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Which airlines can trace your lost luggage with Apple AirTags? Here's the list of all 30

Which airlines can trace your lost luggage with Apple AirTags? Here's the list of all 30

Tom's Guide2 days ago
One of my favorite ways to use Apple AirTags is to track my luggage whenever I do any kind of travelling. I'm not alone with that, and following the launch of iOS 18.2 last year Apple confirmed it had partnered with "15 airlines" on a system that lets travelers share the location of their AirTagged luggage.
That number has since grown to 30 different airlines, now that Saudia, the national carrier of Saudi Arabia, is on board. The airline announced this news on LinkedIn, confirming that travellers would be able to share the FindMy app's Item Location Link via Saudia's "dedicated digital portal."
It's only really relevant if your luggage actually gets lost, though. If you don't bother with checked luggage, or your bags end up on the carousel in the arrivals hall as planned, then you won't need to worry about any of this
The feature is only available on devices running iOS 18.2, iPadOS 18.2 or macOS 15.2 and up. So if you've been holding off on updating your phone, you might want to get iOS 18 installed before your next trip. Or the iOS 26 public beta, if you're feeling up to it.
Oh, and don't do what I did, and assume your AirTags are working before you leave. Make sure to check the batteries, and that you will actually be able to track your luggage in the event it does get lost.
Saudia is just one of many airlines that supports AirTag tracking. So be sure to watch out for the following names next time you're looking to book airline tickets for yourself.
Each airline has its own system for sharing the location of missing luggage, but it all relies on the same principle laid out with the upgrades to Apple's Find My app. That means going into the Find My app to generate a unique sharing code for your tracker.
Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips.
We have a more in-depth guide on how to share your AirTag location here, but the simple version is that you have to open the Find My app, tap the Items tab and find the AirTag in question.
Once you tap Share item location, you'll be guided through a series of instructions to generate a link to share with the airline.
Apple says that at least one of your Apple devices needs to be online in order to "provide updated locations." You also have the power to manage the sharing link, and stop sharing the AirTags location at any time. Which, presumably, you wouldn't want to do until your luggage has been located.
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I ran 15 miles with the Apple Watch's new Workout Buddy — here's my verdict
I ran 15 miles with the Apple Watch's new Workout Buddy — here's my verdict

Tom's Guide

time33 minutes ago

  • Tom's Guide

I ran 15 miles with the Apple Watch's new Workout Buddy — here's my verdict

When Apple announced its Workout Buddy feature, an AI-powered assistant to get you through your workouts, I released an audible groan, knowing I'd have to write this article. On paper, it's the kind of thing I hate — an overly-enthusiastic robotic voice, regurgitating stats I've already seen on my running watch. I'm the kind of person who loves to run alone — it's my time to escape, to decompress, and to get my mind in order. I've completed five marathons, and trained for all of them on my own. I fully expected to hate Workout Buddy, but I diligently downloaded the watchOS 26 Beta onto my Apple Watch Series 10 (here's how to upgrade your Apple Watch to watchOS 26 Beta), and ran for 15 miles. The results surprised me. To put my new Workout Buddy through its paces, I set out on several different runs over two days — an easy 7-mile run one day, followed by a 6-mile tempo session and a 2-mile recovery the next. The tempo session was built on my Apple Watch as a Custom Workout. Each run, excluding the tempo session, started with the Workout Buddy's 'pep talk,' which went over how many miles I'd run this week or my current streak of closing my rings, along with phrases like 'Great job starting your run!' and 'You're crushing it!' Then, each mile, Workout Buddy would tell me my average pace for the mile, my heart rate, and what I was listening to. At the end of the run, it gave me a summary of my workout, again, excluding the tempo run. During the custom workout, Workout Buddy didn't seem to work — instead, I had the normal reminders to change pace during the work and recovery phases of the workout. Perhaps it's something I hadn't toggled on in Settings, or perhaps that was Workout Buddy, but all of the 'good job' messaging was gone. Apple isn't the first brand to add AI to its fitness trackers — we've seen it from Whoop, Garmin, Oura, Strava, and Samsung. Yet like pretty much every other brand on the market, Apple's AI isn't foolproof. On one run, Workout Buddy told me how many minutes I'd run that year — sure, running something like 4,000 minutes is an achievement, but it's not a milestone I've ever tracked before. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. Another thing to note is that you have to have your iPhone with you to use Workout Buddy, and not all iPhones are compatible. Your iPhone has to have Apple Intelligence in able to use Workout Buddy, so you'll need an iPhone 15 Pro/ iPhone 15 Pro Max, or iPhone 16. While I didn't hate Workout Buddy as much as I was anticipating, like all of these AI fitness features, in order to be truly useful, it needs to do more. Apple has erred on the side of caution with an overly positive tone, but what I want is my Workout Buddy to tell me that the last rep was slower, so I needed to dig in to finish the workout strong. Of course, Apple probably wouldn't ever do this, as they wouldn't want to risk people getting injured, but even if the messaging was 'that last mile was slower, but this weeks training load is up 60%', or 'you're slowing down but you're going up-hill. Your grade-adjusted pace is as follows…' it would be more useful than regurgitating what's on my wrist already. It's worth noting, this is a Beta version of watchOS 26, and often Apple will hold things back to coincide with the potential release of new watches this fall. What I'd hope to see is AI that gets smarter the more you run with it. If your Workout Buddy could remember your last run on a certain route, and tell you when hills were coming up, or how your current performance compared, that might be more helpful. What's more, if Apple, like most of the best Garmin watches have done for years, could consider your current week's training load, and how well you've slept the night before, and suggest workouts for you, that could take a lot of the guesswork out of training, and enhance the tool. Plus, prevent you from overtraining and picking up an injury that might keep you from the start line. Apple has always fallen behind its competitors in its lack of coaching, recovery, and training features, but Workout Buddy seems to be a hint of what's to come — Apple using the expertise of its Fitness+ Coaches and blending this into the Workout app. I don't for a second believe Workout Buddy can replace the expertise of real-life coaches, but I've always performed best when I've had someone pushing me to work harder, not congratulating me on getting out the door. It's the reason some of Peloton's instructors have become household names — they don't just hold your hand, they push you to get fitter. Perhaps Apple could follow Oura's lead and give users different AI personalities to subscribe to, so you can pick a coach that's right for you. I just hope when Workout Buddy rolls out this fall, its personality is a little punchier, because it has the potential to be a useful tool for runners. Follow Tom's Guide on Google News to get our up-to-date news, how-tos, and reviews in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button.

Apple iPhone 17, iPhone 17 Pro Release Date: New Schedule Emerges
Apple iPhone 17, iPhone 17 Pro Release Date: New Schedule Emerges

Forbes

time34 minutes ago

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Apple iPhone 17, iPhone 17 Pro Release Date: New Schedule Emerges

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I tested Live Translation on iOS 26 vs Galaxy AI — and the results surprised me
I tested Live Translation on iOS 26 vs Galaxy AI — and the results surprised me

Tom's Guide

timean hour ago

  • Tom's Guide

I tested Live Translation on iOS 26 vs Galaxy AI — and the results surprised me

Apple's amplifying the calling experience on iPhones with new features packaged into iOS 26. I've already explored how the new Call Screen works on iOS 26, pitting it against how the Pixel 9 Pro does it with Android 16. But now, it's time to test out another one of its new calling features: Live Translation. It isn't just for phone calls either because Live Translation works in other apps like Messages and FaceTime. In fact, it's one of the few new Apple Intelligence features that the company announced during its WWDC 2025 keynote for iOS 26 — allowing users to translate phone calls in real time. While it's one of those features that serves a specific case use, you might find it handy when that opportunity arises. Meanwhile, Samsung has actually offered its version called Live Translate as part of its Galaxy AI suite since the Galaxy S24 series. For this comparison, I'm going to break down how these competing services perform and tell you which is the more reliable one. In order to test out these live translating features for phone calls, I'm using an iPhone 16 Pro Max running the iOS 26 beta against a Galaxy Z Flip 7 running One UI 8 on top of Android 16. One important thing to know is the amount of languages each service supports to translate to English. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. In its current iteration, the beta Live Translation feature with iOS 26 only supports a total of four languages: Spanish, Portuguese, German, and French. You're limited with the options, but hopefully Apple rolls out more languages in the coming months. Samsung offers way more. There's 25+ languages supported by Galaxy AI's Live Translate feature, and for this reason, it's much more versatile. Winner: Galaxy AI For these actual tests to see how well they perform, I generated stories using Google Gemini — which I then put into Google Translate to translate and speak for me. Using one phone as the caller speaking in the other language with the other phone translating, I had both phones translating the following in real time: 'The air was thick and salty, a warm blanket that wrapped around me the moment I stepped out of the car. My feet found the soft, warm sand, and I exhaled, feeling the last of my everyday stress melt away. The ocean stretched out, a vast expanse of brilliant turquoise, its waves coming in a steady, rhythmic hush. It wasn't a day for adventure, but for pure, unadulterated peace. I spent the afternoon under a palm tree, the leaves rustling like soft paper, watching the sun dip into the horizon, painting the sky in fiery shades of orange and pink. I took one last, deep breath, filling my lungs with the ocean's scent, grateful for the simple, quiet moments.' The iPhone 16 Pro Max with iOS 26 offers the better experience here because of how it speaks aloud the translation after a couple of sentences. What happens, too, is that the caller's audio is softened to allow the translation in English to play on top of them — much like how an interpreter would do it. With Galaxy AI it tells the other person on the line that the feature is active, but it's heavily delayed the translation. While it manages to translate the story accurately to English, it feels less of a natural conversation going on because of how it waits so long to do it. Winner: iOS 26 Next up, I asked Gemini to generate a story explaining what entropy is in a concise summary. Here's what I used to test out Live Translate with iOS 26 vs. Galaxy AI: "Entropy in action. It's not a punishment; it's a fundamental rule of the universe. This plate, all its molecules in a perfect arrangement, was a state of low entropy—low disorder. Now, shattered on the floor, it's in a state of high entropy. The universe naturally tends toward this chaos. You'll never see these pieces spontaneously jump back together. It takes work—a lot of work—to create order, but things will fall into a mess on their own. This broken plate is a perfect little example of the universe's ultimate plan: more disorder, all the time." Live Translate on iOS 26 stumbled a couple of times with the translation, but the overall point about entropy got across. Just as before, it also announces that the translation is active after I've turned it on — with the actual translation beginning after a couple of sentences. On my iPhone 16 Pro Max, I really like how it breaks it down in iMessage style chat bubbles. What makes it more enjoyable is how Live Translate on iOS 26 makes it feel more like a natural conversation by overlaying the spoken translation over the speaker's voice. Not only does Galaxy AI wait until the caller is done speaking before it begins to speak and show me the translation, but I find it annoying that I can't scroll through the translation on my Galaxy Z Flip 7. Unlike the iPhone, it manages to translate the conversation more accurately — including the parts where the iPhone messed up. But despite this, I still like how iOS 26 performs overall. Winner: iOS 26 Lastly, I had Gemini create a story about someone explaining their day in the office in a more casual manner. Here's the full breakdown: My day? It's been a marathon of meetings that could have been emails and a battle with a printer that seems to hate me personally. I've been staring at the same spreadsheet for two hours, looking for a typo that has to be a single digit, and I'm pretty sure my eyes are crossing. The hamsters on the little wheel in my head have given up and are now just sitting in the corner drinking tiny glasses of water. I've hit peak brain capacity for the day, and now I'm just sitting here, pretending to be productive until it's a socially acceptable time to escape this fluorescent purgatory. The end result with this German translation is no different from the rest, as iOS 26 handles it in a more natural way with how it overlays the translated conversation while the person's actively speaking. It happens after a couple of sentences in and proceeds to keep the same pace throughout the rest of the conversation. It did stumble just once at the end. By this time, I was expecting the same drill as before with Galaxy AI. Specifically, it again waited until the entire conversation was over to start the translation — which makes it feel a bit awkward. Yes, the translation was accurate throughout, but I still don't like the long pause. That's why I tried it a second time, with the caller pausing for a longer period of time two sentences in. While this is the only way I'm able to get Galaxy AI to start translating earlier, it messes up the flow of the back-and-forth conversation. For this reason, I'm giving it to iOS 26. Winner: iOS 26 Beyond their ability to translate phone conversations in real time, it's worth mentioning some of the quirks I found testing these live translation features. Neither service allows me the option to save the transcripts while the feature is active, which is annoying because it'd be handy to have them saved to a note or something. Secondly, Live Translation with Galaxy AI doesn't allow me to scroll through the transcript while I'm actively on the call. I don't understand why you can't do this, but it'd be helpful to go back into the translated conversation to reference something I might've missed — or want to follow up on. Even though Galaxy AI was nearly spot-on with the translation and offers more supported languages, it's the way it executes the translation that makes it not as intuitive to use. At the end of the day, I would prefer having a more casual experience talking to someone speaking a foreign language — instead of having to wait through these long and awkward pauses. I can forgive iOS 26 for botching up a couple of things in my testing, but Apple absolutely delivers the more practical experience. Not only does it start translating much sooner than Galaxy AI, but the way it overlays the audio makes it much more convenient. Plus, I do like how I'm able to scroll through the translation on my iPhone. Hopefully Apple makes the necessary tweaks and additions to make it even better for the final release of iOS 26 later this fall. Follow Tom's Guide on Google News to get our up-to-date news, how-tos, and reviews in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button.

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