| The Latest From our Columnists |
|
|
| PHOTO ILLUSTRATION: RACHEL MENDELSON/THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, APPLE (3) |
|
|
Nicole Nguyen: iOS 17 Is Coming. Here’s What iPhones, iPads and Apple Watches Are Missing. |
|
New devices are fun, but among Apple’s glitzy product launches, its software-focused June event is my favorite. We get a glimpse of the new features coming to existing iPhones, iPads and other Apple devices—at no additional charge! Ahead of the news, I’ve got a long list of things I’d like for the company to announce. 👉 Read Nicole’s full column here. |
|
|
| PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY RACHEL MENDELSON/THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, ISTOCK |
|
|
Julie Jargon: A Chatbot Was Designed to Help Prevent Eating Disorders. Then It Gave Dieting Tips. |
|
A chatbot designed to aid people seeking help for eating disorders and body issues has been taken offline after it provided some users with diet advice. The bot, named Tessa, operated on the website for the National Eating Disorders Association, and was meant to provide help for website users determined to be at risk for developing an eating disorder. 👉 Read Julie’s full column here. |
|
|
| PHOTO: DANIELLE AMY FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL |
|
|
Christopher Mims: Ultralong-Range Electric Cars Are Arriving. Say Goodbye to Charging Stops |
|
If you want to experience the future of fully electrified transportation today, all you have to do is buy a $138,000 electric vehicle, be flexible about where you park it at night—and exercise some patience. Those are a few of the things I learned on a 1,000-mile road trip in an EV in which I never had to stop just to recharge. 👉 Read Christopher’s full column here. |
|
|
The Wall Street Journal’s Evan Gershkovich is being wrongfully detained in Russia after he was arrested while on a reporting trip and accused of spying—a charge the Journal and the U.S. government vehemently deny. Follow the latest coverage, sign up for an email alert, and learn how you can use social media to support Evan. |
|
|
|
| PHOTO: JIM LO SCALZO/SHUTTERSTOCK |
|
|
|
|
|
📰 Enjoying this newsletter? Get more from WSJ and support our journalism by subscribing today with this special offer. |
|
|
|
Once Mighty Intel Struggles to Escape ‘Mud Hole’ |
|
Pat Gelsinger is keenly aware he must act fast to stop Intel from becoming yet another storied American technology company left in the dust by nimbler competitors. Over the past decade, graphics-chip maker Nvidia leapfrogged Intel to become America’s most valuable semiconductor company, rivals overtook Intel in making the most advanced chips, and perennial also-ran Advanced Micro Devices has been stealing market share. Intel, by contrast, has faced repeated delays introducing new chips and frustration from would-be customers. 👉 Read Asa Fitch’s full report here. |
|
|
|
|
Twitter Users Beg for Invite-Only Code to Jack Dorsey-Backed Social Media Platform: ‘I Would Pay Up to $250’ |
|
At a recent event hosted by a tech company, dozens of San Francisco young professionals and others crowded into a basement event space decorated with string lights and munched on pizza and sipped LaCroix. Like attendees at so many Bay Area gatherings, they were chasing the latest hot new thing. This wasn’t the real place they wanted to be. FOMO has people scrambling and pleading to join the exclusive Bluesky. 👉 Read Meghan Bobrowsky and Alexa Corse’s full report here. |
|
|
|
| 🎥 Watch This: Inside Samsung and Apple’s Manufacturing Moves Outside of China |
|
|
| PHOTO ILLUSTRATION: AMBER BRAGDON |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| CREDIT: THE WALL STREET JOURNAL |
|
|
|
|
The Technology newsletter is a weekly digest of tech reviews, columns and headlines from WSJ’s Personal Tech news editor Shara Tibken, tech news editor Robert Wall and Personal Tech bureau chief Wilson Rothman. You can reach them by replying to this newsletter, and follow them on Twitter: @sharatibken, @r_wall and @wjrothman. |
|