Samsung is poised to make a significant impact on the foldable smartphone market with its upcoming Galaxy Z Fold 8 series. This eagerly awaited line-up, featuring the Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra and Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide, is expected to deliver substantial advancements in display technology, performance, and overall usability. Recent filings with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) strongly suggest that these devices are nearing their official release. The Galaxy Unpacked event, scheduled for July 22, 2026, is widely anticipated to be the platform for their grand unveiling.
FCC filings have long been a reliable indicator of a product’s readiness for launch, and the Galaxy Z Fold 8 series is no exception. These filings confirm the existence of the new foldable devices and hint at their imminent arrival in the market. Samsung’s decision to align the launch with its mid-year Galaxy Unpacked event underscores its strategy of maintaining a consistent presence in the competitive smartphone landscape. By unveiling flagship devices during this period, Samsung continues to reinforce its reputation as a leader in technological innovation.
The timing of this launch is particularly significant as it positions Samsung to capture consumer attention ahead of the holiday season. With the foldable smartphone market gaining momentum, the Galaxy Z Fold 8 series is expected to set new benchmarks for design and functionality.
Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra: Elevating Foldable Performance
The Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra is designed to redefine the capabilities of foldable smartphones. At its core is the powerful Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 processor, which ensures exceptional speed and efficiency. This innovative chipset is complemented by a larger battery, addressing one of the most common concerns among foldable phone users, battery longevity. With this upgrade, users can expect extended usage without compromising on performance.
For productivity-focused users, the return of S Pen compatibility is a standout feature. The stylus support enhances the device’s versatility, making it ideal for tasks such as note-taking, sketching, and multitasking. These enhancements position the Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra as a premium choice for those seeking a blend of innovation and practicality in a foldable form factor.
The device also features a high-resolution foldable display with a 120 Hz refresh rate, making sure smooth animations and vibrant visuals. This combination of hardware and software advancements makes the Z Fold 8 Ultra a compelling option for both tech enthusiasts and professionals.
Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide: Expanding the Foldable Experience
The Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide introduces a bold new approach to foldable design with its wider 4:3 aspect ratio. This innovative design choice addresses user feedback from previous models, where narrower displays were seen as limiting for multitasking and media consumption. The wider screen enhances usability, allowing for more efficient side-by-side app usage and improved viewing experiences.
The device features high-resolution displays, including a 432 PPI cover screen and a 403 PPI foldable screen, delivering sharp and detailed visuals. A 120 Hz refresh rate further enhances the user experience by providing seamless transitions and animations. These features make the Z Fold 8 Wide an excellent choice for professionals and power users who demand versatility and performance.
Under the hood, the Z Fold 8 Wide is powered by the same Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chipset as its Ultra counterpart, making sure top-tier performance across the board. Photography enthusiasts will appreciate the inclusion of a 50 MP main camera paired with an ultra-wide lens, offering versatility for capturing diverse scenes. Additionally, the 4,800 mAh battery with 45-W wired charging ensures that the device can handle demanding usage throughout the day.
Samsung’s decision to introduce a wider aspect ratio with the Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide highlights its commitment to addressing user feedback. Many users of earlier foldable models expressed concerns about the limitations of narrow displays, particularly for multitasking and media consumption. By offering a more expansive screen, Samsung not only improves usability but also strengthens its position as a leader in foldable technology.
This strategic move also serves as a pre-emptive response to Apple’s rumoured entry into the foldable smartphone market. By staying ahead of the curve, Samsung aims to solidify its dominance in this rapidly evolving segment. The Galaxy Z Fold 8 series reflects Samsung’s dedication to pushing the boundaries of what foldable devices can achieve, making sure that it remains at the forefront of innovation.
Building Anticipation for a Milestone Release
The Galaxy Z Fold 8 series represents Samsung’s most ambitious effort yet in the foldable smartphone market. With significant upgrades in hardware, design and functionality, these devices have the potential to reshape how users interact with their smartphones. Whether you are a tech enthusiast eager to explore the latest advancements or a professional seeking a versatile device for work and entertainment, the Z Fold 8 line-up offers something for everyone.
As the July 22 Galaxy Unpacked event approaches, excitement continues to build. If the leaks and rumours are accurate, the Galaxy Z Fold 8 series could set new standards for the industry, redefining what is possible in mobile design and functionality. Samsung’s commitment to innovation ensures that these devices will not only meet but exceed the expectations of users, making them a pivotal release in the evolution of foldable technology.
Take a look at other insightful guides from our broad collection that might capture your interest in the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra.
And yes, AI is a factor. Replika and Wabi founder Eugenia Kuyda on how advances in coding changed her hiring calculus
This is an interview about AI. My fiancé works at Anthropic. See my full ethics disclosure here.
Last week in our series on AI and jobs, Brookings’ Molly Kinder warned us to prepare for a “messy middle”: a long, “politically explosive” stretch in which AI job losses are concentrated among some of the best-paid workers in the economy. This week, for the first-ever Platformer live show, I wanted to talk to someone who believes in that vision: a founder building the tools that might bring it about, and who turned out to be unusually candid about what that might cost us.
I’ve known Eugenia Kuyda for more than a decade. In 2015, after her best friend Roman Mazurenko died in a car accident, she gathered the text messages he had sent to friends and family and built a chatbot that let them speak with him again — a story I covered at the time for The Verge, nearly a decade before ChatGPT made chatbots ubiquitous. That project was the seed for Replika, the AI companion app that now claims more than 40 million users. Kuyda’s latest startup, Wabi, takes AI in a different direction — away from personal entertainment and into the world of work. The app, which is now available for iOS, lets you vibe-code apps on your phone using text prompts. Over the next year, Kuyda hopes to shift more of the team’s work away from standard enterprise software toward apps built on her own platform.
Kuyda argues that we are living in “the Microsoft DOS era of AI interfaces,” and that we’re desperately in need of a Windows equivalent: an easy-to-use graphical user interface that lets the average person take full advantage of agents and personalized software. When that happens, she predicts, the long tail of subscription-based apps — the calorie counters, meditation apps, and fitness trackers of the world — will start to disappear, replaced by software that we make and share ourselves.
But what struck me most during our conversation was her answer to the question at the heart of our podcast miniseries. When we began, I expected that more tech executives would tell me they expect AI to cause job loss. Instead, it’s been the opposite — most of them have said that advances in AI will only increase demand for software engineers and other knowledge workers.
Kuyda is our first guest to say plainly that she believes that is a fantasy. The fear of job loss is “super justified,” she told me; in her view, AI has made hiring junior employees “extremely expensive and completely unsustainable for a startup,” because every hire now competes with the leverage of what she calls a “1,000x engineer.” “I think the crazy protests around jobs and AI are going to start happening,” she said. “We live in this very optimistic city, where it’s all about future, future, future — but as soon as you get out of here, it’s pretty scary.”
She’s building Wabi accordingly: the company is modelled on a soccer team, she told me, with 10 to 15 superstar “players on the pitch” who get sizable equity and public-facing roles, supported by contractors in the back office. She doesn’t think you need more than that to build a billion-dollar company anymore.
Whether that turns out to be true depends in part on Kuyda’s own bet on Wabi. Can vibe-coded apps truly compete with enterprise software in the way that she hopes? Or will most companies continue to prefer the stability and support that comes with traditional software as a service?
We should get more data on that point soon: Kuyda told me on the show that after a year in beta, Wabi will launch publicly before the end of the month.
Highlights of our conversation are below, edited for clarity and length. Listen to the entire conversation wherever you get your podcasts — just search for Platformer — or watch it on YouTube at youtube.com/caseynewton.
And let us know what you think — we’re new to podcast production, and welcome your feedback at [email protected].
Casey Newton:So it’s 2015. You are almost a decade away from ChatGPT. What were you seeing that made you think, “I can actually use the tools that are here to make a kind of prototypical chatbot, and that will be an interesting thing to explore”?
Eugenia Kuyda: We actually started a company that was building chatbot tech in 2013. What kick-started that was a friend of mine who used to work at Google DeepMind showed me this technology called word2vec, which was the original tech to basically transform language into math — to let computers understand words, in a way. ImageNet also dropped, and I was like, whoa — soon that will somehow come together, and we’ll have these new neural networks that will understand language. I used to be a journalist before that, and we had this gigantic sign in neon: “The limits of my language are the limits of my world.”
Newton:Which is a Wittgenstein quote, if I remember right.
Kuyda:I felt like if we figured out how to build language models, that would probably be the closest to understanding the world as well.
So we started building that, way before any of the first language models. Then in 2015, Google published a paper where they talked about the first deep learning model applied to dialogue generation, and we decided to hire every possible NLP researcher we could find to focus on these language models. And then, of course, after Roman passed away, we built that AI for him. We were struggling to find a consumer application, and that was it. We were like: maybe we can’t yet build a chatbot that talks eloquently with people and has meaningful conversations, but maybe we can build one that can listen, and that would probably be enough for many people out there.
Newton:How confident were you when you were doing that?
Kuyda: We thought it would work at some point. The models were so crappy in 2016, when we started Replika, that they would just produce non sequiturs. These were sequence-to-sequence models, and of course there were no models off the shelf or through APIs, so we had to build our own — this was right before people moved on to transformers. So it was very hard to say, “Okay, this will become what it is today.” We just felt that it would happen; we didn’t know when. For us it was more like: okay, maybe the tech is lagging, but it’s less about tech capabilities — it’s going to be more about human vulnerabilities. There were so many people who wanted so much to have some connection — someone to listen, someone to hear them out, to accept them, to understand them — that maybe in the beginning just those people would react positively to it, and as the tech got better, we could increase the range of people it would resonate with.
Casey: I think there’s something really poignant about the fact that even though the technology, by today’s standards, was maybe not that good, the human desire and need for support and connection was so powerful that people looked right past it. But at the same time, I wouldn’t downplay the technology either, because when I was talking with Roman’s friends and family, the part of the story that will still make me cry when I tell other people about it is how much people learned about their friend and family member after he passed away, and how their relationship with him changed after he passed away, because of the conversations they were having in this app. That was honestly the moment when I started to take AI more seriously, because I thought: if people can feel that deeply even in this very primitive version of the thing that we have today, there just has to be something there.
Kuyda: I think so. And looking at my previous relationships — oftentimes we do have relationships with people where maybe they don’t respond that much, or it’s more about our fantasies. How much do we put in? A good example is talking to God. So many people talk to God, and maybe he doesn’t really respond.
Newton:He’s sort of famous for leaving you on read.
Eugenia: I also had a lot of experience going on dates where you just listen, and maybe ask, “Oh, tell me more,” and then the guy would be like, “Oh, that was the best conversation I’ve ever had.” And you space out half the time when they’re talking — you’re thinking about all the groceries you need to buy. So I’m like, if this is the level of understanding that’s required for the most amazing conversation, we can probably build that.
Casey:Once you realized how low the bar was, you thought, “There’s a unicorn here.”
I want to zoom out and ask you a question about your two companies, because on the surface they look quite different, right? One is about an AI that you develop relationships with; the other is a tool for making apps. In your mind, are they completely different, or do you see a through line there that you’re chasing?
Eugenia: They’re definitely different things, but for me the idea was always: how can we make a person’s life better, or help them unlock their potential? With Replika it’s easy — it was always about building an AI to help people flourish and feel better in the long term. We had some big studies published around that with Stanford and Harvard, some of them published in Nature, where we proved we were doing that.
With Wabi, the idea is: most of our time today is spent on our phones, using software that’s not built by us — built, in David Foster Wallace’s words, by people that don’t love us, that want us to just scroll or click on things. We shape our buildings, and then they shape us. It’s the same with software — we shape our software, and then it shapes us. Only we don’t shape it; someone else does.
So in this new era, where anyone can really build something in a matter of a few seconds, why not let people take a little bit more agency? Maybe not build every app they use, but at least have software be more decoupled from this model where every app needs to be a business. Wabi is a platform where people can make apps, but can also discover, remix, and use them with their friends and their families. It’s a social platform where you can quickly spin up any app, or find any app, and start using it with whoever you want. In my case, that means creating software that really fits my life — whether it’s helping me learn more about the art movements I’m into, or the language I forgot, or teaching my kids something, or finding cool events to take my kids to, or even just a better weightlifting tracker.
Casey: What is a feature or a design element of something you’ve built that made you feel like, “This is truly, personally for me — I would not expect to encounter this kind of app anywhere else”?
Eugenia: When you take away the idea that you have to make an app, put it on the App Store, distribute it, and make it for some audience, it can just be n-of-one. For me, I have an app that teaches me a daily philosophy concept.
But that’s the simple way of putting it. The more interesting reason I really decided to work on this is that I do believe we’re in the Microsoft DOS era of AI interfaces, where everything’s a chatbot. I’ve worked for 10 years on a chatbot, and I do believe there will be a GUI moment — a Windows, macOS moment — that will come to AI. Mostly because even though the model capabilities became so much better over the years, most people — normies, I guess, us included — still use ChatGPT and Claude mostly the same way they used them in 2022 and 2023: ask questions, search, do homework. That’s it. It’s not all these crazy agents — they’re not spinning up cron jobs or figuring out Claude Cowork, even. And really, that’s because through text, through a chatbot, it’s very hard to discover anything.
Casey:It feels like talking to the Alexa in your house, right? It can set a timer, and it can check the weather, and it can do 1,000 things, and you don’t know what those things are — so you just use it to check the weather and set a timer.
Eugenia: Exactly. But even if you set a timer, you need to see that timer. Chat is great as one of the interfaces; it cannot be the primary one. People love to tap, tap, tap, click, click, click, scroll, scroll, scroll. And that’s the only way to really make things discoverable and multiplayer.
Casey: Talk about the demand that you’ve seen for Wabi so far. Sometimes I feel like a freak, because I like to use software — I love productivity tools. Most people don’t feel that way. So talk to me about these people who are out there saying, “I need to build a philosophy app that only I will understand.”
Eugenia: It’s really just about making this tool simpler for people to use. We’re still in private beta — we’re going public in the next two weeks, so I’m super excited about that.
But I think we grow up being more creators, and at some point we become consumers. Kids use Roblox — kids make these games, kids hang out in these environments they make for themselves. And then at some point we just turn into these passive consumers: scroll, scroll, scroll, and subscribe, subscribe, subscribe. I think once you show people that it’s actually very easy to make something — or not even make something; maybe we just suggest some apps for you that someone else made, and it’s very easy to remix them. The agent says, “Hey, I see you added this app. I know all your apps are black and white — let’s change this one into black and white, too.” So it’s proactively helping you use all this software.
But I do believe software needs to change. If we’re just using AI to write the same old apps from the past, that’s pretty boring. What needs to happen is new agentic apps, where all apps have agency and are more alive. What I mean by that is that you can change them, they can suggest how you can change them, they can grow with you, they can evolve with you — and they can also talk to you. Right now, apps can only send you push notifications. With Wabi, all apps have a chat, so the push notification becomes “Time to work out” — but you can also say “Stop messaging me” as a response. You can change everything right there in the chat. Chat becomes the way for an app to talk to you, but also the way for you to change it.
Casey:Tell me about an example of something somebody built that made you say, “This is the promise of what I’m doing, realized” — the equivalent of that early moment with chatbots, when you saw the pieces coming together and how badly people wanted it, even though the technology was primitive.
Eugenia: A couple of things from my personal experience. I built this weightlifting tracker — I’d been tracking my gym workouts in Notes, which I found out a lot of people do. We make all of our apps agentic by default, and it started talking to me after my workouts, giving me some pointers on how to improve them. So I said, “Now also talk to me during workouts, as I’m logging — tell me what I can do as the next exercise.” And all of a sudden this app just felt so much more alive, and so much better than even a really fancy-looking app off the App Store, because it was smart. And not only that — it was also connected to my Apple Health, it was connected to my other apps, so all of a sudden it had a lot more knowledge about me. That was really a magical moment.
Another one: we have a few apps for our team. Our design engineer, Alex, makes lunches for us at the office every day, so we made an app where he puts up the menu for the week, and we can all vote and comment and say stuff — “Oh my god, these poke bowls were so nice.” It was just a little bit magical, because it created another way for us to bond more as a team.
To me, the really important thing is that today we have AI that lives separately in a chatbot interface, and then we have apps on our phones, and everyone’s debating: okay, MCPs or APIs — how are they going to communicate? But really, we should not have that distinction. Every agent or agent skill should just be an app, because a normal, regular person will never understand what an agent skill is, and no one’s going to go read Markdown files on GitHub. Instead, they can totally understand: oh, it’s just an app that looks at your inbox, and whenever there’s a new email, checks whether it’s an important one and sends you a quick summary. That is super easy to understand. If I tell you it’s an email agent that triages your inbox — “here’s the Markdown file, go figure it out” — that’s hard to understand.
Casey:In a world where everyone can make their own software, what does it do to the value of software that other people are selling — SaaS companies, for example?
Eugenia: The biggest problem with vibe coding is that no one’s going to use other people’s apps if those indie developers own the backend and the data. There’s just no way — even for consumers, let alone for businesses. If I build an AI therapy app on Replit and say, “Casey, use my fantastic AI therapy app, here you go,” you’re like: okay, well, Eugenia can read all my logs. [And so you won’t use it.]
And I don’t even need to be a bad actor. Maybe I just forget to maintain it, and then all your therapy sessions go away. Or I’m bad with security, and all of that is exposed to everyone. So the only way for people to share their personal software is to build it on one platform, where all the backend stays in one place, and the platform is responsible for security, the social graph, privacy, maintenance — the apps will never go away. And for B2B, it’s kind of the same premise.
Casey:So what is the sweet spot? If you project a couple of years into the future, what is the mix on my phone of apps that other people made and apps that I made bespoke for myself?
Eugenia: I think the only big, big apps that will stay are the ones that either have network effects — the big social networks, of course — or that have basically an offline business behind them, like Instacart or Uber. You’re not using those for the software, obviously. But everything that’s just software, I think, will go — especially all the subscription apps, the long tail of the App Store. That is going away. There’s just no need for any of it — it’s already barely working. If you really think about subscription apps — if you take out dating apps, social networks, and games, just the pure software — there’s only Duolingo that actually ended up going public. Nothing on the App Store that’s purely software really became a huge, huge business.
Casey:Would you be willing to name a name, or maybe a category, that you just think is actually in a lot of trouble here?
Eugenia: Subscription apps with low retention. Fitness apps, calorie trackers, sports apps, meditation apps — pretty much every app from that lifestyle and health and fitness category. They’re not providing a lot of value. If they have low retention, that means they’re just selling stuff during onboarding — that’s the name of the game for most of these apps — and then people just leave and never come back. Instead of that, I think people will want tools that are a lot more agentic, smarter, and tailored to them, and that they can use with their friends immediately.
Casey:So I used Wabi today — I made a podcast question evaluator. And I’ll give you a bit of gentle product feedback. The app looked very beautiful, but the keyboard was floating over the UI element to submit the question. I said, “Hey, the element is covered,” and it said, “Okay, I’m going to fix that” — and then it didn’t really fix it. To me this speaks to the challenge of DIY software. What has been your experience as you’re trying to bring people along? Do people have the patience to say, “I’m going to stick with this and figure it out,” or do they hit that limit and think, “I’m just going to ask ChatGPT”?
Eugenia: That’s a great question. When we started a year ago, on our evals we had 10 to 15 percent quality, which was: pretty much nothing’s working. So we had to build a lot around it. By November, it went to 75 percent, and now it’s probably at 80-something. And with our public launch we’re actually moving away from React Native to web views, and there we’re seeing closer to 90 percent. So I think that’s just going to be solved — it’s just a matter of time. We’ve seen the cost go down dramatically, the speed improve dramatically, the evals go up dramatically. Compared to Replika — where, in 2016, to think we would have meaningful conversations with computers was really crazy — to think that developing mini apps on the go will be solved in the next year? It’s a safe bet.
And what we figured out is that people forgive when it’s theirs. My weightlifting tracker is not the most perfect one, but it’s mine. I came up with everything. I’m very proud of it. It’s like pruning your own garden — we’re so proud of our kids.
Casey:That’s very real. When I’ve used other coding tools to make little tools that I use at Platformer, you do have a sense of pride, even though all you did was type in the box.
One word that gets used a lot to talk about what you’re doing is “democratizing,” right? You’re taking something that used to be the province of an elite, and you’re putting the tools into lots of people’s hands. There are many questions right now about the near-term future of software engineering, given that tools like yours exist. You are somebody who employs software engineers. How are you thinking about that question?
Eugenia: I guess there are two sides of it. First is the beauty of the idea that everyone can build — because up until now, there were maybe 6 million Android developers and 4 million iOS developers in the world, and billions of people using these apps. That’s a real mismatch. Instead of that, now everyone can be that person. And I do think there’s something beautiful in how it’s a little easier to create software than to make content — because one could argue, well, you can make great YouTube videos or Instagram stories. But there, if you look better, if you’re richer, it’s easier for you to do these things. With an app, it’s truly the quality of your idea. Anyone can create anything, and I like that a lot.
But the second part of the story is the questions about jobs. Compared to Replika, one of the reasons I wanted to start a new company was to work again with a team of 10 to 15 incredible people, instead of 100-plus people. Because now it’s just crazy how expensive it is to hire another person if you get it wrong.
Ten years ago there was this article about “below the API” and “above the API” …
Casey:Tell me about it.
Eugenia: When Uber and the on-demand economy were really happening, the idea was that you should stay above the API. Below the API means you’re working a job where the API tells you what to do — you’re an Uber driver, and an algorithm tells you what to do. And then there are people above the API — the software developers at Uber HQ who are developing the algorithm that will tell the driver what to do. So the whole idea was: stay above the API. And now it’s: stay above the AI.
But before, you could hire a 10x engineer — incredible — but you could also hire a 1x engineer,. and okay, the difference is 10x, whatever. Now, either you hire a person who is incredible at coming up with stuff and spinning up all the agents and doing the work — you’re hiring a 1,000x person — or you hire just some person who’s going to take up the time of the 1,000x person, and it’s really expensive. So hiring a not-so-great person, or a junior person, becomes extremely expensive — and completely unsustainable for a startup. And that, I think, is really hard.
That’s really bad news, frankly. I don’t have a solution. I think tech probably needs to create a better narrative for how this is going to go. I think the crazy protests around jobs and AI are going to start happening. We live in this very optimistic city, where it’s all about future, future, future — but as soon as you get out of here, it’s pretty scary. People are really struggling to find jobs, and I think this can only get worse.
Casey:How justified do you think that fear is? Do you think that two years from now there will be more software engineers, as we know them today, or fewer?
Eugenia: I think it’s a super justified fear. And I don’t believe in this “oh, it’s just another technology, and we’ll have even more jobs” line. People say, “Radiologists still exist!” I’m like, yeah, but I’m not hiring people anymore for these junior jobs.
Casey:First of all, thank you for saying what you just said. When I’ve talked to other folks in this series, there’s been a lot of reluctance to say, “I think there are going to be fewer software engineers.” Basically to a person, everybody has said: I think there’s going to be more — or maybe we won’t call them software engineers, but we’ll have more “builders.” It sounds like you started this company assuming maybe it will never be the size of your previous company, because you’re just not going to need as many people.
Eugenia: Yeah, I really believe that.
I think two things need to change. We’re still building the software of the past using the tools of today and the future. So we need to think: what’s the software of the future? How can apps change? We don’t need the same old apps and the same old distribution platforms operating this way when you can spin up an app in seconds.
And then the second question is: we should really think about a new type of company building. It’s almost like everything changed. For example, Figma designers — that is definitely going away. It’s just completely crazy to design everything, mock everything first, and then go develop it, and then test it and iterate. Of course everything should just be built at the same time.
I do think that right now, if you’re building a startup — specifically an application-layer startup like ours — you probably need 10 to 15 people, but absolutely insane people. And in order to attract them, because so many big companies are trying to get them, you need to change what you’re offering. You’re not going to attract them with 0.1 percent of equity and whatever the startup salary is. So we’re trying to do it differently.
I’m a big soccer fan, so I’m like: okay, let’s try to do a soccer team, where there are players on the pitch and there’s the back office. What are the most important roles for us? Let’s make them players on the pitch. They’re the team. Let’s give them the fame. Let’s give them a lot more ownership than employee number 15 would usually get — all 10 to 15 will get very meaningful, sizable equity grants. It’s a relatively flat hierarchy, but they need to be absolute superstars. And because you’re able to give a little more — pay them a little more, give them fame and ownership in a way that not a lot of other startups can — you create this incredible team on the pitch.
And everyone who is just doing one thing — maybe we need someone to deal with accounting, or legal, or motion design — we hire them as contractors, even if they’re full time. We want the top people there too, but that’s part of the agreement: you guys are coming in to fill a role, and the founding team is the founding team. And the people who put on a jersey with the name of the company — we want them to be active on socials, we want them to put their names out there.
Casey:And to cook lunch.
Eugenia: Cook lunch, yeah — everything. But that allows you to hire really top-tier people, not just as a first or second employee, but even as employee number 15. And I don’t think you need more than 10 to 15 people to build a billion-dollar company.
Casey:So in this moment, it’s possible to build a billion-dollar company, and you don’t need more than 10 or 15 people.
Eugenia: Well, some people are trying to do it with one.
Casey:I imagine some folks sitting here are thinking: Eugenia, I would love for someone like you to consider me insane, and a superstar, and worthy of putting on the jersey. What does that mean in practice? Has the skill set changed? What do people actually need to be able to do in a world where maybe there are only ever 10 or 15 seats at this company?
Eugenia: It really depends, because we have designers, product people, generalists, engineers. When it comes to engineers, it’s either really incredible generalists or people who are super good at that one particular thing. For example, Swift — it’s very hard to find a fantastic Swift iOS engineer, and we went through, I think, 120 people recruiting one, for our second-highest person. Because the question is always: will GPT-6 replace the person I’m hiring? And if the answer is maybe yes, then it’s an extremely expensive hire for us — it’s better maybe not to do it, because we’ll spend more time coaching and rewriting. But for everyone on the team, I think it’s agency, product intuition, design taste — whatever your specialization — and not being an asshole. Three very important qualities.
Casey:I think I understand what you mean by every one of those, but agency could mean a lot of things. What does a high-agency person look like at your company? What are they doing?
Eugenia: Well, Alex is one.
Casey: I think we can all agree Alex is extremely high-agency.
Eugenia: But frankly, I really think management at that stage is almost counterproductive, so people need to figure out what they do. We also build a lot of agents internally that are actually managing our company. But it’s people who can decide what needs to be done, go get it done, and push it to production. That is what’s needed. Ideally, you need a few generalists who can do it all the way, and some specialized people who are very good at backend, very good at frontend, polishing the stuff that they’re building. But you really just need people who know: okay, this needs to be done — quickly agree on it, and just go get shit done. If someone needs to go somewhere and agree, and then mock something up, and then develop it — you’ve already lost, because everything’s moving so quickly. There’s no time for that.
Casey:So being able to initiate a project and get it done without much help along the way — this is a core skill that you are hiring for.
Eugenia: Yeah. Get shit done. Also known as agency.
Casey:Last question. You’ve talked a little bit about your concerns about these new times that we’re moving into. Is there anything out there that is making you optimistic about AI and jobs in the near-term future?
Eugenia: The idea that we can all be creators, and can channel our creativity a lot more — can build stuff that before was constrained by developers or designers. I think that’s cool. We spend so much time on our phones using other people’s apps, doing what other people decided we should be doing. It would be really awesome if we could build stuff that would make our lives better. To me, that really is the way to ultimately connect with other people — use apps with friends, use apps with family, use apps with people you didn’t really know before. To me, that’s the beautiful part of it: all these new opportunities that are going to open up. And I think this is probably the first time where the iPhone is somewhat fragile. Maybe there is a way to build a better operating system that’s more serving us, versus serving companies through the apps that they built.
When Apple unveiled iOS 27, it highlighted only a pair of new AirPods features initially. But there are several more AirPods additions in iOS 27, here’s everything new.
Custom EQ
Custom EQ is a feature that some AirPods users thought Apple would never ship. But it’s here in iOS 27, available now in the AirPods beta.
With Custom EQ, Apple now lets you set your own sound profile for AirPods. Per Apple:
AirPods are designed and engineered by Apple to faithfully represent music, TV shows and movies, and calls. If you prefer a different sound profile, you can customize how AirPods represent any audio played.
You can change the EQ by going to your AirPods’ settings ⇾ Audio & Routing ⇾ Equalizer ⇾ Custom. From here, you can adjust the sound profile for low, mid, and high frequencies.
Custom EQ is available on AirPods Pro 3, AirPods Pro 2, AirPods Max 2, and AirPods 4.
GymKit can sync AirPods Pro 3’s heart rate data
Apple GymKit has been available for years, but only for Apple Watch. It lets you pair and sync workout data with compatible cardio equipment, like treadmills, ellipticals, indoor bikes, and more.
In iOS 27, GymKit expands to support iPhone using AirPods Pro 3’s heart rate sensor. My colleague Zac gave it a try:
The setup is simple. I tapped my iPhone to the treadmill, picked Indoor Walk (Indoor Run is also offered), and started the workout from the treadmill. With GymKit, workout data is stored privately on iPhone and removed from the equipment.
Once the workout started, the treadmill received heart-rate data from AirPods Pro 3. Meanwhile, the Fitness app on iPhone received the treadmill’s distance, pace, incline, and calorie data. Treadmills know details that an iPhone and AirPods can’t know on their own, especially incline and precise belt distance.
For more details on iOS 27’s GymKit feature for AirPods Pro 3, check out Zac’s full hands-on below.
Siri AI
For most AirPods users, the single biggest upgrade in iOS 27 will be Siri AI.
Siri AI is available on compatible iPhone hardware in iOS 27, and Apple made sure to expand full support for the AI assistant to AirPods too.
AirPods are essentially becoming an AI wearable thanks to the new Siri. It will let users do a lot more than the current Siri. Here are some key features via Apple’s website:
World Knowledge: “Ask about virtually any topic that’s on your mind, from important facts to recipes and restaurant recommendations. Siri AI can reference information online to give you detailed, up-to-date insights.”
Conversational: “Siri AI is your conversational AI assistant with entirely new capabilities…Ask open-ended questions, brainstorm ideas for work or creative projects on the go, and engage in natural, back-and-forth conversations.”
Personal Context: “Siri AI can find relevant answers to what you’re looking for just by asking. Search for a photo from years ago, easily locate an email buried in your inbox, or pull up a note you saved on your iPhone.”
Redesigned Settings menus
With every batch of new AirPods features that debuts, the AirPods settings screen in the Settings app gets more cluttered.
But in iOS 27, Apple has a welcome fix: it’s redesigned and reorganized all AirPods settings.
Now, you’ll find AirPods settings organized into more categories and submenus, accompanied by colorful icons. It makes finding the right setting way easier and more intuitive than before.
But with iOS 27 and watchOS 27, Apple expands Precision Finding on the Watch to AirPods Pro 3.
AirPods Pro 3’s case includes the latest second-generation Ultra Wideband (UWB) chip, letting you find it with greater precision and step-by-step guidance right from your wrist.
Which new AirPods features in iOS 27 are you most excited about? Let us know in the comments.
You watched it happen on a Tuesday. It was your spring intern. The one who joined last month and never ran a campaign before. They pulled up ChatGPT in a meeting and generated the kind of competitor comparison that used to take you a week when you were their age. It took them 90 seconds.
It wasn’t great. The positioning was off in a couple of places, the tone was generic, and it cited a competitor that pivoted out of your category eight months ago.
But it was fine. That was the problem.
Because fine is what most B2B marketing has been for the last decade. Fine is what built a lot of careers, including, if we’re being honest, parts of yours and mine. And fine just got commoditized.
This isn’t an article about how AI is going to change everything. You’ve read that one already. Instead, I want to talk about what actually changed, what didn’t and why the marketers panicking right now are missing the much more interesting story.
The Honest Part
Let’s name what got taken before we talk about what didn’t.
The skills that defined a “good marketer” five years ago are now table stakes. I’m talking about competitor research, first-draft copy, messaging docs, nurture sequences, and anything where the work was structured, the inputs were public and the output was a document. That work is no longer where your value lives.
But here’s the thing that took me a while to admit. Those deliverables were never the actual job. They were the artefacts of the job. The job was always judgment and knowing which competitor actually mattered, which message would land with which buyer or which campaign was worth running. The deliverables were just how we proved we’d done the thinking.
AI didn’t take the job. It took the proof of work. Which means the job itself, the part that was always hardest to see and hardest to hire for, is now exposed.
Here’s a small example of what I mean.
For about 20 years, “SEO” was a complete sentence. That’s over. SEO still exists, but it’s now one acronym in a much messier alphabet. There’s GEO, or generative engine optimization, which is getting your content surfaced inside AI-generated answers. There’s AEO, which is the answer-engine version of the same idea. And now there’s even LLMO, which is the inside-baseball term for being cited by name when someone asks Claude or ChatGPT about your category.
If you wanted to “do SEO” in 2018, you hired someone who knew SEO. If you want to do digital visibility in 2026, which is what the work actually is now, you need someone who can read a market well enough to know which of those surfaces matters for your buyers. That’s judgment.
What AI Structurally Can’t Do
This is the part where most people get preachy, so I’ll try not to. But it’s also the part that matters most, so I want to be specific about it.
AI doesn’t have your scar tissue. AI wasn’t in those meeting rooms. It can pattern-match case studies, but it can’t pattern-match the things you learned that nobody ever wrote down.
It doesn’t have your taste. Like why one subject line feels right and another feels slightly off. Taste is developed over years of being wrong about small things, and it’s the rarest skill in marketing because it’s the hardest to teach.
It doesn’t have your relationships. AI can map networks, but it can’t be in them. Don’t be afraid to leverage the people you know in authentic ways.
It doesn’t have your point of view. Not your LinkedIn brand, but your actual, sometimes-unpopular position on why your category is broken and how to fix it. POV is what comes from living through enough cycles to have opinions you’re willing to defend.
These aren’t consolation prizes. They aren’t the soft skills you fall back on when the hard skills get automated. They are, and always were, the actual job.
You’re Not Behind. You’re Repositioning.
This isn’t a transition you survive. It’s a repositioning you need to be awake for. Audit what you do that’s now commoditized, and be honest with yourself. Then identify what you do that isn’t, and be generous with yourself.
Beyond that exercise, these nuggets will also help:
• Stop Competing With The Machine On Volume: If AI can produce 50 ad variants, your edge isn’t producing the 51st. Your edge is choosing which two go live, why those two and what they tell you to do next. The leverage moved from production to selection.
• Become The Editor, Not The Writer: The most valuable skill in marketing right now is taste applied to AI output. Read everything the machine produces with a sharper eye than you’ve ever read your own drafts.
• Leverage Inputs The Model Can’t Access: Customer interviews. Win/loss calls. Sales call transcripts. Your CRM. Your community. Your own conversations with buyers. These are proprietary data your competitors don’t have, and the LLMs don’t either.
• Build Your POV: Not as a brand exercise, but as a competitive moat. Pick the take on your category that only you would have, given your specific career, and write it. Defend it. Be wrong sometimes. Recognizability is a function of having said something specific enough to disagree with.
• Get Closer To Revenue: The marketer attached to pipeline and retention is harder to displace than the marketer attached to impressions and MQLs. This was always true. It’s just become impossible to fake.
The new era of B2B marketing isn’t about surviving AI. It’s about being undeniable enough that survival isn’t the question.
We’re only three months out from the launch of Apple’s premium next-generation smartphone line-up, and while we’re not expecting a sea change in terms of functionality, there are still several enhancements rumoured to be coming to the iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 18 Pro Max.
One thing worth noting is that Apple is reportedly planning a major change to its iPhone release cycle this year, adopting a two-phase rollout starting with the iPhone 18 series. That means the iPhone 18 Pro, iPhone 18 Pro Max, and the long-rumoured foldable iPhone (“iPhone Ultra”) will be released in September 2026, followed by the iPhone 18, iPhone Air 2, and iPhone 18e in spring 2027.
Overall Design
Rumours suggest the iPhone 18 Pro line-up will largely retain the same design as the iPhone 17 Pro models. Most rumours suggest the rear camera system will look identical to the current generation, featuring a raised “plateau” with three lenses arranged in a triangle – although recent dummies indicate a possible thickening of the plateau and the protrusion of individual lenses. Display sizes are also expected to remain unchanged, with the iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 18 Pro Max continuing to use 6.3-inch and 6.9-inch panels, respectively (the same dimensions introduced with the iPhone 16 Pro series). iPhone 18 Pro models could drop the current two-tone look of the rear casing found on the iPhone 17 Pro in favor of a more seamless aesthetic, while Apple has apparently updated the back-glass “replacement process” to minimize the color difference between the Ceramic Shield 2 glass and the aluminium frame, resulting in a more unified appearance.
Next-Level Battery Life
Thicker Chassis
The iPhone 18 Pro Max will feature a bigger battery for continued best-in-class battery life, claims a Chinese leaker. The Weibo user known as “Digital Chat Station” said that the iPhone 18 Pro Max will have a battery capacity of 5,100 to 5,200 mAh. (The iPhone 17 Pro Max has the biggest iPhone battery to date at 5,088 mAh. Apple says it has a battery life of up to 39 hours.) According to another rumour, the body of the iPhone 18 Pro Max will be slightly thicker than the iPhone 17 Pro Max, raising the device’s weight to around 243 grams. That would make the iPhone 18 Pro Max approximately 3 grams more than the iPhone 14 Pro Max, which is currently the heaviest model Apple has produced. A larger battery is the most likely cause.
Smaller Dynamic Island
Under-Screen Face ID?
Rumours continue to circulate about whether the iPhone 18 Pro models will introduce under-display Face ID, but reports remain divided on when the technology will actually arrive. The feature would move the TrueDepth camera system beneath the display, eliminating the need for the current Dynamic Island cut-out.
According to Wayne Ma of The Information, Apple is targeting a design without a Dynamic Island, replacing it with a single pinhole camera in the upper-left corner of the screen. However, other sources dispute that claim. Display analyst Ross Young believes under-display Face ID is possible for the iPhone 18 Pro, but says a smaller Dynamic Island will still be present. Bloomberg‘s Mark Gurman has echoed this view, reporting that the new models will feature a slimmed-down Dynamic Island rather than removing it entirely. Apple is also said to be testing new camera miniaturization technology to reduce the size of the front-facing camera currently located within the Dynamic Island.
The Weibo leaker “Ice Universe” has claimed the Dynamic Island cut-out on the iPhone 18 Pro models will be approximately 35% narrower than it is on the iPhone 17 Pro models. Specifically, they said it will have a width of around 13.5mm, down from around 20.7mm.
Meanwhile, Chinese leaker Instant Digital has offered yet another version of events, saying the Dynamic Island will shrink in size, but that under-display Face ID and camera technology won’t debut this year. The latest word on the subject is that Apple is weighing two options for the iPhone 18 Pro’s Dynamic Island, and a final decision has yet to be made. One option apparently retains the existing screen mold from the iPhone 17 Pro, while the other introduces a significantly smaller “Mini Dynamic Island” enabled by moving the Face ID receiver and transmitter components beneath the display.
Upgraded Display
LTPO+
The iPhone 18 Pro models will reportedly use LTPO+ display technology, which should be more power efficient than the current LTPO technology in the iPhone 17 series. Such an upgrade could also contribute to longer battery life (see above), since LPTO+ enables finer control of OLED light emission, potentially allowing the display to optimize its operation based on environmental conditions. In other words, it will know better when to up screen brightness or reduce it, depending on surrounding light sources. The panels are reportedly being supplied by Samsung Display and LG Display.
A20 Pro Chip
2nm Process
The iPhone 18 Pro models will use Apple’s A20 chip, based on TSMC’s 2nm process for power and efficiency improvements. A move to 2nm fabrication increases transistor density, which will enable higher performance. The A20 series is expected to deliver roughly a 15 percent speed gain and about 30 percent better efficiency compared with the A19 series used in Apple’s iPhone 17 models.
Apple’s A20 chip will be packaged with TSMC’s Wafer-Level Multi-Chip Module (WMCM) technology, suggesting at least some A20 chips will have RAM integrated directly onto the same wafer as the CPU, GPU, and Neural Engine, rather than sitting adjacent to the chip and connected via a silicon interposer. This could contribute to faster performance for both overall tasks and Apple Intelligence, and longer battery life from improved power efficiency.
C2 Modem
Replacing Qualcomm
Apple plans to include its next-generation C2 modem in the iPhone 18 Pro models, according to supply chain analyst Jeff Pu. The chip will succeed the C1 modem, which debuted in the lower-cost iPhone 16e as Apple’s first in-house cellular modem, and the C1X modem chip in the iPhone Air, which Apple says is up to 2× faster than the C1. The C2 is expected to bring faster speeds, improved power efficiency, and support for mmWave 5G in the United States – a feature missing from the C1 and C1X.
Apple’s modem roadmap is part of a long-term strategy to reduce reliance on Qualcomm, which currently supplies 5G modems for the rest of the iPhone line-up. The company has been working on developing its own cellular chips for years, aiming for deeper integration and greater control over power management and performance.
New Camera Sensor
Samsung-Made
Samsung is working on a new three-layer stacked image sensor, reportedly intended for the iPhone 18. The sensor, referred to as PD-TR-Logic, integrates three layers of circuitry, which would improve camera responsiveness, reduce noise, and increase dynamic range. The leak comes from a source known as “Jukanlosreve,” who claims the sensor is being developed specifically for Apple’s 2026 iPhone line-up. Sony has long been Apple’s sole image sensor supplier, so Samsung’s entry would be a big shift in the iPhone’s camera supply chain.
Variable Aperture
DSLR-Style
Apple intends to equip this year’s iPhone 18 Pro models with a variable aperture lens, according to reports. Weibo-based leaker Digital Chat Station claims the main rear camera – what Apple calls the 48-megapixel Fusion camera – on both iPhone 18 Pro models will offer variable aperture, which would be a first for the iPhone. A variable-aperture system physically adjusts the lens opening, letting more light in for low-light shots or narrowing the opening for brighter scenes and deeper depth of field.
The main cameras on the iPhone 15 Pro, 16 Pro, and 17 Pro all use a fixed ƒ/1.78 aperture, where the lens is permanently set to its widest setting. With a variable lens, the iPhone 18 Pro would allow users to manually shift the aperture, similar to on a DSLR camera. This would mean more control over depth of field, enabling sharper focus on subjects or smoother background blur. Industry analyst Ming-Chi Kuo said in November 2024 that Apple’s iPhone 18 Pro models will get the feature.
5G Satellite Internet
Non-Terrestrial Data
According to a report by The Information, Apple plans to add support for 5G networks that operate via satellites rather than Earth-based towers as early as next year. This advancement would allow future iPhones to gain full internet connectivity through satellite, not just limited emergency features.
If Apple meets the 2026 target, the first devices to feature 5G satellite internet would likely be the iPhone 18 Pro, iPhone 18 Pro Max, and the long-rumoured foldable iPhone. Apple partners with Globalstar for its iPhone satellite features, but there is currently no service that delivers full 5G satellite internet directly to a smartphone. That said, Amazon and Globalstar announced in April a definitive merger agreement under which Amazon will acquire the satellite operator. Amazon’s Leo satellite network will power existing iPhone features – with scope for additional feature support as part of a forthcoming infrastructure upgrade.
Simplified Camera Control
New Design
Apple is reportedly working to simplify the Camera Control button’s design on iPhone 18 models in order to reduce costs. The current Camera Control button on iPhone 17 models uses both capacitive and pressure sensors beneath a sapphire crystal surface. The capacitive layer detects touch gestures, while the force sensor recognizes different pressure levels for taps, presses, and swipes.
However, according to the Weibo-based account Instant Digital, Apple will remove the capacitive sensing layer and retain only pressure sensing recognition in the second iteration to achieve all Camera Control functions on the iPhone 18. The simplified version is not about reducing functionality in the button, but about saving money. The current solution is said to be very expensive for Apple and is generating costly after-sales repairs.
We don’t expect Camera Control to go away anytime soon – Apple apparently sees it as a key feature, so much so that it has reportedly made deliberate engineering compromises to ensure that the first foldable iPhone features the button.
New Colours
Three in Testing
In February 2026, Bloomberg‘s Mark Gurman reported that Apple is testing a deep red finish for the iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 18 Pro Max. Rumours of purple and brown finishes have also circulated, but Gurman believes those are just variants of the same red idea. Since then, we’ve seen aligned rumours that the devices will come in light blue, dark cherry, dark grey, and silver.
The iPhone 14 Pro and iPhone 14 Pro Max were previously available in Deep Purple, and Apple has never released an iPhone in a genuinely brown color. According to a Chinese leaker, Apple’s iPhone 18 Pro models won’t come in black this year. If the rumor is true, it will be the second consecutive year Apple has ditched what was arguably its most classic color option for the Pro lineup.
iOS 27
Smarter Siri
The iPhone 18 Pro will ship with iOS 27, which brings the biggest Siri shake-up in the assistant’s history. Apple introduced Siri AI at WWDC in June – a rebuilt, more conversational version of Siri with onscreen awareness, personal context understanding, and broad world knowledge that lets it pull up-to-date answers from the web. It also gains its own standalone app for revisiting past conversations, an expanded Visual Intelligence mode, and writing tools that work across email, messages, and documents. Like the iPhone 17 Pro, the iPhone 18 Pro is expected to carry 12GB of RAM, so it should run the full range of Siri AI and Apple Intelligence features.
Media spending funnelled to conversion and awareness jumped 10% from 2024.
Dive Brief:
Nearly two-thirds, or 62.6%, of media spend in 2026 is being directed toward conversion and awareness, a 10% increase from 2024, according to newly released data from Gartner’s CMO Spend Survey.
CMOs also are investing in human talent, despite AI adoption being a goal for many organizations in an effort to reduce labor costs. The survey found labor accounted for 24.5% of marketing budgets in 2026, up from 21.9% in 2025.
The findings signal the importance of new customer acquisition and growth for marketers. Loyalty and retention now accounts for less than 15% of overall media spend, a 29% decrease over the same period.
Dive Insight:
Digital channels continue to rapidly overtake offline ones in terms of overall media spending, largely due to CMOs feeling increased pressure to adopt AI solutions that offer optimization and personalization, per recent Gartner data.
However, the focus on digital channels and short-term optimization may be hurting AI-readiness, according to the report. Organizations that direct a larger share of their budget to loyalty and customer retention tend to be more AI-mature, per Gartner. This implies that less AI-ready organizations may be putting too much emphasis on channels that are easier to measure and automate.
“AI can help marketers optimize faster, but optimization is not the same as strategy,” said Ewan McIntyre, vice president, analyst and chief of research in the Gartner Marketing practice in press materials. “CMOs must guard against letting AI steer too much budget toward the channels and stages of the journey that are easiest to tune, while underinvesting in the touchpoints that build long-term customer value.”
The “CMO Spend Survey” includes responses from 401 CMOs across North America, Europe and the U.K.. Respondents were from a variety of industries, company sizes and revenue, with most working for companies with an annual revenue of $1 billion or more. The survey is conducted annually, with the most recent survey fielded January through March 2026.
While AI is a priority for marketers, few CMOs feel they are able to leverage the technology properly. Previously released data from the survey found 70% of CMOs are unable to implement and scale initiatives surrounding the technology properly, largely due to inadequate internal procedures. Just 30% of CMOs feel their organizations have the necessary infrastructure to meet AI goals. A lack of internal AI expertise is also hindering uptake, with 38% of survey respondents citing it as a key barrier to achieving efficiency with the technology.
Finding those with the AI skills necessary to reach key benchmarks may prove to be a challenge. Only 32% of marketers feel they need to personally update their skills surrounding the technology, per Gartner data released in February.
All you need to take to the virtual skies now is a browser.
For decades, Google has hidden a flight simulator game in the desktop app for Google Earth, and now everyone in the world can access it through a web browser.
The game is part of a larger push by Google to add pro-level features to the website interface. Some of those features include elevation profiles, new import types, extra data layers and the flight simulator.
Most of the above features are for professional and hobbyist use, but the flight simulator is just for fun. It’s been around since 2007 in the desktop app, and Friday marks its first appearance in the website version of Google Earth.
It’s not as in-depth as some other flight sims, but you can’t argue with the breadth of places where you can fly. Google Earth
How to play the flight simulator in Google Earth
It doesn’t take a lot of effort to get into the game. Start by following this link to the Google Earth website and clicking the Explore Earth button in the top right corner. Use the search bar to load the point on Earth where you would like to fly. Finally, click Tools, and the flight simulator is the last option on the list.
The controls aren’t shown in the game, but you can find them on Google’s developer website. You can choose to use the mouse or arrow keys to control the pitch and roll of the plane. The Page Up and Page Down buttons increase and decrease thrust, respectively. But be careful — it is quite easy to lose control of the airplane, leading to a topsy-turvy browser screen. The game ends if you crash the airplane, but Google lets you try again as often as you want.
Google Earth Flight Simulator doesn’t use rendered graphics. These are actual, real-life photographs. Google Earth
What’s it like to play Google’s flight simulator?
The Google Earth flight simulator is an Easter egg in what is ultimately a tool used for education and by a surprising number of businesses.
Playing the game is fun, but not in the same serious-gaming sense as playing Microsoft Flight Simulator or Ace Combat. Those are the types of games you play to complete objectives, for the enjoyment of realistic flight, and the scenery. The only part of that mix where Google Earth’s flight simulator keeps up is its breath taking scenery.
Microsoft Flight Simulator models the Earth at 1:1 scale, allowing players to fly globally using real-world geography, airports, and terrain. It combines Bing Maps data, satellite imagery, and AI-assisted procedural generation to create a highly detailed and often photorealistic representation of the planet. Google Earth lets you do the same, except your map is made up of pictures taken by the Google Maps team or sourced from satellites and low-flying aircraft.
Both platforms present a similar global-scale environment and incorporate photorealistic elements. Microsoft Flight Simulator generally delivers a higher level of visual fidelity through real-time rendering, while Google Earth relies on actual aerial and satellite photography, offering a different form of realism based on real-world imagery rather than fully rendered graphics.
Flying under the Golden Gate Bridge is possible in Google Earth’s flight simulator.Google Earth
The photorealism is the best part of Google Earth’s flight sim. The controls are too simple for experienced flight sim players, and they can be a little janky at times, making control of your virtual aircraft frustrating. Other than the thrust settings, there are no additional customization features. This was intended to be a lightweight, novelty experience, not a serious flight simulator.
That said, its simplicity is part of its appeal. Pausing for 15 minutes in a busy day to glide over a football field or descend toward Mount Rushmore—freely accessible from a browser tab and without the need for specialized gaming hardware—remains a quietly remarkable experience.
Feature image credit: Google Earth
By Joe Hindy
Joe is a freelance journalist. It all started with a long-running affection for building his own PCs, which he did for the first time as a teenager. It evolved into a lifelong enjoyment of putting words on the internet about the subject. He’s written for CNET, PCMag, Mashable and SlashGear as a freelance writer, and worked as a Senior Editor at Android Authority for 10 years. When he’s not writing about tech and science, he’s learning the ins and outs of DIY home repair, gaming, playing his bass guitars and posting help on PC building and gaming subreddits. He is a staunch believer that orange juice should have pulp. See full bio
Apple will be bringing Sign in with Apple and Hide My Email under one email domain, according to a new announcement for Developers. These are privacy features that require an iCloud+ subscription, where users can create a temporary email address to sign up for various websites and platforms. These temporary email addresses forward emails to the primary iCloud email address, but it can be turned off if you do not wish to receive emails from that specific website. Sign in with Apple allows users to sign up for a website or platform, and users are given an option to share or hide their primary email address.
A new change to these features will be coming later this summer, where “Apple will unify the email domains used by Sign in with Apple and iCloud+ Hide My Email under a single, shared domain: private.icloud.com.”
According to Apple, “New addresses generated for both features will be issued on the new domain. For example:
Sign in with Apple addresses, previously issued on privaterelay.appleid.com, will be issued on private.icloud.com.
iCloud+ Hide My Email addresses, previously issued on icloud.com, will be issued on private.icloud.com.
Existing addresses on the legacy domains will continue to work and forward mail to users without interruption.”
As implied, users who are currently using these features with existing addresses will be unaffected, and this change will only apply to new addresses created when this change comes into effect later this summer. App developers will be required to update their account systems and email validation to work with the new address alongside the previous one.
With the rise of LinkedIn and the collapse of traditional advertising’s efficacy, human connection is all the more valuable.
There is a category of professionals that most business strategies don’t account for. They don’t have the biggest marketing budget or the most sophisticated funnel and sales tactics. What they have is something harder to engineer and impossible to automate: they seem to know everyone, and more importantly, everyone seems to want to know them.
They’re called super connectors. And in 2026, they may represent the most underestimated business strategy in professional services.
Most professionals treat networking as a support activity, something you do alongside the real work. Super connectors have figured out that for them, it is the real work. The network isn’t a tool they use to run their business. The network is the business. And the returns flow both ways to the people they connect, and back to themselves in ways that most conventional marketing strategies simply cannot replicate.
The concept isn’t new. Malcolm Gladwell identified connectors as one of the key agents of social change in his seminal work on how ideas spread, describing them as people who link the rest of us to the world, who move through multiple social worlds with ease and bring those worlds into contact with each other.
Now, with the rise of LinkedIn as a professional trust layer, the collapse of traditional advertising’s efficacy, and the explosion of AI-generated content, all make genuine human connection more valuable than it has ever been.
The difference between being a super connector and networking
The easiest mistake is conflating super connecting with heavy networking. They are not the same thing. Networking, at its core, is transactional. You show up, you collect contacts, you follow up when you need something. Super connecting operates on an entirely different logic.
As David Siegel, the CEO of Meetup, described it, networking is self-focused. ”It’s about ego, it’s about yourself.” Super connecting, by contrast, is more about wanting to help others. It’s not done as a quid pro quo.The distinction sounds simple, but it produces measurable business outcomes.
According to network scientist Ronald Burt, the single most reliable predictor of career success is an open network, where the individual connects different clusters of people who don’t know each other. This structural position, sitting at the intersection of otherwise disconnected communities, is precisely what makes super connectors so disproportionately valuable. They don’t just know people, they bridge people and worlds together that most people wouldn’t think to connect.
The business case is straightforward. Research shows that people are four times more likely to make a purchase when referred by someone they know. Referrals convert at three to five times the rate of non-referrals, and referred customers have a 37 percent higher retention rate. In a market where cold outreach is increasingly ignored and paid acquisition costs continue to climb, referrals are arguably the highest-ROI business development activity available. The super connector has built an engine that generates them continuously by earning that trust.
What makes this a strategy, not just a personality trait, is the flywheel it creates for the super connector themselves. Every introduction they make deposits into a trust account with both parties. When either of those people has an opportunity, a referral, or a deal to route, the super connector is the first call. They become the person everyone wants access to, which means inbound never stops. Their reputation compounds faster than any content strategy could, because it is built by other people talking about them, not by them talking about themselves. Over time, they stop chasing business entirely. It starts finding them.
LinkedIn changed what this looks like
For most of professional history, super connecting happened in rooms—conferences, dinner tables, golf courses. The barriers were time, geography, and access. LinkedIn systematically removed all three, and in doing so, created an entirely new scale at which a single person can operate as a bridge between communities.
Research published by LinkedIn in 2025 shows that over 65 percent of business deals begin with informal conversations, often through DMs and comment sections. The platform has become less a resume repository and more a professional trust layer, where reputations are built slowly and publicly, and where being consistently visible to the right people over time generates the kind of familiarity that makes introductions feel natural rather than forced.
In 2025, LinkedIn helped 122 million people secure interviews and 35.5 million were hired through platform connections. But hiring is only the most legible version of what the platform enables. The less visible version, the deal sourced through a comment thread, the partnership that started in a DM, the client who had been reading someone’s posts quietly for six months before reaching out, is where super connectors operate most effectively.
What the data makes clear is that showing up consistently matters more than showing up perfectly. In 2026, networking is less about who you know and far more about who remembers you, trusts you, and sees value in knowing you. Super connectors have understood this intuitively for years. They post, they comment, they make introductions, they refer generously, not because they have a strategy document that tells them to, but because they are genuinely invested in the people around them. The business results are a by product of that investment, not the motivation for it.
The give-first architecture
What distinguishes super connectors from strategic networkers is their orientation toward the relationship itself. They give first. Frequently. Without keeping score.
Research on relationship development shows it takes approximately two years to establish trust and five years to reach what researchers call the “revenue tipping point,” the moment when a relationship begins to generate consistent, compounding business value.This timeline is deeply inconvenient for anyone thinking in quarters. But for those willing to play a longer game, the architecture is nearly impossible for competitors to replicate quickly.
The give-first orientation shows up differently depending on the person. Some make introductions, others share opportunities, others amplify publicly, others show up in moments of professional difficulty with a kind word and a specific offer of help. What matters is not the form but the consistency and the genuine lack of strings attached. People can feel the difference. And on a platform like LinkedIn, where interactions are public and patterns are visible over time, that difference accumulates into a reputation that either opens doors or closes them.
The visibility layer
There is a practical dimension to super connecting that often goes underappreciated: it requires being findable. An extraordinarily generous professional who operates entirely in private, no digital presence, no public record of their thinking, no trail of interactions that others can encounter and follow can still be a connector, but their impact is bounded by the size of their immediate network. Visibility removes that ceiling.
Every thoughtful comment, every generous introduction made publicly, every post that shares a hard-won perspective rather than recycled advice, it all compounds into something no ad budget can buy: the sense that someone already knows how you think before they ever reach out.
This is where the modern super connector has an advantage that previous generations simply didn’t. Consistent, original content on LinkedIn, sharing a perspective, making an observation, drawing a connection between ideas that others haven’t made yet serves as a continuous, low-friction advertisement for the kind of person you are and the kind of relationships you build. It creates what might be called ambient trust: the slow accumulation of context that makes a stranger feel like they already know you before they ever reach out.
The professionals generating the most consistent inbound business right now, without a massive ad budget, without a complex funnel, without a sales team tend to share a common characteristic. They have been showing up consistently in public, giving generously in private, and connecting people who need each other without expecting anything in return.
From networker to super connector: How to make the shift
The difference between a networker and a super connector is not talent or personality. It is intention and habit. The shift is available to anyone willing to change how they show up, not just when they need something, but consistently, in ways that create value for others before they create value for themselves.
Here is what that shift looks like in practice.
Stop attending events to collect contacts and start attending to make connections for other people. Before the next conference, dinner, or industry gathering, ask yourself who in the room should know each other and make those introductions. Not because it benefits you directly, but because facilitating a useful connection is the fastest way to become the kind of person people remember and return to.
Make one introduction a week with no agenda. Identify two people in your network who would genuinely benefit from knowing each other and connect them by email, on LinkedIn, or in person. Do it consistently. Do it without expectation. Over the course of a year, that single habit quietly repositions you from someone who networks when it’s convenient to someone whose name comes up in conversations you were never part of.
Make your generosity visible. When you make an introduction publicly, tagging both people, explaining why you’re connecting them, you do two things simultaneously. You create real value for the people involved, and you signal to everyone watching exactly the kind of person and professional you are. Visibility without substance is noise. But generosity made visible is its own form of marketing, and it compounds.
Show up before you need anything. Comment on people’s work, share their wins, amplify their ideas, consistently and genuinely, not strategically. The professionals who only surface when they have an ask are the ones nobody thinks of first. The ones who showed up when there was nothing in it for them are the ones who get the call when something matters.
Shift how you think about your network entirely. A contact list is something you extract from. A community is something you invest in. The mental shift from “who can help me” to “who can I help and who should know each other” is the actual transformation and it is the one that takes the longest, requires the most patience, and generates the most durable business results of anything a professional can do.
The networker asks: “What can this connection do for me?” The super connector asks: “What can I make possible for the people around me?” The second question, asked consistently and acted on generously, is a business strategy. It just doesn’t look like one until it’s already working.
Building something that lasts
The strategy sounds deceptively simple. It is, in practice, one of the hardest things to sustain due to the longer timeline. The results are invisible for longer than most people are comfortable with, and the whole architecture requires a genuine orientation toward other people that cannot be faked at scale.
But for those willing to build it, the compounding returns are real. In a market where everyone is optimizing for reach and very few are optimizing for trust, the super connector has found the one competitive advantage that AI cannot replicate, and money cannot buy.
Today, growth happens in public, not behind the scenes.
There’s a version of building a company where the walls stay up. The brand stays manicured, the founder is always composed, and the audience only sees the result.
Nowadays, that veiled approach to business seems like a distant and outdated mode—building out loud, in public, and in real time has become the new GTM.
Shannae Ingleton Smith, co-founder, CEO, and president of Kensington Grey Agency, has spent the last several years proving this. Her creator management firm represents more than 200 culturally relevant creators across the globe and operates a ventures arm that grew through radical transparency, practiced before it was a strategy or a trend.
She started by giving everything away
Kensington Grey, named after Ingleton Smith’s daughter, didn’t begin as a business. It began as a private Facebook group.
Ingleton Smith spent years in advertising sales at Rogers Media, one of Canada’s largest media conglomerates, watching brands spend millions on placements while readership migrated to social. She also watched the people deciding who got deals consistently fail to reflect the communities they were supposedly serving.
“I always made it a point to advocate for people of color, to advocate for Black women, to make sure those stories were being told in the boardrooms,” she said in a recent interview with Inc.
While on maternity leave, she and her best friend started a pro bono Facebook group advising Black creators on pricing, pitching, and industry access. The group grew to 400-plus creators. Members came back with wins rooted in their guidance, and a viral story about the process drew attention to the community’s organic growth and success. The DMs that followed, asking for their formal support, were the launch pad for starting the agency.
The origin of Kensington Grey is an act of building in public.
“Those things were previously gatekept by the influencer marketing community,” Ingleton Smith says. “But those were our posts going the most viral because nobody was talking about that.”
The transparency wasn’t a tactic. It was a value system that happened to build the brand.
What building in public requires
Most conversations about building in public collapse into content advice: post more, share your process, be relatable.
Ingleton Smith’s version is more demanding. “Throw perfection out the door,” she says.
She noted that audiences expect founders to share the journey—good and bad—in real time. That’s accountability to an audience sophisticated enough to distinguish authenticity from performance, and willing to act on that distinction.
“People buy things and support brands they believe in now more than ever,” she says. “Growing up, the general consumer didn’t know who the CEO of Dell was, but people know Hailey Bieber is behind Rhode. They know Danessa Myricks is behind Danessa Myricks.”
The founder and the brand are no longer separable
Kensington Grey’s growth makes this concrete. When the agency launched, management firms had social pages but weren’t using them. Ingleton Smith ran Kensington Grey’s Instagram the way she’d run a creator’s account by posting daily, taking positions, and sharing what the industry kept quiet.
“That visibility helped us gain clients and opportunities for our creators,” she says. The agency built community the same way it taught its talent to—by showing up consistently and providing real value to people, whether or not they were on the roster.
The business case for a long-standing community
Kensington Grey’s support in the launch of Jenee Naylor’s bespoke sunglass line, 12PM Studios, is the clearest proof of concept, and Ingleton Smith is careful not to let it read as a formula anyone can lift.
“The community building starts way before launch,” she says.
Naylor had driven hundreds of thousands in sales through Target collections, Amazon drops, and six years of YouTube content before one of her own products shipped.
“There are people with millions of followers who are just there to watch,” Ingleton Smith shares. “Jenee’s audience—she has trained them to shop.”
The infrastructure matched: Naylor as creative director, her husband on finance and paid media, a full-time hire before launch day.
“We built this to be a household name from day one,” Ingleton Smith says.
Community isn’t built in a pre-launch sprint
“Get on camera so your audience feels like they know you,” Ingleton Smith says. That takes years of work, but it’s also the only version that converts when it matters.
Ingleton Smith recommends that any CEO who really wants to make an impact should show up—not because founders need to become influencers, but because the audience has gotten too smart for the alternative.