Google

Google Pixel phones finally get native call recording — how to enable it and when it’s legal (November 2025)

Les téléphones Google Pixel bénéficient enfin de l’enregistrement d’appels natif — comment l’activer et quand c’est légal (novembre 2025)

Nouveauté : le Pixel dispose enfin d’un véritable enregistreur d’appels intégré Après des années de solutions de contournement, d’astuces limitées par région et d’applications tierces défaillantes, Google a discrètement activé l’enregistrement d’appels natif sur les téléphones Pixel. Des rapports de 9to5Google, Android
novembre 19, 2025

Technology News

  • Apple Sports App on iPhone Expands to Multiple European Countries
    November 21, 2025, 7:24 PM EST. Apple's free Sports app for iPhone has rolled out to additional European markets, adding countries such as Belgium, Croatia, Czechia, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Poland, Hungary, Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, Slovakia, Slovenia, Serbia, Greece, Estonia, Latvia, Romania, Ukraine, and more. The app was already available in the U.S., the U.K., Canada, and other markets like Austria and France, with Germany among others also supported.
  • NASA Advances Artemis II Toward Crewed Moon Mission with Orion-SLS Integration
    November 21, 2025, 7:22 PM EST. NASA is accelerating Artemis II preparations for a crewed Moon mission, targeted no later than spring 2026. The Orion spacecraft, with its launch abort system, is integrated with the SLS rocket inside the Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) at Kennedy Space Center. Teams completed critical testing of communications interfaces between the rocket, Orion, and ground networks, including the Near Space Network and Deep Space Network. Acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy said the mission will fly four astronauts around the Moon and back, building the foundation for future lunar and Mars missions. In the coming weeks, crews will conduct a Countdown Demonstration Test at Kennedy, don their Integrity crew survival system spacesuits, and rehearse inside Orion in the VAB. A second test will address launch-pad emergencies on Launch Pad 39B. The crew: Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen.
  • One smartphone brand thieves won't steal - and it ain't Apple
    November 21, 2025, 7:18 PM EST. London police say more than 100,000 mobile phone thefts were reported in 2024, highlighting a holiday safety risk. A curious pattern emerges: thieves reportedly return or discard Samsung devices after hearing, "Don't want no Samsung." The article notes there are no official figures on brand popularity among criminals, but implies that resale value and device protections influence theft decisions. Samsung's Theft Detection Lock is cited as a potential deterrent, while high-value iPhones likely drive much of the market. Whether these cases reflect a wider trend or isolated incidents remains unclear; the piece originated with PC-WELT.
  • Google Brings Gemini to Android Auto, Expanding AI Conversations on the Road
    November 21, 2025, 7:16 PM EST. Google is expanding its AI reach with Gemini on Android Auto, rolling out to 45 countries and potentially 250 million cars. After upgrading Google Assistant to Gemini, drivers can engage in hands-free conversations to get activity recommendations, compose and edit messages (with translations for 40 languages), and manage emails, calendars, and notes. The update taps into Gmail, Google Calendar, Google Keep, and even Samsung Calendar/Notes, with more third-party support planned. Five use cases include requesting stops, drafting messages, searching mail/calendar, creating music playlists, and rehearsing a speech. While convenient, safety concerns about distraction at highway speeds persist. Google says more features are coming as Gemini expands its AI in vehicles.
  • Own Tesla Stock? What to Know About Its Robotaxi Rollout, Safety Race with Waymo, and 2026 Outlook
    November 21, 2025, 7:14 PM EST. Tesla aims to push its robotaxi rollout toward operating without a safety driver by 2026, per CEO Elon Musk. The company contrasts its cautious approach-paranoid about safety- with Waymo's history, highlighting miles driven and incident rates. By end of Q3, Tesla reported seven collisions across more than 250,000 robotaxi miles, implying a higher collision rate than Waymo's 2.1 incidents per million miles and the rough 67,000 miles benchmark Musk referenced. It's important to note safety drivers may have intervened in some Tesla events, and small-number variability can swing averages. Still, Tesla has far more data from its FSD program, which could help improve robotaxi performance as the rollout matures. The takeaway for investors: the timeline is uncertain, but the risk-reward hinges on safety improvements, data leverage, and scale into 2026.