved regions and emerging markets. Titled “Finance Without Frontiers,” the paper explains how the unbanked and underbanked population is turning to crypto for cross-border payments and financial inclusion as a whole.

According to the report, crypto adoption has grown beyond speculation into real-world utility because of the financial inclusion it offers. Besides trading on digital asset platforms, users now have access to global systems through tokenization, artificial intelligence (AI) agents, and mobile-native services.

A Huge Financial Inclusion Gap

Researchers at the world’s largest crypto exchange found that the scale of unmet financial need is structural and concentrated in certain regions. There is a huge global financial inclusion gap.

Data from the World Bank revealed that roughly 21% of the global adult population (1.3 billion adults) remains unbanked. Approximately 73% of these adults are found in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), with more than 50% concentrated in eight countries.

For the purpose of the report, researchers tagged adults with access to deposit accounts but limited access to credit, digital payments, yield-bearing savings, or cross-border services as the underbanked. About 4.7 billion adults lack access to credit or loans, and 3.6 billion in LMICs do not use digital payments or cards. Roughly 40% of adults in LMICs save formally, with at least 77% receiving no interest on their deposits.

Interestingly, five of the eight countries with the highest concentration of unbanked people rank among the top 20 in Chainalysis’s Global Crypto Adoption Index. This pattern shows that digital networks have provided an alternative entry point for financial inclusion.

How Crypto Helps

Diving deeper, Binance researchers highlighted areas where crypto has driven financial inclusion. Some of them include payments and remittances, access to capital markets, private-market democratization via tokenization, and programmable finance for non-human participants (AI agents). There is also the area of device penetration for people with mobile phones versus those with smartphones.

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Amid the rise in financial inclusion, the growth of the share of crypto users from emerging markets has outpaced that of developed markets. Users from emerging markets have increased from 49% in 2020 to 77% in 2026 amid active demand for a broader range of financial services.

Additionally, user engagement has extended well beyond trading: an internal study on Binance showed that 14% of total active users engage with multiple products, including savings, payments, and investments. The majority of these users are concentrated in emerging markets.

The observed adoption trend highlights how on-chain networks have become a major component of the global financial-inclusion conversation.

Vimeo Promo Code: 40% Off This May 2026

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Remember Vimeo? You probably don’t use it to browse videos the way you might with some other services. But if you landed on this page, there’s a good chance you use it to host your professional portfolio. Or assets for your business. Or your short films. Vimeo has tools other video hosting services simply don’t have, like AI editing tools, on-demand content selling, customizable embeds, and collaborative editing features. And best of all: There are no ads. WIRED has rotating Vimeo promo codes to help you save.

Get 10% Off Annual Plans With This Vimeo Promo Code

No matter what you need for your business or career, when it comes to video, Vimeo’s got multiple plans to suit. And luckily, right now, you can save with a Vimeo promo code—even on the annual plans, which already include 40% in savings. Just use the Vimeo coupon code to save 10% on your membership plan.

The Easiest Way to Save 40% on Your Vimeo Plan

Vimeo has a few different membership plans that you can save on. No matter which you go with, the easiest way to save a lot is with an annual membership, which has automatic 40% savings compared to paying monthly. And yes, you can even stack promo codes with the annual billing options.

More on Vimeo Pricing and Membership Plans

So what tier do you need? The Starter plan starts at $12 per month (billed annually) or $20 per month (billed monthly). It comes with 100 gigabytes of storage, plus boosted privacy controls, custom video players, custom URLs, and automatic closed captioning.

Boost your plan to Standard for $25 per month (billed annually) or $41 per month (billed monthly) to upgrade to 2 terabytes of storage, 5 “seats” (which are collaborative team member spots), a brand kit, a teleprompter, text-based video editing, AI script generation, and engagement and social analytics.

Finally, there’s the Advanced plan, which costs $75 per month (billed annually) or $125 per month (billed monthly). You’ll get 10 “seats”, 7 terabytes of storage, AI-generated chapters and text summaries, live chat and poll options, plus streaming and live broadcast capabilities.

Use a Vimeo Coupon Code to Get Savings on Vimeo on Demand

Vimeo on Demand is a new way to stream and download movies online. Through Vimeo on Demand, you can rent, buy and subscribe to the best original films, documentaries and series directly from your favorite small business video creators, including The Talent and Wild Magic.

Does Vimeo Have a Free Trial?

While Vimeo doesn’t have a free trial of its paid plans, it does have a free plan with some basic features. Additionally, paid plans can be canceled anytime–within 14 days for an annual subscription, or 3 days for a monthly subscription. You’ll get a full refund if you decide to cancel within the respective timeframes.

Do City Delivery Drones Make Sense? No One Knows, but They’re Flying Over NYC

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It’s a bird, it’s a plane, it’s a six-propeller flying vehicle with a nearly eight-foot wingspan.

For the next year, delivery drones operated by the British company Skyports are taking daily weekday trips across New York City’s East River, between the tip of Manhattan and a pier in Brooklyn. Since early May—a bit behind schedule—the drones have carried light cargo for a New York City health care system. Right now, those loads are basically a few pounds of paper; once the healthcare system is confident the setup works, it should include nonhazardous, non-biological packages, such as light pharmaceuticals.

The drones are part of an experiment run by two New York-New Jersey agencies to discover how a relatively new and sometimes controversial sky-bound delivery tech might fit into a hectic urban environment—and the airspace above it. The pilot program will also try to answer a question that hangs over the entire drone delivery industry: Where does it make sense?

“Will there be enough regular flights (1 to 2 per hour) that the client health care system finds true value?” Stephan Pezdek, the regional freight planning manager at the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which is operating the pilot, wrote in an email to WIRED. (The Port Authority declined to name the health care system for contractual reasons.) “Will deliveries make it to their destination faster and within the financial constraints of the current carriers they are using? Will the community appreciate the work and not feel like it is a disruption? All of this will inform our understanding of how the first corridor shapes up.”

The Port Authority, which is also working with the New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCDEC) on this drone project, will also measure how the deliveries affect patient care, Pezdek says.

Globally, drone delivery is still in an experimental phase. What projects do exist mostly focus on carrying cargo to rural or suburban areas, where gaps in road networks and services, plus emptier skies, could make the tech a better fit. Skyports has been delivering mail in remote areas of Scotland since 2023, and carrying cargo to offshore wind turbines in Germany. The US company Zipline says it makes deliveries to and from some 5,000 health facilities across four continents; its oldest program delivers vaccines and blood products in Rwanda. In the US, companies including Alphabet’s Wing and Amazon’s Prime Air are working to expand delivery services across the South, with a focus on the suburban areas surrounding Houston, Austin, and Dallas, Texas.

For drones, dense cities present different challenges. First, there’s the safety question. New York City’s airspace is packed, hosting three international airports. In Manhattan alone, there are three publicly owned heliports. In May 2023, nearly 9,000 helicopter flights took place over city land or water, according to data compiled by the New York City Council. This drone pilot program’s start date was pushed back in part because another experimental aviation tech, an electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) vehicle, was demo-ing its own first-of-its-kind flights out of the same heliport.

That citified hustle and bustle leads to extra precautions. The pilot project was, as standard, approved by the US Federal Aviation Administration, which requires a certified drone pilot to supervise every flight. Each flight will take place over a fixed route away from residential buildings. The project must obtain a weekly NYPD permit to operate, and delays in acquiring the first one also led the city to push back its start date, says Amanda Kwan, a spokesperson for the Port Authority. The agency also spoke with three local community boards before it allowed the drones to take off.

How Handheld Translators Work and Why They’re Handy for Travel

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Earbud-based translators are the next game changer. These are over-ear devices that come in a pair—one for you, one for your conversation partner. Each of you wears one earbud, and the software on your phone handles the translation, both ways, behind the scenes. The best earbud translators make for the most natural way to communicate with someone in a foreign language that I’ve found to date, though handhelds tend to have more capabilities. (Earbud-based designs seem to be the direction the industry is heading.)

When shopping for a handheld translator, watch out for expensive subscription plans. Many devices come with free service, but only for a time, and re-upping after the trial period ends can be pricey. Check the fine print before you buy. Also, make sure the translator you’re considering covers all the languages you need. Note that while some translators support hundreds of languages, they may be limited in the language pairs they can translate between.

Who Really Needs a Handheld Language Translator?

Again, if you only need casual translation for occasional or emergency use, you can definitely get by with a free translation app on your phone. Translation devices are best for frequent users who expect to carry on multiple sustained conversations with speakers of other languages over time.

Those scenarios could include attending a reunion with your Swedish wife’s extended family or a lengthy workshop series with colleagues from other parts of the world. These tools are also often marketed to first responders who need to quickly assess a situation when human translation services aren’t available.

In situations where you may need to communicate with several speakers, each speaking a different language, a portable translator can make even more sense. If you expect your journeys to take you to far-flung areas or off the grid entirely, where internet service may be poor or nonexistent, a translator can be a helpful tool in your travel bag, even if you only expect to use it for emergencies.

Which Handheld Language Translators Are Best?

After testing numerous handheld translators, I recommend this trio. Which one you pick will depend on how you expect to use it—and your budget.

Best Stand-Alone Translator

Timekettle

T1 Handheld Translator Device

The Timekettle T1 is a reasonably affordable and very pocketable device that makes for an easy addition to your travel kit. Built for two users to communicate, each with access to half the screen, the T1 translates each side of a conversation—written or spoken—into that user’s own language. Using it can be a little tricky: a color-coded button on the side of the device or a virtual one on the 4-inch touchscreen must be held down to tell the T1 which language to listen for. But once you get the hang of it, the system works pretty well.

Accuracy is solid, and translations are fast, popping up in well under a second. One challenge I had with the device relates to its small screen. Like most translators, the T1 supports photo-based translations via its 8-megapixel camera, but the 540 x 1080-pixel screen is too small to display much text at once. Also, while the unit includes a global eSIM with two years of free service included ($50/year after that), I encountered plenty of signal gaps, even in my own home. The good news is that if Wi-Fi’s available, that works too. The unit also supports 31 offline language pairs (10 in combination with English), so if you plan ahead, service woes may not be an issue at all.

Best Translator Earbuds

iFLYTEK

iFLYTEK AI Translation Earbuds

If you want to upgrade your translation experience and make it more immersive, you’ll want to invest in a pair of earbuds, which give you a more personal and natural way to communicate. As described above, the iconic way to use these is to pop one on yourself and give the other to your friend. An app on your phone handles two-way translation, back and forth.

These 12-gram on-ear earbuds are the best I’ve tested, primarily because once they’re configured, they work completely hands-free. No clicking buttons or tapping the side of your head every time you’re ready to speak: The earbuds understand who’s talking and when, and they work with remarkable speed, almost like a professional interpreter whispering in your ear.

Walmart Promo Codes: 65% Off

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After living in big cities like San Francisco and New York, when I set foot in Wally World in the Midwest, I heard angels sing. Rows and rows of fluorescent lights highlighted any and every product needed for your house in one place. Screw the mom-and-pop bodega—I missed this level of convenience. If by chance they don’t have what you need in-store, there’s even more online, with pickup and delivery available.

Get Walmart Coupon Savings Today

Walmart has quite literally thousands of flash deals that change weekly, with up to 65% off tech, appliances, end-of-season, and holiday items, so be sure to check often to find the best rotating deals. And if you’re like me, I’m always searching for the best tech deals without breaking the bank. So whether you’re looking to purchase a new 17-piece non-stick cookware set, Dyson cordless vacuum cleaner, or this season’s latest clothing trends for men, women or children—Walmart is your one-stop shop for it all.

You can also enjoy great benefits with Walmart+, a paid membership that gives early access to promotions and events like Walmart Black Friday deals, free delivery, free shipping with no order minimum, savings on fuel, streaming with Paramount+, and more. You can pay monthly or annually, and you’ll get a free trial of Walmart+ for 30 days to try it out. Walmart+ Assist helps qualifying government aid recipients get a membership at a lower cost.

Join Walmart Today to Get Free Delivery

Did you know that Walmart basically has its own Amazon Prime-esque membership plan? It’s called Walmart+, and it’s a great option for people who shop at Walmart often. It’ll give you free grocery delivery, free shipping with no order minimum, savings on fuel, and early access to promotions and events. Plus, you can try Walmart+ free for 30 days to see if the service is right for you or your family. The annual plan is $98 (roughly $8 per month) after trial, meaning you’ll get $57 in savings annually.

In a Rush? Get Fast Delivery at Walmart

If you don’t want to leave your home, Walmart offers fast delivery in as fast as an hour! You’ll just need to book a timeslot through the site to get your favorites and essentials right to your door. This even includes delivery of important refrigerated prescriptions, like Insulin, GLP-1s, antibiotics, and more. Plus, it’s great for when you’re sick and need cold/flu remedies like DayQuil, Theraflu, tea, and more.

What Is OnePay Walmart Spend Card?

The OnePay Walmart Spend Card is a Walmart-exclusive credit card (meaning that it can only be used at Walmart and Walmart.com). If you don’t qualify for the OnePay CashRewards Mastercard (and have poor credit scores), this is a great way to build credit history—but you won’t get the cash-back rewards of the CashRewards card. This card can not only help you build credit, but also doesn’t require an annual fee. Just know that when you apply for a OnePay Card, you will first be considered for the OnePay Cash Rewards Card, but if you don’t qualify, you’ll be considered for a OnePay Walmart Spend Card. Interested applicants can apply online at Walmart.com, the Walmart app, or in-store.

Get 5% Cashback Walmart as a Walmart+ Member

Being a Walmart+ member has tons of perks, including 5% cashback when you shop at Walmart, plus, 1.5% cash back on all other purchases with zero annual fees. And when you open a OnePay Card and spend over $75 on that card within 30 days, you’ll get an extra $35 cash back. To get these rewards, all you need to do is pay with your OnePay CashRewards Card at Walmart (or anywhere Mastercard is accepted), earn OnePay points on your purchases, and redeem for cash (or a statement credit into a OnePay Cash Account).

‘Reservation Hijacking’ Scams Target Travelers. Here’s How to Stay Safe

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There’s another type of digital scam to be aware of, as per the BBC. It’s called “reservation hijacking.”

The name gives you a clue as to how it works. Essentially, scammers use details about a booking you’ve placed (perhaps with a hotel or airline) to trick you into sending money somewhere you shouldn’t.

While this type of scam isn’t brand new, a recent data breach at Booking.com has raised the risk of people being caught out. With data about you and your reservation, a far more convincing setup can be put in place—why wouldn’t you believe that someone purporting to be an employee from a spa you’ve got a reservation with is telling the truth about who they are, especially if they know the dates of your trip, your phone number, and your email address?

According to Booking.com, no financial information was exposed in the April 2026 hack. However, names, email addresses, phone numbers, and booking details have been leaked. The travel portal says affected customers have been emailed about the heightened risk of scams, so that’s the first thing to check for when it comes to staying safe.

Minimizing the risk of getting scammed by a reservation hijack involves many of the same security precautions you may already be following, and just being aware that this is a way you might be targeted will make a difference.

How Reservation Hijacks Work

Scammers can get hold of your booking details.

Courtesy of David Nield

We’ve already outlined the basics of a reservation hijack, but it can take several forms. As with other types of scams, it tends to evolve over time. The basic premise is that someone will get in touch with you claiming to be from a place you have a reservation with, whether it’s a car rental company or a hotel.

The scammers will try to pull together as much information as they can on you and your booking. Sometimes they’ll target employees of the place you’ve got the reservation with in order to get access to their systems, and other times they may take advantage of a wider data breach (as with the recent Booking.com hack).

They might also get information through other means. Maybe they’ve somehow got access to your email, or to some of your social media posts (where you’ve shared your next vacation destination and a countdown of how many days are left to go). Don’t be caught out if you find yourself speaking to someone who knows a lot about your travel plans.

Trump Media Posts $406M in Quarterly Losses as Bitcoin Bet Backfires

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Trump Media Posts $406M in Quarterly Losses as Bitcoin Bet Backfires


Trump Media & Technology Group posted a $405.9 million net loss in the first quarter of 2026, up from $31.7 million a year earlier, amid growing unrealized losses on its crypto holdings.

The parent company of Truth Social booked $244 million in unrealized losses on its Bitcoin position and a further $108.2 million in investment losses tied mostly to equity securities, with nearly $370 million of the quarter’s total losses stemming from digital asset and equity markdowns, according to a recent filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

The losses mostly trace back to Bitcoin purchases made at last summer’s market peak. Trump Media bought roughly 9,500 Bitcoin at an average cost of around $108,519 per coin. By March 31, the company held 9,542 Bitcoin with a cost basis of $1.13 billion but a fair value of just $647 million, a gap of nearly $500 million. The position has since recovered somewhat, now worth around $770 million with Bitcoin trading above $80,000.

The company also holds 756 million Cronos (CRO) tokens, purchased for $113.9 million as part of a Crypto.com deal last year, which were worth just $53 million at quarter-end. Of the firm’s Bitcoin holdings, 4,260 BTC is pledged as collateral for convertible notes and another 2,000 BTC is held against covered call options to hedge against price swings.

Related: UAE firm bought 49% of Trump-linked crypto startup for $500M

Cash flow stays positive despite mounting crypto losses

Despite the losses, Trump Media still generated $17.9 million in operating cash flow during the quarter, helped by selling options tied to its pledged Bitcoin. Total financial assets reached $2.1 billion, three times the level from a year ago.

Revenue came in at $871,200, up just 6% from $821,200 in Q1 2025, with media revenue of $810,100 and $61,100 in management fees from Truth.Fi ETF offerings.

The results arrive after a turbulent stretch for the company. CEO Devin Nunes stepped down on April 22, and the stock has lost more than 90% of its value since peaking at $97.54 in early 2022, last changing hands around $8.93.

Trump Media shares. Source: Yahoo! Finance

Related: Trump-linked American Bitcoin energizes 11,298 new ASICs

American Bitcoin posts $82 million quarterly loss

As Cointelegraph reported, American Bitcoin, the crypto mining company co-founded by Eric Trump and backed by Donald Trump Jr., posted an $81.7 million net loss in the first quarter of 2026, narrowing from a $100.6 million loss a year earlier.

Revenue came in at $62.1 million, a 400% jump from $12.3 million in Q1 2025 but a step down from $78.3 million in the prior quarter, missing analyst estimates by 17%. The company also reported a loss of 8 cents per share, well above Wall Street’s estimate of 1 cent.

Despite the miss, American Bitcoin mined a record 817 Bitcoin during the quarter, up from 783 in Q4 2025.

Magazine: Trump’s crypto ventures raise conflict of interest, insider trading questions

Groupon Promo Codes: 60% Off in May 2026

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I will be a Groupon stan until I die. I have used their coupons for massages, haircuts, oil changes, and for experiences like a Camel ride in the Sahara while I was in Morocco and a deal on glamping in an Airstream trailer in Joshua Tree. Groupon is one of the best ways to get reduced prices on something you’ve always wanted to try, but don’t want to pay full price for. Make sure to nab a Groupon promo code for seriously reduced prices on activities and services.

Get a 20% Off Groupon Promo Code With Email Sign-Up

Whether you’re looking to save on top-tier activities (get outside and enjoy the warmer weather), beauty (schedule that overdue wax), or even just that car maintenance you’ve been putting off (remember, the check engine light doesn’t have to be a mainstay), Groupon has you covered. Get a 20% off Groupon promo code when you subscribe to the brand’s emails. Not only can members get even more savings on top offers, you’ll also be the first to know exclusive deals.

Score an Extra 30% Off Museums and Sightseeing Tours With Groupon Coupon Code

One of the best gifts is the gift of experience, and luckily Groupon is running 50% discounts on some of their most popular sightseeing bundles. Use discount code EXPLORE for an extra 30% off museums and shows. Upgrade your movie date night for less with up to an extra 40% off movie tickets with a Groupon promo code. Some of the most popular pass options include the San Diego Explorer Pass, which gets you access to Safari Park or Zoo, USS Midway Museum, speed boat adventures, and whale watching. For cultural week, Groupon is running promos and discounts on some of their most popular museums and shows. This includes live music and concert deals, from a dueling pianos show to music festivals, and cultural experiences like admission to museums and movie tickets at vintage theaters.

Plus there are passes to some of the most popular vacation spots like sunny San Diego. Or maybe the Big Apple is more your speed, with the New York City Explorer Pass, with over 95 things to do, including tours of the Empire State Building, cruises, museums, and city tours. Maybe you’d rather test Lady Luck with the Las Vegas All-Inclusive Pass, which gives passes to over 45 things to do, including a scenic helicopter tour, Grand Canyon exploration, and tickets to popular shows.

Save up to 50% on Family Passes, Memberships, and More Groupon Coupons

Some of the best Groupon deals include family fun vacations to Great Wolf Lodge. In this hotel-water park, single-day passes are up to 30% off for online bookings. Plus, if you get together the whole family and go with a group, you can get free food, drink, and arcade credits. Speaking of family, save more when you buy more with a Sam’s Club membership. With Groupon membership packages, you can save 50%, get $25 off a one-year Club membership, and $40 off Sam’s Club Plus memberships. Believe it or not, Costco Memberships are Groupon bestsellers so you can save big on all your bulk items.

If you’re like me and are clueless about what’s happening under your car’s trunk (or tires, or engine, or the underneath entirely), you can save up to 50% on car repair and maintenance services like oil changes and tire rotations, including up to 25% off Valvoline oil changes.

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