
Apple's Surprise Free Offer To iPhone 13 Users Is Now Live For iPhones And More
Apple iPhone 13 Pro now has satellite connectivity with T-Mobile.
T-Satellite works by connecting your phone to Starlink satellites (though, please note, it doesn't install Starlink on your phone as rumor-mongers previously claimed).
T-Mobile's CEO Mike Sievert said in a post on X, 'Today marks a huge step in @TMobile's mission to end dead zones. T-Satellite is officially out of beta and available to anyone who wants it — including Verizon and AT&T customers,' he exclaimed.
That's an important point: subscribers on other networks can sign up to T-Satellite by paying a monthly fee. Note that Verizon and AT&T are expected to offer their own versions of this service, but for now, T-Mobile has first-mover advantage.
'With 650+ satellites in orbit, the largest satellite-to-mobile constellation on the planet aims to connect you almost anywhere you can see the sky. It's already helping save lives during disasters and providing an extra level of safety for those who love to explore the great outdoors,' Sievert goes on.
The service is available for compatible handsets, and that includes most current Android phones as well as all iPhones from iPhone 13 onwards.
It went live on Wednesday, July 23, right on schedule — though had already been offered to customers impacted by the recent floods in Texas — and the new service has been called a game-changer because, unlike rival satellite options, including Apple's own Globalstar service, it doesn't require users to point their phone at the satellite. It works just like regular cell connections do, even in your pocket.
If T-Mobile is your carrier and you have the Experience Beyond service, you get this new capability included. Others, including AT&T and Verizon customers, can access the service for $10 per month. The T-Mobile satellite service is limited to texting with iMessage and SMS, and data is not supported, though more capabilities may follow.
For now, this is the beginning of a new way to stay in touch wherever you are, even if your phone is in your pocket.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Digital Trends
16 minutes ago
- Digital Trends
5 iOS 26 public beta features you need to try right now
Apple has finally opened the gates for the masses to test the next big iPhone software update. The public beta build of iOS 26 has finally been released, and it brings with it a whole bunch of new features and UI changes. The big draw, of course, is the new Liquid Glass design makeover. To put it mildly, it has proved to be a controversial choice, and over the numerous developer updates that Apple has released so far, it has refined the glass-inspired UI design. To date, it remains a topic of hot discussion, but it's here to stay regardless. Recommended Videos With it comes a fresh look for the lock screen, which now features an adaptive clock widget that adjusts its size based on the on-screen content. It can even turn static images into spatial wallpapers that respond to motion. Beyond the big aesthetic overhaul, iOS 26 also brings a whole bunch of new features, but five of them stand out from a functional perspective. Let's dive in: Visual Intelligence for the screen When Apple Intelligence first landed on the iPhone, one of the most notable capabilities in the AI bundle was Visual Intelligence. Essentially, you just need to point the camera at the world around you, and the AI will help you make sense of it. Whether it's pulling information from a poster, identifying plants, or translating text, it can handle it all. Even open-source projects have launched similar apps, some of which run entirely on the iPhone. With iOS 26, Apple has expanded Visual Intelligence to cover whatever appears on your phone's screen. Based on the content that appears on the screen, or the element users choose to highlight, Visual Intelligence will find similar matches on Google Search or on shopping sites. It will also assist with adding events to the calendar or just pulling up more information about it using ChatGPT. A big upgrade for the Phone app Some of the most notable changes in iOS 26 were apparently reserved for the Phone app. Apple combined the Favourites, Recents, and Voicemails sections under a unified dashboard. Another notable addition is the call screening facility, which informs users about the intent of the caller before they pick up. My favorite, however, is the hold assist system. For my reporting duties, I often find myself waiting on extended hold periods while trying to communicate with employees at various agencies, both government and private. The new Hold Assist feature in the Phone app will handle the wait times for you. Once your call is put on hold by the person on the other end, the onboard assistant takes over. When a human returns to attend the call, the Phone app will inform you of their availability so that you can carry forward the conversation without wasting your time. A cleaner camera app Apple received a lot of flak for its Photos app redesign not too long ago. Not all those problems have been addressed with iOS 26, but the entire app has been simplified across two main sections. The Library is where you find all your photos, while the Albums feed is where you get all the custom and preset folders. Of course, it has all been redesigned to match the Liquid Glass theme, which also extends to the camera app. To make things simpler in the camera app, Apple now only shows two options at the bottom, one each for photo and video. Only when you slide across the pill-shaped controls will you get access to other modes such as portrait, panorama, and slo-mo. Each mode now prominently shows the granular options at the top, but you don't have to stretch your fingers all the way up to make adjustments. Every granular control, from exposure and aspect ratio to styles, now conveniently opens in a dashboard at the bottom of the screen. This is particularly helpful while taking photos in portrait orientation. Plus, the consolidated approach just makes it easier to access the desired tools while using the iPhone one-handed. Furthermore, format and resolution options have also been expanded and given their own unique place in the camera viewfinder, which means you no longer have to make a trip to the Settings app each time you need to tweak those presets. The Messages app is more fun Remember the call screening feature mentioned above for phone calls? Well, Apple is extending that convenience to the Messages app, as well. All the messages from unknown senders are silenced and pushed into a separate folder. On the more functional side of things, it now supports live translations for texts. Apple is also taking cues from other communication platforms such as WhatsApp and Telegram. To that end, you can finally set custom backgrounds for chats. These can be created on the fly using the Image Playground system. Moreover, typing Indicators have finally been enabled for group chats. Additionally, you can create polls in the Messages app. Interestingly, Apple Intelligence will automatically suggest the polling system when it detects that a conversation is going in that direction. Apple Maps is now your travel diary Apple Maps is one of the most underrated apps offered by the company, though it's not without its own share of bad history. With the arrival of iOS 26, the app is getting a new feature called Visited Places. Think of it as a personal log of all the notable places you have visited, from monuments to coffee shops. Users can opt for their iPhone to detect their visit to places of importance, and subsequently view these locations in Apple Maps under the 'Visited Places' dashboard. It's a neat way of saving the location details and going back in time for reference information whenever the need arises. Thanks to Apple Intelligence, these places will be detected and logged automatically, and even the preferred route information will be saved. Thankfully, all the data saved in the Visited Places dashboard is end-to-end encrypted, which means not even Apple can access it, let alone any third party.


CNET
16 minutes ago
- CNET
iOS 18 vs. iOS 26: Here's What Liquid Glass Brings to Your iPhone
If you're still on the fence about installing the iOS 26 public beta, you're not alone. The next version of Apple's mobile operating system looks exciting, but is it all that different from what's currently on your iPhone? This comparison might help. The latest version of Apple's OS brings Liquid Glass to the table -- an all new design language that takes cues from VisionOS on the Vision Pro headset. Translucency and a literal polish grace almost every aspect of iOS 26, but it's not as dramatic as you might expect it to be. Underneath, the iOS you're used to remains largely unchanged, which is a good thing. While Liquid Glass may be the showstealer of this iOS version, there are still plenty of basic features that we're excited for. Whether that means it's worth installing a potentially unstable build will be up to you, but if you want to see what you're missing out on, check out our comparison between iOS26 and iOS 18 below. For more, don't miss the leaked iPhone 17 Pro model colors. Home screen Apple kept the new Liquid Glass minimal on the home screen, with only minor changes to the default home screen appearance versus iOS 18's. Apple/Screenshot by Jeff Carlson Looking at the home screens, the primary difference you'll find is that in iOS 26 the background of the dock and the search option that sits in between the dock and the home screen icons are more transparent and have a sheen to the edges, whereas in iOS 18, these are slightly darker. Other smaller changes are that the icons on iOS 26 look slightly larger, and some app icons seem to have been more influenced by the redesign than others, most notably (from the screenshots) Settings, Camera and Mail. For Liquid Glass to really shine on the home screen, you'll want to opt for the "All Clear" mode, which will create the most dramatic change to your icons and widgets. Going this route could potentially introduce some viewability issues, but the "reduce transparency" setting remedies this quite well. Control Center Apple/Screenshot by Jeff Carlson Things here are largely unchanged. Outside of the new glassy look in iOS 26, the 1x2 and 2x1 controls are more rounded than that of iOS 18. Lock screen Apple/Screenshot by Jeff Carlson It's easy to see the differences that Liquid Glass brings to the lock screen of the iPhone. The digital clock in iOS 26 dynamically resizes depending on the wallpaper and the number of notifications you have at any given moment, which is pretty cool. The clock itself on iOS 18 can be changed, but it won't change in size in response to content displayed on the lock screen. The background on notifications is clearly different between the two OS versions, with iOS 18 providing more opacity and a black text versus iOS 26's near-transparent background on white text. The controls at the bottom in iOS 26 also appear more like physical buttons with depth and more of a see-through background. The new unlock effect in iOS 26 is that the motion of unlocking your iPhone will appear as though you're lifting a sheet of glass, highlighted by a shiny edge to give it form when you begin to slide your finger up. Menus and dynamic tab bars iOS 26's new Dynamic Tab gives you a cleaner look and more space to view your content. Apple/Screenshot by Jeff Carlson A new addition in iOS 26 is the introduction of dynamic tab bars in apps that will change depending on whether you're scrolling or trying to perform a specific action. Apple says this will create a more intuitive experience while freeing up space for your content. If you were to replace the glass effect with heavily saturated colors, no one would blame you for mistaking this new tab bar with what Google's doing in Android 16 in some of its apps -- they look a lot alike. But compared to iOS 18, this new dynamic tab bar should not only reduce sifting through multiple menus, but it looks pretty good in the process. iOS 26 will dynamically adapt to light and dark backgrounds In iOS 26, the color of menu icons and icon text will adapt depending on the background. Apple/GIF by CNET While it's harder to compare Liquid Glass to iOS 18 here, an upcoming feature is that buttons and menus will adapt depending on the content's background color. For instance, when you're scrolling through an app with a light background, the floating menu options will appear with black text for easier viewing and will automatically change to white upon scrolling to a dark background. in iOS 18, some apps aspects of the user interface would appear darker depending on the color of the background, but less so than how Liquid Glass handles it now. CNET/ Screenshots by Jeff Carlson iOS has had this type of feature show up in a less dramatic fashion before, as you can tell from the photos app screenshots above. Comparing these to what's on the horizon, it's hard not to get excited about the small tweaks Liquid Glass has in store, too. Those are just a few of our initial findings, and we'll likely add more once we surface them. If you want more about iOS 26, check out three upcoming features that are a bigger deal than Liquid Glass.


The Verge
18 minutes ago
- The Verge
Microsoft uncovered a security flaw affecting macOS's Spotlight.
Posted Jul 28, 2025 at 5:01 PM UTC Microsoft uncovered a security flaw affecting macOS's Spotlight. The vulnerability (CVE-2025-31199), which Apple patched in a March 31st update, could give bad actors access to files inside a device's Downloads folder and data cached by Apple Intelligence. That includes geolocation data, media metadata, and facial recognition info, according to a report from Microsoft Threat Intelligence. Security researchers discovered the flaw after using Spotlight plugins to bypass a security feature made to prevent third-party services from gaining access to user data. Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates. Emma Roth Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All by Emma Roth Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All AI Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Apple Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Microsoft Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All News Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Security Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Tech