Real Estate Nouvelles: 27 juillet 2025

Technology News

  • The Best Smartwatches for 2026: A Modern Horology Brief
    November 18, 2025, 11:46 PM EST. Smartwatches have evolved from novelty to essential digital valets that monitor health, sleep, blood-oxygen, and stress while keeping you punctual. The guide highlights the top 2026 models: Best Overall goes to Apple Watch Series 10/11 and the Ultra 3, with brighter displays, improved health sensors, longer battery life, satellite connectivity, and a rugged titanium chassis. For iPhone users, it's seamless integration-Messages, workouts, and Siri-though with the same lifestyle branding. On Android, the Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 and Ultra offer a stylish, high-performance rival featuring Google's Gemini AI, titanium builds, sapphire crystal, and a 3,000-nit display. Together, these watches form Android's most polished reply to Apple's regime, balancing freedom, health insights, and all-day wearability.
  • First Windows 10 ESU Update Fails on Company-Licensed PCs, Microsoft Investigates 0x800f0922
    November 18, 2025, 11:44 PM EST. Microsoft is investigating a bug that prevents the first Windows 10 ESU update (KB5068781) from installing on devices with a company license. Reports show the update appears to install but after a restart it rolls back with error 0x800f0922. The issue does not affect consumers using private licenses, and Microsoft has not announced a patch or workaround yet. The root cause appears tied to the activation of Windows subscriptions via the Microsoft 365 Admin Center. Regular Windows 10 users can still receive the ESU update automatically once their device is registered, resulting in build number 19045.6575. No workaround is currently available. The ESU update remains a critical security update now that support for Windows 10 has ended.
  • Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra gets early Black Friday cut with big discounts
    November 18, 2025, 11:42 PM EST. Samsung is rolling out early Black Friday deals on the Galaxy S25 Ultra with up to $700 instant trade-in credit and six months of Google AI Pro, though you can't stack them. All three storage tiers get $350 off: the 512GB at $1,069.99 (was $1,419.99), and the 1TB at $1,309.99 (was $1,659.99). The phone features a 6.9-inch QHD+ display, 12GB RAM, embedded S Pen, and the overclocked Snapdragon 8 Elite with a 200MP main camera and 100x Space Zoom. Our take: a big, capable phone with long-term support (seven-year software updates). A base price dip to $949.99 makes it competitive against rivals. If you want up-to-date Galaxy software and S Pen, act fast-these deals may not last.
  • NANLITE Unveils Cookie and Cookie-S Tiny USB-C LED Lights for Smartphones
    November 18, 2025, 11:40 PM EST. NANLITE launches the cookie and cookie-s tiny USB-C powered LED lights for smartphones. Weighing 21.4 g and powered directly from the USB-C port (no internal battery), they offer three brightness levels and three CCT temperatures (roughly 3200K, 4300K, 5600K). The dual-sided design provides hard light on one side and diffusion on the other, with eight LEDs per side and color accuracy: CRI 95 and TLCI 98. They support dual capture by lighting both sides simultaneously and come in coral pink, cyan blue, or lavender for $12.99.
  • Garmin Forerunner 165 vs. Coros Pace 4: Best starter AMOLED running watch showdown
    November 18, 2025, 11:38 PM EST. Looking to pick between the Coros Pace 4 and the Garmin Forerunner 165? This Wareable comparison covers two current-gen, entry-level AMOLED running watches. Both offer a light ~40g polymer case and a sharp 1.2-inch AMOLED (390x390) display. Price-wise, Pace 4 sits at about $249/£229 with dual-frequency GPS and strong battery life; the Forerunner 165 debuted at $249/$299 and often lands around $200-$250 as it matures, creating parity if you skip music. In use, Garmin's UI feels punchier out of the box, while Coros tends to keep brightness lower to squeeze extra hours. Verdict: choose the Pace 4 if you want premium screen tech and GPS at a modest premium; opt for the Forerunner 165 if you value software polish and near-price-parity on many SKUs.