Features

Top Newsmakers 2023: AI, Apple, and X

All the loud stories this year

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What was your social media platform of choice this year? If you were like us, you probably seesawed between several platforms for various reasons you can read below. Regardless of which platform you called home, all your feeds would have been invaded by a few loud stories this year. Now, because of how loud (and how many) there are, it’s understandable that you might have missed a few. As the year ends, let’s recap the top newsmakers for 2023.

Generative AI breaks the world

There’s no denying that artificial intelligence is the most talked-about technology of 2023. The year started with the rise of ChatGPT. It’s ending with everyone else building either their own model or an AI CPU.

Are you a believer or a doubter of AI? While some immediately heralded an AI-infused future for all of humanity, others (including the technology’s own pioneers) treaded carefully, decrying how dangerous the technology is. Regardless of which belief you leaned more on, AI is changing the world.

On a technical level, the easiest way to talk about AI is through the number of parameters and the computational power of a model or CPU. However, the technology is also taking no prisoners in the entertainment industry. For several months this year, Hollywood writers and actors went on strike to protest how studios were trying to replace them with AI. The technology’s story is far from over, but its effect this year earns it a spot on this recap.

Netflix fights against password sharing

The writing was on the wall for password sharers. Last year, Netflix, despite formerly condoning password sharing, announced that it will start curbing the practice this year. In the first quarter of 2023, the company added a new pricing scheme, charging users who use an account outside of the account’s assigned household. In fact, the platform even talked about banning sharers outright.

Restricting sharing isn’t the only major change, too. The service also got rid of one of its cheaper subscription tiers, shoehorning users to either more ads or a pricier subscription. On the bright side, the platform is slowly upping its content quality, thanks to widely successful adaptations this year, such as Scott Pilgrim Takes Off and One Piece.

The end of Twitter

The latter of half of 2022 sizzled with the rapid ascension of billionaire Elon Musk to the top of the Twitter corporate ladder. Through waves of controversy, Twitter’s new owner continued the trend this year by adding several changes, welcome and unwelcome, to the popular platform.

Naturally, the biggest change is the death of Twitter as a brand. Effectively canning the iconic blue bird, Twitter is now known as X. Likely to Musk’s dismay, the change never stuck. A lot of users still refer to the platform as “Twitter” or “Twitter/X.”

Besides the naming convention, the platform saw several features added, including voice and video calls. The company also hired a new CEO, Linda Yaccarino, to run the business side of the platform.

Threads briefly takes over

Following a string of controversial decisions from Twitter/X, Meta dropped its bombshell: an actual competitors to the former’s dominance. Unsurprisingly, Threads took the world by storm. The platform, helmed by Mark Zuckerberg and Instagram’s Adam Mosseri, earned millions of signups within only a few days of launching.

The app’s fairytale story didn’t last, though. Soon after its astronomical rise, interest just tapered off. In essence, Threads is a pared-down version of Twitter. Unfortunately, “pared down” means that it doesn’t have some of features that made Twitter so good over the years. For example, it didn’t have hashtags on launch. (It does now, but it’s a little bit late.)

Is the Threads story done? Probably not. As the app continues to add more features, it’s likely that you’ll hear from Zuckerberg and Mosseri in the future.

The darkening of Reddit

Speaking of social media, let’s turn our attention to Reddit. For a lot of Reddit users, the best way to use the platform is (or was) to use a third-party app. These apps allowed developers to tailor the experience and to add some features missing from the main app. As a company, Reddit wasn’t happy, though.

In a shocking decision earlier this year, the platform announced pricing changes for its API. Developers had to pay a lot more to access Reddit’s API, the crucial backbone behind these third-party apps. The new prices effectively cut off the smaller developers responsible for much of the slate of Reddit apps.

In retaliation, a good chunk of subreddits went dark and turned their communities private. While the protest didn’t do much to change Reddit’s mind, it was another example of social media platforms suddenly polarizing its users this year.

Everyone’s getting a handheld console

The handheld console wars are on! The Steam Deck heralded the ongoing war last year. Now, the battle for handheld gaming supremacy is in full swing. Throughout the year, the segment saw the launch of the ROG Ally and the Legion Go. Oh, and Valve also shadow dropped an OLED version of the Steam Deck soon after the Legion Go launched.

Players now have a lot of options for a handheld console. The segment isn’t going away anytime soon, too. Scarily silent this year, Nintendo has yet to announce or launch a successor to the Switch. One can imagine that the company has huge plans for the console in the next year or two.

Apple caves in

Apple is notorious for refusing to play ball with other mobile operating systems. Previously, when asked how to bridge differences between Android and iOS, Tim Cook notoriously told the public to just get an iPhone. However, in the latter half of the year, Apple just changed its tone. The company announced two major changes to bridge the gap between Android and iOS.

In September, Apple announced the first iPhone to adopt USB-C. For the first time, the iPhone was no longer hindered by an undying devotion to the Lightning cable. Apple wasn’t don’t yet, too. Only very recently, the company made the surprise announcement to adopt RCS in 2024. Though the changes likely stem from legislation (especially in the European Union), the long-standing zeitgeist of Apple refusing to adopt Android’s standards is slowly changing.

Grand Theft Auto VI breaks a YouTube record

To be fair, Grand Theft Auto VI was hardly on our radar this year. However, in the very brief time since it popped up on our feeds, the upcoming title never looked back.

When November ended, Rockstar Games suddenly announced that it will finally unveil the future of the Grand Theft Auto series, teasing a trailer coming in December. Now, the trailer is here. Even though a leaker spoiled the trailer’s reveal almost a day prior, the first Grand Theft Auto VI trailer quickly broke records. The sole video is now the most viewed non-music video in YouTube history after only 24 hours. In that span, the video garnered over 90 million views. The former record holder, Mr. Beast’s “Every Country On Earth Fights For $250,000,” only got 59 million views in 24 hours.

Smartphones

Unboxing: HONOR Magic8 Pro Photography Kit

A modular accessory setup

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HONOR Magic8 Pro Photography Kit


The new HONOR Magic8 Pro isn’t just getting a camera upgrade — it’s getting an entire system built around long-range photography.

At the center of this unboxing is the HONOR Magic8 Pro Professional Imaging Kit. It’s a modular accessory setup designed to push mobile telephoto shooting further. With the attachable 2.35x Telephoto Extender, protective case, and Shot Imaging Grip, the Magic8 Pro reaches an equivalent 200mm focal length. It can also digitally extend far beyond that. It’s a bold attempt to solve one of smartphone imaging’s hardest problems: clear, stable zoom at night.

The hardware story is just as ambitious. The Magic8 Pro features a 200MP Ultra Night Telephoto camera with a large 1/1.4-inch sensor, wide f/2.6 aperture. It also has an CIPA 6.5-rated stabilization — an industry-leading benchmark for optical image stabilization. HONOR says this new system shifts from passive shake correction to proactive prediction, improving micro-shake detection and keeping distant details sharp even in low light.

Color science also gets an upgrade. The new AiMAGE Color Engine focuses on true-to-life tones, balancing complex lighting scenes like blue hour skylines or neon-lit streets. Expect cleaner highlights, preserved shadow detail, and more consistent skin tones across environments.

But the real story of this kit is experience. The Shot Imaging Grip adds DSLR-style ergonomics, complete with a shutter button, zoom lever, and quick-launch controls. There’s even support for 67mm filters, opening the door to more creative shooting setups.

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Hands-On

Samsung Galaxy S26 series: Chasing usability, not specs

Thoughtful software additions

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“Our philosophy has never been about chasing specs.”

That line from Samsung’s presentation captures the Galaxy S26 Series better than any spec table.

This isn’t a year of radical hardware shifts. Battery capacities remain unchanged. Megapixel counts are familiar. The design language evolves rather than transforms.

But incremental doesn’t automatically mean irrelevant.

The S26 Ultra feels like Samsung refining its priorities — usability, privacy, and AI integration — instead of pursuing headline-grabbing numbers.

Hardware refinement, not reinvention

The Galaxy S26 series looks more unified. All three models now share the same corner radius, creating a consistent visual identity. The Ultra no longer stands apart with sharper edges. It’s a small change, but it makes the lineup feel cohesive.

The camera module sits on a more defined island rather than blending into the rear panel. It’s subtle, but noticeable in person.

Samsung also trimmed weight and thickness on the Ultra. At 7.9mm and 214 grams, it handles slightly better than last year’s model. The company switched to Light Armor Aluminum, which it claims improves heat dissipation and weight. The difference in hand isn’t dramatic, but it’s appreciated during extended use.

Charging finally moves forward. The Ultra supports 60W wired charging, up from 45W. Samsung says you can reach 75 percent in around 30 minutes. That’s a meaningful improvement for quick top-ups.

However, 60W isn’t industry-leading in 2026. Competing brands have offered similar or faster speeds for years. This feels less like Samsung setting a new benchmark and more like closing a gap.

Battery capacity remains 5,000mAh. That’s consistent with previous models. While fast charging helps daily convenience, endurance gains will depend on software optimization and real-world usage.

AI and software remain the headline

Like recent Galaxy generations, the S26 Series leans heavily on software features.

Privacy Display is one of the more practical additions. It restricts viewing angles at the pixel level, functioning like a built-in privacy filter. If you’re using your phone in public spaces, people nearby will struggle to see what’s on screen.

You can toggle the feature or enable it only for specific apps. That flexibility matters. It allows privacy protection for sensitive apps while keeping general use unaffected.

This addresses a real-world problem. Public screens are inherently visible. Privacy Display doesn’t eliminate that risk, but it reduces casual glances and unwanted observation.

Audio Eraser also gets an upgrade. It now works across third-party apps. We tested it on a noisy K-pop fancam from YouTube, and the background noise reduction was noticeable without destroying audio quality.

It’s not perfect. Overprocessing can occur in extreme cases. But for cleaning up shared videos or reducing ambient noise, it proves useful.

AI Photo Assist introduces text-prompt editing directly inside the Gallery app. Users can describe edits in natural language — remove objects, expand backgrounds, or modify elements — without exporting images to external tools.

This isn’t groundbreaking technology. Similar generative edits exist in other AI platforms. The difference is integration.

By embedding generative tools inside the Gallery, Samsung turns them into part of the default workflow. Photo editing becomes more accessible rather than requiring specialized knowledge or separate apps.

That shift is meaningful. It signals that generative AI editing is becoming a standard smartphone feature rather than an experimental add-on.

Cameras: computational evolution

The camera hardware remains familiar. The Ultra continues with a 200MP main sensor and telephoto configurations similar to last year.

Improvements focus on computational photography.

Samsung widened apertures to allow more light. Stabilization has been refined. AI sharpening and Nightography processing aim to produce cleaner images with reduced noise.

From samples shown during the presentation, low-light shots appear brighter and cleaner. However, the processing can feel aggressive. Details sometimes look overly smoothed, and textures can appear artificial.

This reflects Samsung’s long-standing approach — prioritize computational enhancements over megapixel increases. The S26 continues that philosophy.

For video creators, APV (Advanced Professional Video) enables 8K recording with minimal quality degradation during edits. Super Steady Video also improves handheld stabilization.

These features cater to content creation workflows rather than casual snapshots.

Incremental but intentional

The Galaxy S26 Ultra doesn’t try to shock. It doesn’t reinvent Samsung’s design language or introduce dramatic hardware leaps.

Instead, it refines existing ideas.

Privacy Display addresses public visibility concerns. Audio Eraser improves real-world video cleanup. AI Photo Assist integrates generative editing into everyday photo workflows. Charging speeds improve without industry-leading ambitions.

Even the design changes — unified corner radii, a defined camera island, lighter materials — emphasize cohesion.

This strategy resembles the broader shift in the smartphone industry. Hardware innovation has slowed. Software and usability improvements drive differentiation.

Samsung appears comfortable with that reality.

Of course, first impressions only tell part of the story. We still need extended testing for battery life, thermal performance, camera consistency, and AI reliability.

The S26 Ultra may not represent a revolution. But refinement can matter — especially when it targets usability and practical features. 

Samsung will have to make significant hardware upgrades eventually. But for now, it feels like the company is doubling down on incremental progress. Not flashy. Not radical. But purposeful.

Whether that strategy resonates will depend on real-world performance.

Samsung Galaxy S26 Series – Specs 

Feature Galaxy S26 Ultra Galaxy S26+ Galaxy S26
Display 6.9″ Dynamic AMOLED 2X

  • QHD+ (3120 x 1440)
  • 500 ppi, 1-120Hz
  • S Pen support
6.7″ Dynamic AMOLED 2X

  • QHD+ (3120 x 1440)
  • 516 ppi, 1-120Hz
6.3″ Dynamic AMOLED 2X

  • FHD+ (2340 x 1080)
  • 411 ppi, 1-120Hz
Rear Camera: Ultra Wide 50MP, F1.9, 0.7 µm 12MP, F2.2, 1.4 µm 12MP, F2.2, 1.4 µm
Rear Camera: Wide 200MP, F1.4, 0.6 µm 50MP, F1.8, 1.0 µm 50MP, F1.8, 1.0 µm
Optical Quality 2x
Rear Camera: Telephoto 1 10MP, F2.4, 1.12 µm 10MP, F2.4, 1.0 µm 10MP, F2.4, 1.0 µm
3x optical zoom
Rear Camera: Telephoto 2 50MP, F2.9, 0.7 µm

  • 5x optical zoom
  • Optical Quality 10x
Front Camera 12MP, F2.2, 1.12 µm 12MP, F2.2, 1.12 µm 12MP, F2.2, 1.12 µm
Processor Snapdragon® 8 Elite Gen 5 for Galaxy (3 nm) Exynos 2600 (2 nm)* Exynos 2600 (2 nm)*
Memory (RAM) 12GB / 16GB 12GB 12GB
Storage 256GB / 512GB / 1TB 256GB / 512GB 128GB / 256GB / 512GB
(Micro SD: N/A)
Battery 5,000 mAh 4,900 mAh 4,300 mAh
  • Super Fast Charging 3.0
  • Super Fast Wireless Charging
  • Wireless PowerShare
Dimensions 78.1 x 163.6 x 7.9 mm

214 g (Sub6/mmWave)

75.8 x 158.4 x 7.3 mm

190 g (Sub6/mmWave)

71.7 x 149.6 x 7.2 mm

167 g (Sub6)

Colors Standard: Cobalt Violet (Hero), Sky Blue, Black, White

Online: Silver Shadow, Pink Gold

Standard: Cobalt Violet (Hero), Sky Blue, Black, White

Online: Silver Shadow, Pink Gold

Standard: Cobalt Violet (Hero), Sky Blue, Black, White

Online: Silver Shadow, Pink Gold

 

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Dating

Crossing an island to see if love would show up

A 24-hour detour in Cagayan De Oro, captured on OPPO Reno15

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Doing things for the plot used to burn me badly. It always ended the same way: me lying on the floor, crying over choices I insisted were romantic when they were clearly reckless, while my cat stared at me with a look that suggested regret over choosing me as an owner.

I’ve gone through enough heartbreak that someone my age should have learned by now. I should know when to pause before making decisions that feel thrilling only because they are unhinged.

And yet, I still move through life the way I did in my early twenties, convinced that consequences can wait as long as I feel something in the moment.

I had always wanted to go to Cagayan de Oro. The city feels like a threshold, a gateway to Northern Mindanao, opening up to Camiguin and Bukidnon, two places I have romanticized endlessly through saved TikTok videos and screenshots meant for a future version of myself who finally had the time.

Travel felt like a good enough reason to go. It just wasn’t the real one.

It was for love

Four years ago, I noticed him after watching at finish line of an ultramarathon on one of the hardest trails in the Philippines.

There was something about that moment — about the way exhaustion and triumph lived in his body at the same time. That single image stayed with me. Attraction and curiosity followed.

After walking away from my “loml, loss of my life, unfortunately, as Taylor Swift would put it, I decided to take a risk to start the year. I wanted to see whether my heart would open again, even slightly.

Armed with nothing but courage I wasn’t fully confident in and the OPPO Reno15 mounted on my Ulanzi tripod, I crossed 800 kilometers to see a “friend.”

I used the word carefully, knowing how much work it was doing. I also knew this trip would either become one of the best decisions I made this year or one I would have to process slowly over time.

Touchdown with intentions

I was already on assignment in Northern Mindanao. In almost a decade of traveling for work, I had never extended a stay. I flew in, did the job, and flew out because Manila always waited with something urgent.

This time, I rebooked my flight for the next day, telling myself that one more day was reasonable. A stop at Panagatan Restaurant in Opol, Misamis Oriental made it feel like I had slipped into my own 1989 (Taylor’s Version)-coded vacation.

Blue skies stretched endlessly above a calm sea. The air felt cool against my skin, though there were no birds cutting through the frame.

I sat there soaking in sunlight, staring at the view as it unfolded in front of me. For the first time in a long while, I felt welcomed. I caught myself thinking that life might actually be okay. I could breathe.

Like in the song “Clean,” except this time I was twelve months sober from a love that almost broke me.

A table for one

I checked in at Red Planet because every hotel I genuinely wanted to stay at was fully booked. What remained were family rooms priced at over US$150.

The room I ended up with was simple, featuring a queen-sized bed and costing less than US$40. There was barely enough space for my drum-like American Tourister luggage, but the bed was wide and welcoming.

I spread myself out and slept like a starfish, the way you do when no one is watching.

Just under two kilometers away sat Cucina Higala, known for serving modern Filipino cuisine rooted in Mindanao heritage. A friend from Cagayan de Oro had told me never to miss it, no matter how packed it got.

Of course, I listened.

Lunch there felt indulgent in the best way. The interiors made it feel like someone’s home rather than a restaurant. Even the bathroom caught my attention, tucked into a corner and washed in shaded daylight.

Everything worked together. The low murmur of diners layered with laughter; the smell of food arriving at nearby tables; the clink of cutlery against plates.

There was a sense that time moved slower here, encouraging you to stay longer than planned. I finally understood why the locals insisted going there.

Waiting at six

Before dusk settled in, I headed to Uptown to meet a friend. I wanted to catch up and ground myself. Eventually, I admitted why I was really in the city.

We sat at Milestone Coffee + Kitchen in Uptown, cups of tea and coffee between us. They also have a branch downtown, but Uptown felt easier, more relaxed, like the right place to unravel stories and gossip that carried weight.

The truth was simple: I was there to see someone I had an interest on for years, and we were supposed to meet at six.

I was terrified of being stood up. Crossing land, sea, and sky for a man was something I had never done before. I believed we would meet because he said we would, but I still asked my friend for recommendations on where to go, just in case.

Backup plans felt necessary. I just needed to know there was something to hold onto if my heart cracked open in public.

After sunset

Thankfully, he picked me up at Milestone Coffee + Kitchen and met my friend. We rode back toward downtown through the diversion road, him on his brand-new Yamaha Fazzio in Matte Orange.

His motorcycle had a name. Ophelia. He bought it in October, right before Taylor Swift released her album The Life of a Showgirl and the single “The Fate of Ophelia.”

My 1989-coded escapade shifted into something “Opalite”-coded, as if I had wandered into a version of my own People We Meet on Vacation moment and somehow found my Alex Nilsen-slash-Travis Kelce.

We strolled along the boulevard where people walked, ate, laughed, and leaned into the night market energy. Some sat by the riverside, letting the evening pass without urgency.

I drank fresh coconut juice from a stall that stayed busy even at ten in the evening, while everything across the street had already closed. It tasted exactly like the moment felt — unexpected and sweet.

We ended the night drinking beer we bought from a convenience store, like teenagers sneaking alcohol because our parents would disapprove. It was simple and familiar… and it tasted like home.

On borrowed time

The next morning, I knew it was already my last day in the city. While he was working, like actual adults and not the versions we see in movies, I packed up, freshened up, and walked to Limketkai to grab coffee and brunch.

I took my morning slowly. I journaled in my pocket notebook, listening to “Past Lives” by sapientdream and Slushii, sipping my coffee while watching people move through their own lives.

It felt grounding to exist without urgency, even if only for a few hours.

When my beau finally gave the signal to visit his farm, where I could leave my luggage before heading to the airport, I checked out of the hotel and went on what felt like an almost hour-long ride.

The farm was only about a fifteen-minute drive from the airport, which meant we still had time, real time, to spend the rest of the day together.

I toured his farm on foot and watched livestock being cared for with a gentleness that made me feel like I had stepped into a version of life far removed from mine.

I felt like a Disney princess playing with animals, temporarily forgetting that I had a return flight waiting for me.

We ate together, and at some point I fell asleep on the hammock, only waking up when he gently shook me so we could go to his favorite place.

At the edge of the day

The beach was so close to the airport that my heart sank the moment I saw it. Leaving the city suddenly felt very real. Leaving him even more so.

The entire encounter felt People We Meet On Vacation-coded, and yet I kept hoping this was not just a vacation fling, that he wasn’t merely a vacation boyfriend meant to exist only within a fixed timeline.

I relished the sight of the sea, his favorite spot as he told me, where he went to clear his mind whenever life felt overwhelming.

The water was turquoise, vivid against the rocks, and it was impossible to ignore. The sound of waves crashing against the cliffside rocks and the cool hum of the breeze wrapped around us as we talked.

We pondered about life, about where we were heading, about what this meant, and what it realistically could not be.

That was when I realized there was distance between us, not only measured in kilometers. We were two people meeting at different points in our lives, emotionally and mentally out of sync despite how naturally everything else fit.

We both rejected the idea of dating, even after acknowledging how rare it felt to find someone who matched our freak so effortlessly. I knew this could grow into something more if one of us was brave enough to go the distance.

I also knew that maybe neither of us was in the right place to choose someone else when our own dreams still demanded so much attention.

Goodbyes timed by the sky

The sky turned pink and purple as I headed to the airport. He followed behind me riding Ophelia, while I sat inside a tuktuk, a small motorized, three-wheeled rickshaw carrying me and my luggage through the last stretch of the city.

Rain had been forecasted all day. We both knew it. And yet somehow, the universe held it back, letting us have the beach, conversations, laughter, and pauses.

It waited until everything that mattered had already happened.

He made sure I got to the airport safely. Only after I gave him a tight squeeze and finally let go did the rain arrive, as if on cue, like it understood timing better than either of us.

It was an evening flight, and I looked like a deranged person wearing sunglasses, crying while sipping floral tea at Bo’s Coffee, staring out at the runway as planes lined up for departure.

I kept asking myself why distance suddenly frightened me when I had already crossed eight hundred kilometers for him.

Somewhere above the clouds, the answer floated heavily. I did love him. I just never said it out loud because I was afraid of what it would demand, and I was afraid of opening my heart again to someone I wasn’t even sure I would meet again.

For a moment, I felt loved and desired, and remembered what it felt like to be chosen, even briefly.

When I arrived in Manila, I looked through the photos captured on my OPPO Reno15 and smiled, seeing how a smartphone held on to a fleeting moment of love, written on sand and washed away exactly in time.

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