logo
WiiM Intros Sonos-Killing Smart Speaker and Apple and Google Get More Accessible—Gear News of the Week

WiiM Intros Sonos-Killing Smart Speaker and Apple and Google Get More Accessible—Gear News of the Week

WIRED17-05-2025

Plus: Nothing confirms over-ear headphones, there's a new Xperia phone, and a striking transparent turntable from Audio-Technica catches our eye.
All products featured on WIRED are independently selected by our editors. However, we may receive compensation from retailers and/or from purchases of products through these links.
Global Accessibility Awareness Day was Thursday, so it's fitting that both Apple and Google have announced a raft of new accessibility features for their devices this week, all slated to land in the coming year.
First up, let's talk Apple. The headline is Magnifier support for Mac. This is integrated with Accessibility Reader, so you can use your iPhone camera to zoom in on a distant whiteboard or sign and magnify it on your MacBook screen, tweak contrast and colors to make it more legible, or extract the text into your preferred format.
For deaf and hard-of-hearing people, Apple has beefed up Live Listen by adding Live Captions support and extending it to the Apple Watch. You can use your iPhone's microphone to boost audio for AirPods or hearing aids with Live Listen, but with Live Captions, you can get instant transcription on your wrist. The Apple Watch can also serve as a remote control for capture, so you can leave your iPhone close to the speaker (ideal for a meeting, classroom, or lecture hall). You can also rewind if you missed something and review the transcript later.
Other noteworthy additions include Braille Access, which turns your Apple device (iPhone, iPad, Mac, or Vision Pro) into a braille note taker, enhanced eye and head tracking for iPhone and iPad, plus new Accessibility Nutrition Labels in the App Store, which will allow people to see at a glance what accessibility features an app or game supports. You can find the full list on Apple's website. — Simon Hill Google Has Accessibility Updates for Android and Chrome
Google's accessibility update focuses in on existing Android and Chrome features, as well as some new ones aimed at Chromebooks in the classroom.
The relentless drive of AI has seen Google's Gemini enhance several existing services like Android's Talkback screen reader, which offers AI-generated descriptions of images for low-vision and blind folks. The company is expanding that integration, so you can now ask questions about those images, perhaps the material of a pictured dress or learning the make and model of a car. Google is also relying on AI to enhance its Expressive Captions to convey more emotion and tone.
Improvements to the Chrome browser enable you to use your screen reader to interact with PDFs to read, highlight, search, and copy text just as you would with any other page. Page Zoom has also been improved for Chrome on Android, so you can increase text size without affecting the webpage layout and customize your preferred zoom levels for different pages, bringing it into line with Chrome on desktop.
For students using Chromebooks in the classroom, Google has enabled hands-free navigation with Face control, which uses the webcam to track facial movements. The caret browsing setting enables folks with visual impairment to navigate and interact with web pages using a keyboard instead of a mouse. ChromeVox is a built-in screen reader that can read onscreen text aloud and will soon be able to output audio captions in braille when the Chromebook is connected to a braille display. Chrome also now features more natural-sounding voices for text-to-speech.
Finally, the College Board's Bluebook testing app (where students can take the SAT and Advanced Placement exams) can access all of Google's built-in accessibility features, including ChromeVox, Dictation, and the College Board's digital testing tools. — Simon Hill Watch Out Sonos! WiiM's First Smart Speaker Is Here
Ever since Sonos bungled its app update last year, Sonos stans have been clamoring for a whole-home streaming alternative that reliably works. Chinese audio brand WiiM makes easy-to-use audio devices that support virtually every major streaming service. I've been enjoying the company's streaming player and stand-alone streaming speaker for months, with no issues playing music in different zones, starting Spotify jams with my wife on her phone and me on mine, and generally imbuing our home with music.
WiiM's latest is a smart speaker and wireless subwoofer that can take your system to the next level. The speaker, called the Sound, looks remarkably familiar to anyone who has seen an Apple HomePod and features a small, round display on the front to help you know when it's listening (and what is playing). It's capable of a room-filling 100 watts of sound and can be configured as a stereo pair if you have two. The subwoofer adds a bit of low-end extension and should be great for folks who want to use this system to fuel a dance party.
In addition to the two speakers, WiiM also announced a new streaming amp called the Amp Ultra which features a touchscreen and large physical volume knob. It looks like a great, affordable competitor to options from Cambridge Audio, Naim, and others. This amp has a dedicated subwoofer output and HDMI, so you can use it and your new subwoofer with your TV too. – Parker Hall Sony Is Back With Another Xperia
Sony hasn't sold an Xperia smartphone in the US for two years, which doesn't seem to be changing with the new Xperia 1 VII. The niche, expensive flagship Android phone continues the design language of previous Xperia devices, while combining the prowess of Sony's various hardware brands, from its Bravia TV and Alpha camera teams to the Walkman music department. For example, the new Xperia adds an artificial intelligence-powered Auto Framing mode to recognize humans during video capture—it records the whole scene, but it'll also provide a cropped close-up view of the person, so you can intermix footage despite using one camera.
From the Walkman team, Sony says the Xperia now has 'high-quality sound components,' from adding gold to the solder on the audio jack to minimize transmission loss to upscaled music quality with DSEE Ultimate support. The phone's speakers have also been upgraded, with better treble and mid-bass output.
The Xperia 1 VII has flagship specs like any other high-end Android, from the Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset to 256 GB of internal storage. However, unlike the competition, Sony's phone retains the microSD card slot for storage expansion and still has a headphone jack. It's available in the UK and Europe for £1,399 (€1,499). Nothing Teams Up With KEF, Confirms First Over-Ear Headphones
Nothing announced this week that it is working with British hi-fi wizards KEF on 'several acoustically co-developed' audio products that it said are already in progress and launching later this year. A few days later, it dropped a video on its YouTube channel announcing it was releasing its first pair of over-ear headphones this summer. The KEF partnership wasn't mentioned directly, but it feels safe to assume it is probably involved.
Some of the things the designers seem keen to address in the forthcoming cans include a better, easier-to-use design, more interesting and unique features, and a cheaper price than comparable headphones—all with a 'better than AirPods Max' performance. Amen. —Verity Burns Audio-Technica Debuts a Transparent Turntable
We can see right through Audio-Technica's new turntable. Quite literally. Unveiled at High End Munich this week, the AT-LPA2 transparent deck has been labeled as the brand's 'finest turntable yet,' delivering not just a striking design but the promise of a high-end analogue performance too. That's helped by a number of features—the acrylic platter and chassis aim to provide top-notch resonance control and minimize unwanted vibrations, there's an optical speed sensor positioned under the spindle for ensuring the most accurate playback speeds, and an external power supply to prevent any electrical interference affecting the turntable's sensitive audio components.
The AT-LPA2 will also come fitted with Audio-Technica's well-regarded AT-OC9XEN dual moving coil cartridge alongside a newly designed straight carbon-fiber tonearm and adjustable anti-skate mechanism. The interchangeable 110-gram and 130-gram counterweights should allow for broader cartridge compatibility, futureproofing it should you ever want to upgrade. It's available now for $2,000 (£1,699). — Verity Burns Huawei Unwraps Sleek New Wearables
Folks in the UK may be interested in Huawei's new wearable lineup (they won't come to the US). I've been wearing the headline-grabbing Huawei Watch 5 for the past few days, a luxurious new entrant to the smartwatch scene with a sleek design that combines sapphire glass with titanium or stainless steel. It runs Huawei's HarmonyOS but also works with Huawei's app on Android or iOS to bring notifications to your wrist (there's even an eSIM option). It boasts solid health and fitness tracking, partly thanks to a pressure sensor you can press with your other fingertip for ECG and PPG measurements, making it easy to track your heart health and blood oxygen levels. The display is nice and bright, and I've been getting around three days between charges with it set to always-on. (You can get around a week with it off.)
Elsewhere, the Huawei Watch Fit 4 and 4 Pro are the more affordable entries in Huawei's smartwatch lineup. With a rectangular design reminiscent of the Apple Watch, they mix sapphire glass and an aluminum body with a titanium alloy bezel. They look nice, but the thick bezel around the screen detracts a little from the design, and it's not very responsive, sometimes needing a couple of taps or swipes. Both are solid fitness trackers, but the svelte (9.3-mm) 4 Pro adds water sports tracking and a new Air Pressure Sensor. Neither requires daily charging, and they are relatively affordable.
Huawei also announced open-fit earbuds, the FreeBuds 6 and the MatePad Pro 12.2-inch 2025, an OLED tablet that can be paired with Huawei's Glide Keyboard. The Huawei Watch 5 (£400), Huawei Watch Fit 4 (£150) and 4 Pro (£250), and the Huawei Freebuds 6 (£140) are available now. There's no word on the price or release date for the tablet. — Simon Hill Rewind's Boombox Is a Modern Twist on an Old Classic
French retro tech brand Rewind is releasing a boombox to sit alongside its excellent Walkman-style portable cassette player. In advance of its debut at the High End audio show in Munich, the company posted a video of the new GB-001 earlier this week—the GB apparently, and rather questionably, standing for 'Ghetto Blaster' if the original, now deleted Instagram post is anything to go by. It's a single-deck device with clean lines that showcase two bright, backlit VU meters. There are four speakers onboard, with the company aiming for a neutral sound rather than an 1980s-style bass monster. The GB-001 will also function as a Bluetooth speaker and has battery power. — Martin Cizmar Google I/O Is Almost Here
Google I/O, the annual developer conference where we learn what's new from the search giant, kicks off on May 20 in Mountain View, California. (You'll be able to stream it here.) We're expecting to hear about the company's mixed reality plans at the show, but Google made several announcements this week. That includes a new design language for Android and an expansion of the Gemini assistant onto new platforms like Wear OS and Android Auto. Google's Find My Devices app is also rebranding to Find Hub, since it's now more than just a tool to find lost gadgets. You can read more about these updates here.
Android is also getting some fancy new security and privacy boosts. For example, Google is expanding its Scam Detection AI tool in the Google Messages app to flag more types of digital fraud, and there's a new Advanced Protection mode in Android 16 that offers extra security for at-risk users.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Will Musk's explosive row with Trump help or harm his businesses?
Will Musk's explosive row with Trump help or harm his businesses?

Yahoo

time43 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Will Musk's explosive row with Trump help or harm his businesses?

When Elon Musk recently announced that he was stepping back from politics, investors hoped that would mean he would step up his involvement in the many tech firms he runs. His explosive row with President Donald Trump - and the very public airing of his dirty White House laundry - suggests Musk's changing priorities might not quite be the salve they had been hoping for. Instead of Musk retreating somewhat from the public eye and focusing on boosting the fortunes of Tesla and his other enterprises, he now finds himself being threatened with a boycott from one of his main customers - Trump's federal government. Tesla shares were sent into freefall on Thursday - falling 14% - as he sounded off about President Donald Trump on social media. They rebounded a little on Friday following some indications tempers were cooling. Even so, for the investors and analysts who, for months, had made clear they wanted Musk off his phone and back at work, the situation is far from ideal. Some though argue the problems for Musk's businesses run much deeper than this spat - and the controversial role in the Trump administration it has brought a spectacular end to. For veteran tech journalist Kara Swisher, that is especially so for Tesla. "Tesla's finished," she told the BBC on the sidelines of the San Francisco Media Summit early this week. "It was a great car company. They could compete in the autonomous taxi space but they're way behind." Tesla has long attempted to play catch-up against rival Waymo, owned by Google-parent Alphabet, whose driverless taxis have traversed the streets of San Francisco for years - and now operate in several more cities. This month, Musk is supposed to be overseeing Tesla's launch of a batch of autonomous robo-taxis in Austin, Texas. He posted to X last week that the electric vehicle maker had been testing the Model Y with no drivers on board. "I believe 90% of the future value of Tesla is going to be autonomous and robotics," Wedbush Securities analyst Dan Ives told the BBC this week, adding that the Austin launch would be "a watershed moment". "The first task at hand is ensuring the autonomous vision gets off to a phenomenal start," Ives added. Who is Elon Musk? How the Trump-Musk feud erupted But with Musk's attention divided, the project's odds of success would appear to have lengthened. And there's something else to factor in too: Musk's own motivation. The talk in Silicon Valley lately centres less on whether Musk can turn things around and more on whether he even cares. "He's a really powerful person when he's focused on something," said Ross Gerber, President and CEO of Gerber Kawasaki Wealth and Investment Management. "Before, it was about proving to the world that he would make EVs - the tech that nobody else could do. It was about proving he could make rockets. He had a lot to prove." A longtime Tesla investor, Gerber has soured on the stock, and has been pairing back his holdings since Musk's foray into right-wing politics. He called Thursday an "extremely painful day." "It's the dumbest thing you could possibly do to think that you have more power than the president of the United States," Gerber said, referring to Musk's social media tirade against Trump. The BBC reached out to X, Tesla, and SpaceX seeking comment from Mr Musk but did not receive a response. A particular problem for Musk is that, before he seemingly created an enemy in Donald Trump, he already had one in the grassroots social media campaign against his car-maker. Protests, dubbed #TeslaTakedown, have played out across the country every weekend since Trump took office. In April, Tesla reported a 20% drop in car sales for the first three months of the year. Profits plunged more than 70%, and the share price went down with it. "He should not be deciding the fate of our democracy by disassembling our government piece by piece. It's not right," protestor Linda Koistinen told me at a demonstration outside a Berkeley, California Tesla dealership in February. Koistinen said she wanted to make a "visible stand" against Musk personally. "Ultimately it's not about the tech or the Tesla corporation," said Joan Donovan, a prominent disinformation researcher who co-organized the #TeslaTakedown protests on social media. "It's about the way in which the stock of Tesla has been able to be weaponized against the people and it has put Musk in such a position to have an incredible amount of power with no transparency," Donovan added. Another aspect of Musk's empire that has raised the ire of his detractors is X, the social media platform once known as Twitter. "He bought Twitter so that he had clout and would be able to - at the drop of a hat - reach hundreds of millions of people," Donovan said. There is another possibility here though. Could Musk's high-profile falling out with Trump help rehabilitate him in the eyes of people who turned against him because of his previous closeness to the president? Patrick Moorhead, chief analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy, thinks it could. "We're a very forgiving country," Moorhead says in a telephone interview. "These things take time," he acknowledges, but "it's not unprecedented". Swisher likened Musk's personal brand to that of Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates more than two decades ago. She said Gates was once regarded as "the Darth Vader of Silicon Valley" because of his "arrogant and rude" personality. Today, despite his flaws, Gates has largely rehabilitated his image. "He learned. He grew up. People can change," Swisher told me, even though Musk is "clearly troubled." The problem for Musk is the future for him and his companies is not just about what he does - but what Trump decides too. And while Trump needed Musk in the past, not least to help fund his presidential race, it's not so clear he does now. Noah Smith, writer of the Noahpinion Substack, said Trump's highly lucrative foray into cryptocurrencies - as unseemly as it has been - may have freed him from depending on Musk to carry out his will. "My guess is that this was so he could get out from under Elon," Smith said. In Trump's most menacing comment of the day, he suggested cutting Musk's government contracts, which have an estimated value of $38 billion. A significant chunk of that goes to Musk's rocket company SpaceX - seemingly threatening its future. However, despite the bluster, Trump's warning may be a little more hollow than it seems. That's because SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft ferries people and cargo to the International Space Station where three NASA astronauts are currently posted. It demonstrates that SpaceX has so entrenched itself in the US space and national security apparatus, that Trump's threat could be difficult to carry out. You could make a similar argument about Musk's internet satellite company, Starlink. Finding an alternative could be easier said than done. But, if there are limits on what Trump can do, the same is also true of Musk. In the middle of his row with Trump, he threatened to decommission the Dragon - but it wasn't long before he was rowing back. Responding to an X user's suggestion he that he "cool down" he wrote, "Good advice. Ok, we won't decommission Dragon." It's clear Musk and Trump's friendship is over. It's less certain their reliance on each other is. Whatever the future for Musk's businesses is then, it seems Trump - and his administration's actions - will continue to have a big say in them. Trump and Musk trade insults as row erupts in public view Tesla shares tumble as Trump-Musk feud erupts Sign up for our Tech Decoded newsletter to follow the world's top tech stories and trends. Outside the UK? Sign up here. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

The Republican at the Center of the War Between Trump and Musk
The Republican at the Center of the War Between Trump and Musk

Wall Street Journal

timean hour ago

  • Wall Street Journal

The Republican at the Center of the War Between Trump and Musk

Caught in the middle of President Trump and billionaire Elon Musk's spectacular fallout is a Republican operative with close ties to both men. Katie Miller, 33, is a former Trump White House staffer married to White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller. Over the last year, she became a top adviser to Musk and worked at his side as he slashed and reshaped the federal government from his position as the leader of the Department of Government Efficiency.

If Elon Musk and President Trump divorce, who gets Silicon Valley?
If Elon Musk and President Trump divorce, who gets Silicon Valley?

Miami Herald

timean hour ago

  • Miami Herald

If Elon Musk and President Trump divorce, who gets Silicon Valley?

SAN FRANCISCO -- Last year, Elon Musk was the Pied Piper of support for Donald Trump among Silicon Valley power brokers. One by one, tech billionaires close to Musk who had either backed Democrats or avoided the political scrum put their money and their time behind the former president's bid to reclaim the White House. But the meltdown of the relationship between Trump and Musk on Thursday has thrown that coziness into question. In the coming days, the billionaires who followed Musk to Washington may be forced to decide whose side they are on in this suddenly personal fight. For Silicon Valley, what appeared to be a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to team up with decision-makers in Washington is looking precarious. Musk was the keystone of the tech industry's relationship with the Trump administration. Without him, it could be up to lesser-known figures, such as venture capitalist David Sacks, a close friend of Musk who has become the Trump administration's artificial intelligence and crypto czar, to maintain those ties. 'This is a tale as old as time,' said Venky Ganesan, a partner at venture capital firm Menlo Ventures. 'Like Icarus, Elon is finding out that if you fly too close to the sun, your wax melts and you crash.' Even before Musk announced that he was leaving Washington, there were growing questions about what exactly the tech industry's embrace of the Trump White House was accomplishing. The yearslong attempt by the Justice Department to break up Google? Still on track. The Federal Trade Commission's pursuit of Meta, Facebook's parent company? That just wrapped up in a Washington courtroom and is now in the hands of a federal judge. Tariffs on imported goods that could hurt device makers like Apple? Trump seems more determined than ever to see them through. 'Much better to be aligned with principles than personalities,' Ganesan added. 'A lesson tech titans might want to learn.' Representatives for the White House and Sacks did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Musk did not return an email request seeking comment. Throughout 2024, many of the tech industry's boldface names threw their support and hundreds of millions of dollars behind Trump, mainly because he promised to back away from regulating the cryptocurrency industry and keep the federal government's hands off artificial intelligence. Venture capitalist partners Marc Andreessen and Ben Horowitz surprised many when they announced they were supporting Trump, though Horowitz changed his mind when former Vice President Kamala Harris, a personal friend, entered the race. (He said, however, that their venture firm still endorsed Trump.) Many of their colleagues, such as the tech mogul hosts of the popular All-In Podcast, which includes Sacks, also endorsed Trump. For them, Trump has kept up his end of the bargain. He has not only pushed for the deregulation of crypto markets, his family's company has jumped headfirst into them. And Trump's domestic policy bill that angered Musk even contains a provision that would block states from regulating AI. Other tech industry leaders have not had as much luck. At Trump's inauguration, Apple's Tim Cook, Meta's Mark Zuckerberg, Amazon's Jeff Bezos, Google's Sundar Pichai and Musk formed a Mount Rushmore of tech bosses in the crowd behind the new president. Sergey Brin, a Google co-founder who once raced to the airport in San Francisco to protest the travel restrictions of Trump's first administration, was also there. So was OpenAI's Sam Altman, a fellow travel restriction protester. Jensen Huang, CEO Nvidia and relative newcomer to presidential circles, did not attend the inauguration but traveled to Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida to talk AI chips. Their results have been mixed. For a while, Cook appeared to have talked Trump out of the tariffs on Chinese imports that would have badly hurt Apple. But Trump changed his mind and created a different set of tariffs that directly targeted Apple. Huang has been blocked from selling chips to China over national security concerns but was awarded a license to sell hundreds of thousands of chips in the Middle East in data center deals that also brought Altman's company to the table. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told a room of AI leaders, lobbyists and lawmakers this week that the administration would invite foreign investment into AI data centers, reversing Biden administration restrictions. He was speaking at an event hosted by Washington AI Network and sponsored by Meta, Amazon, OpenAI, Microsoft and TikTok, where he announced the administration would rename the U.S. Safety Institute to the Center for AI Standards and Innovation to emphasize growth of the industry over regulation. 'America must lead in AI, and that means embracing innovation while securing our infrastructure,' Lutnick said. 'The new Center for AI Standards and Innovation will help ensure developers have clear, trusted guidelines -- without unnecessary regulation -- so we can stay ahead in the global AI race.' But if Musk's all-out hostility toward Trump continues, it is difficult to say how Trump will treat Musk's companies and Silicon Valley. Until this past year, Trump showed more interest in old industries like steel and cars and was critical of the tech industry's biggest companies -- as well as a few of the smaller ones. Many Trump supporters are still suspicious that Silicon Valley's peacemaking is just opportunism, and would be happy to see him become more hostile. Musk's rift with Trump could directly affect efforts in Washington to benefit his companies. At the Federal Communications Commission, SpaceX has intensely lobbied for more access to spectrum for its Starlink satellite wireless service. FCC Chair Brendan Carr has been a vocal supporter of Musk's satellite strategy and his business. At a SpaceX launch in November, Carr posted a photo of the launch with the words, 'It's time to unleash America's space economy.' Musk saw an opportunity after his Starlink satellite service was shut out of the $42.5 billion Broadband Equity Access and Deployment Program created during the Biden administration, which favored fiber internet service over satellite in hard-to-reach rural areas. Now much of that is up in the air, and Trump has threatened to target the many government contracts held by Musk's companies. 'This has escalated very quickly, so this rupture absolutely could matter,' said Blair Levin, of New Street Research and a former chief of staff to the FCC. Musk's satellite ambitions are tied up in policy debates in federal agencies, Levin said, and 'politically it is very easy to tweak things in ways that are very unhelpful to Musk.' In an update on the social platform X on Thursday afternoon, Musk posted a video of Trump standing next to a bright red Tesla, parked in front of the White House. 'Remember this? @realDonaldTrump' Musk wrote. This article originally appeared in The New York Times. Copyright 2025

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store