In its latest update, Verum Messenger takes a major step toward integrating communication and financial services. Users can now enjoy a long-awaited feature — topping up their Verum Finance card directly through Apple Pay.
A New Level of Convenience
The integration with Apple Pay significantly simplifies the top-up process. Users no longer need to go through complex transfer steps or rely on third-party services. Just a few taps — and the funds are instantly credited to the card.
This is especially valuable for those who use Verum Messenger not only for communication but also for managing their finances within the ecosystem.
Finance and Messaging in One App
This update reinforces Verum’s strategy to combine in a single product:
secure communication
cryptocurrency operations
everyday financial tools
Verum Messenger is no longer just a messaging app — it is evolving into a полноценную fintech platform.
Security and Speed
Apple Pay is known for its high level of security thanks to:
biometric authentication
payment tokenization
no sharing of card details
By integrating these technologies, Verum Messenger ensures that financial operations are not only convenient but also максимально secure.
What This Means for Users
The update brings several key benefits:
instant card top-ups
simplified user experience
reduced reliance on third-party payment services
deeper integration of finance into everyday communication
Looking Ahead
The addition of Apple Pay is just one step in the evolution of the Verum ecosystem. It’s clear the team is moving toward creating a unified digital environment where users can handle most of their needs — from communication to capital management — within a single app.
Early in March, X (formerly Twitter) started testing a dedicated app called XChat among thousands of beta testers. It appears that the test phase is over and the app is ready for its public rollout. The Elon Musk-owned company has announced that XChat is now listed on the App Store, with a wide launch lined up in the coming days.
What’s the big play?
The chat app’s listing page on the App Store mentions a release date of April 17, and it will be available simultaneously for iPhone and iPad. As far as features go, the XChat app is advertising end-to-end encryption as one of its highlight features. For the unaware, E2E is currently deemed the safest security protocol to ensure that your messages are private, and no middleman or third-party (including the company that built the platform) can read your conversations.
x / App Store
WhatsApp and Signal, for example, implement it by default. On Instagram and Telegram, there’s a dedicated private chats feature that relies on end-to-end encryption to protect your messages.
Circling back to XChat, it will also enable screenshot blocking, which means no participant in the conversation can take a screengrab of the chats. The app will let users edit or delete sent messages, and will also let them send disappearing messages. Calling and group chats will also be a part of the package.
Ever since Musk took over X (which eventually merged with xAI, followed by a broad merger with SpaceX), plans for creating a super-app took center stage. Back in December, Musk quipped that he wants to transform X into something like WeChat, the Chinese app that allows everything from messaging and payments to reservations, among a whole bunch of other quirky services. In June last year, it was reported that the X super app would also offer investment and trading services once the super app plans materialize.
Why is this an interesting shift?
There’s more to the plans than a straightforward messaging pivot to XChat. Or at least that’s what Musk’s past claims, and the recent turn of events, suggest. On the surface, it would seem that Musk simply wants to serve a messaging app that fills the functional gaps that you can’t quite access on the social media app.
Just a day ago, Musk shared on X that WhatsApp can’t be trusted, referring to a lawsuit claiming that Meta allowed third parties access to the encrypted messages on WhatsApp. Even though WhatsApp has denied these claims, Musk’s statement added more fuel to the privacy fire. Separately, Telegram founder, Pavel Durov, claimed that WhatsApp’s encryption claims amount to the “biggest consumer fraud in history.” But that was not all.
Signal — one of the most widely trusted messaging apps out there, owing to its robust security protocols — also found itself in the line of fire. As per reports, the FBI was able to obtain the contents of Signal messages after accessing the notifications history on a suspect’s iPhone, even though the app allows a lock facility. Pavel also took a potshot at Signal, highlighting how Telegram never shows a message’s contents in the notification banner.
It seems XChat is making a splashy public debut at a time when trust in the popular privacy-first platforms such as WhatsApp and Signal is coming under scrutiny. Moreover, it would be interesting to see if X offers all the features for free, or whether some of them will be locked behind a premium subscription, just like the sibling social media service.
This weekend’s watchlist covers three different genres of movies, so you can pick whatever you are in the mood for. We have a trio of hidden gems on Amazon Prime Video that deserve way more attention.
There is a gritty Michael Caine revenge thriller you should not miss, a micro-budget 1950s sci-fi mystery that thrives on atmosphere and dialogue. For horror fans, we have a psychological horror bout a hospice nurse whose faith tips into something far more dangerous that gets inside your skin.
Saint Maud is not a horror film in the traditional sense, and going in expecting one will work against you. What it actually is is a deeply unsettling psychological portrait of a young hospice nurse named Maud, a recent Catholic convert who becomes dangerously fixated on saving her terminally ill patient’s soul in ways that grow increasingly disturbing.
Morfydd Clark’s performance is the engine of the whole thing, holding a fragile, frightening line between piety and paranoia throughout. I really like how the film gets under your skin without ever fully explaining itself. You finish it feeling like you witnessed something you were not supposed to see, and that feeling does not leave quickly.
If you have a soft spot for slow-burn British crime dramas, Harry Brown is the movie you need to watch this weekend. Michael Caine plays the title character, a widowed, retired Royal Marines veteran living on a decaying South London housing estate overrun by gang violence. When his only friend is murdered, Harry stops looking the other way.
What makes this film work so well is how it refuses to glamorize what follows. Harry is not an action hero. He is an old man with emphysema who stumbles during a chase and collapses on a canal path.
I really like how the film earns every moment of tension because it keeps Harry vulnerable and the world around him genuinely threatening. Caine is absolutely extraordinary here, and there are sequences in this film that will make you forget you are watching a 77-year-old man.
Have you accidentally tuned into a late-night radio broadcast and could not bring yourself to switch off. Well, The Vast of Night is exactly that kind of sci-fi movie.
Set over a single night in 1950s small-town New Mexico, the film follows Fay, a teenage switchboard operator, and Everett, a fast-talking local radio DJ, as they stumble onto a mysterious audio frequency that sends them down a strange and increasingly eerie rabbit hole.
There are no big set pieces or alien invasions. The tension is built almost entirely through dialogue, long unbroken camera takes, and an incredibly precise sound design that makes the night feel alive and watchable.
What I really love about this movie is how it makes stillness feel tense. A long phone call, a quiet street, a voice crackling through static, and somehow all of it keeps you completely locked in. For a movie made on a low budget, The Vast of Night makes an entertaining watch.
Sony’s TV business is going through a major structural shift, but if you’re thinking about buying a Sony TV right now, very little is about to change.
The company has created a new entity, Bravia, Inc., which will now handle its TV and home theater business. TCL owns 51% of this new company, while Sony holds 49%, giving TCL operational control over manufacturing, supply chain, and logistics.
That sounds like a big deal, and it is. But the impact depends entirely on what part of the business you’re looking at.
Sony isn’t stepping away from what defines its TVs
Even with TCL taking operational control, Sony is still responsible for the areas that shape how its TVs actually perform.
That includes image processing, picture tuning, and audio technologies, which are core to Sony’s identity in the TV space. Branding also remains unchanged, so Sony and Bravia TVs will continue to look and feel like Sony products for the foreseeable future.
If you’re buying a Sony OLED or Mini-LED TV today, this shift doesn’t suddenly change the experience. The fundamentals that Sony is known for are still being handled internally.
What’s actually changing happens behind the scenes
Zeke Jones / Digital Trends
The biggest shift is in how Sony TVs are made, not how they look or perform today.
Historically, Sony had tighter control over manufacturing. Going forward, that responsibility shifts to TCL, which now handles production, logistics, and overall operations. Sony’s role becomes more focused on design, software, and tuning.
In simple terms, future Sony TVs become Sony-designed, but TCL-produced. That distinction doesn’t matter immediately, but it could shape how these TVs evolve over time.
Why this move makes sense for both companies
Sony’s TVs have long been positioned as premium products, but they’ve also been expensive to build.
TCL, on the other hand, is one of the largest TV manufacturers globally and is known for producing high-performance TVs at scale. This partnership gives Sony access to that manufacturing efficiency, along with stronger supply chains and potentially lower costs.
From a business perspective, it’s a practical move. From a buyer’s perspective, it could change how Sony TVs are priced and positioned going forward.
Where this could actually benefit buyers
There are a few clear upsides if this partnership plays out well.
Sony TVs could become more competitive in the mid-range segment, an area where pricing has historically been a challenge. Improved manufacturing scale could also lead to better availability, especially for high-demand models that have been difficult to find at times.
There’s also potential for stronger Mini-LED TVs. TCL has deep experience in this space, and that could influence how Sony develops its own lineup in the future.
None of this is guaranteed, but the potential is there.
The concerns are more about long-term identity
The bigger questions aren’t about what happens next year. They’re about what happens over time.
Sony has built its reputation on consistency, color accuracy, and refined picture tuning. With TCL handling manufacturing, the question becomes whether those standards remain as tightly controlled.
There’s also a broader concern around brand identity. Sony TVs have traditionally leaned premium and refined, while TCL focuses more on performance and value. If those approaches start to blend too much, Sony’s positioning could shift.
That doesn’t happen overnight, but it’s something to watch.
What happens to OLED?
One of the more important unknowns is how this affects Sony’s approach to OLED.
Sony doesn’t manufacture its own OLED panels. It sources them from companies like LG Display and Samsung Display, while TCL has focused more heavily on Mini-LED technology.
That creates a potential tension. In the best-case scenario, nothing changes and Sony continues to push OLED alongside Mini-LED. In a less ideal scenario, OLED could become less of a priority over time.
Right now, there’s no clear indication either way, but it’s a key area to watch.
When will any of this actually show up?
Not immediately.
Bravia, Inc. is expected to begin operations around 2027, which means buyers in 2026 won’t see any real impact. Even in 2027, changes are likely to be gradual. The more noticeable differences, if they happen, are expected to show up closer to 2028 and beyond.
So, should you be concerned?
If you’re buying a Sony TV today, there’s no real reason to worry. The current lineup remains unchanged, and the aspects that define Sony’s picture quality are still controlled by Sony. In the short term, this deal doesn’t negatively affect what you’re getting.
Long term, it becomes a story worth watching. If Sony maintains control over its processing, tuning, and quality standards, this could make its TVs more competitive, especially in pricing and availability. If that balance shifts too far, the identity of Sony TVs could change.
For now, though, nothing about this deal should stop you from considering a Sony TV.
The Beats Studio Buds+ are down to $99.95, a $70 saving off their $169.95 list price, and that gets you true wireless noise canceling, spatial audio, and sweat resistance at a price that most competing earbuds with this feature set can’t touch. For anyone using an iPhone or an Android device, these cover the bases better than most things at this price.
What you’re getting
The Studio Buds+ improved on the original Studio Buds in two meaningful ways: better ANC performance and the addition of spatial audio, which delivers a more immersive, three-dimensional listening experience on compatible content. The noise-canceling handles commuting and office environments well, and transparency mode is responsive enough to actually use when you need to stay aware of your surroundings.
What sets the Studio Buds+ apart from most earbuds at this price is the cross-platform compatibility. They pair seamlessly with iPhone through the Apple ecosystem while offering full Android integration through the Beats app, one-touch Google Assistant access, and Find My Device support. Most earbuds at this price favor one platform at the expense of the other; the Studio Buds+ don’t make that compromise.
The built-in microphone handles calls clearly, the IPX4 sweat resistance makes them a practical gym companion, and the compact charging case keeps the overall package travel-friendly.
Why it’s worth it
Spatial audio and ANC together in a wireless earbud typically push the price well above $100. The Beats Studio Buds+ at $99.95 bring both to a price point where the decision becomes considerably easier, particularly for anyone who switches regularly between Apple and Android devices and doesn’t want to sacrifice features to do so.
The bottom line
The Beats Studio Buds+ at $99.95 are a well-rounded wireless earbud at a price that makes the feature set look considerably more expensive than it is. The ANC, spatial audio, and genuine dual-platform compatibility add up to an earbud that’s difficult to beat at this price, and the $70 saving makes it the right time to pick them up.
Amazon’s long-delayed satellite internet service is finally getting close to actually launching. In his latest letter to shareholders, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said the company is “on the verge” of launching Leo, Amazon’s low Earth orbit satellite internet service, and expects it to go live in mid-2026.
This puts Amazon much closer to finally challenging SpaceX’s Starlink, even if it is still arriving years later than its biggest rival.
When does the Starlink rival drop?
Amazon
Jassy said Amazon already has 200 low-orbit satellites in space and plans to add a “few thousand more” in the years ahead. But the first release is set to kick off in the middle of this year. To recall, Leo was originally conceived as Project Kuiper back in 2019, being renamed last year
Amazon has revealed that it has already secured revenue commitments from enterprise and government customers. But this is not a typical consumer broadband play. Jassy claims that Leo will integrate with Amazon Web Services so enterprises and governments can move data back and forth for storage, analytics, and AI. This gives Amazon a very obvious angle against Starlink. Leo isn’t just selling connectivity, it is also selling the broader AWS-powered ecosystem.
Amazon
Why Amazon thinks it can win people over
Starlink converts might actually be real. The executive said that Delta Air Lines has selected Leo as its future onboard WiFi provider and will begin using it on 500 planes in 2028. Other names mentioned include JetBlue, AT&T, Vodafone, DIRECTV Latin America, Australia’s national broadband network, and NASA, among Leo’s customers.
Amazon’s list of early customers signals to the world that companies are at least willing to bet Leo can become a credible second option in the satellite internet market. But that said, Amazon is still playing catch-up with Starlink, which already has nearly 10,000 satellites in space.
Apple’s iPhone 5C is apparently getting a second life, and this time it is not because it was a hidden gem that was slept on.
In an NBC News segment, the network highlights a small but noticeable social media comeback for Apple’s old iPhone 5C. The sudden popularity is largely driven by Gen Z users who seem drawn to its colorful design, “throwback” camera quality, and overall retro charm.
The story is less about raw utility and more about the vibes. So after the iPod, the colorful iPhone is the next to get a revival.
Apple
Why Gen Z is suddenly into the iPhone 5C again
The appeal behind the iPhone 5C is pretty simple. Gen Z is drawn to how different it feels from modern phones. Today’s smartphones mostly look like polished slabs of metal and glass. The iPhone 5C, on the other hand, is bright, plastic, cheerful, and a little awkward in a way that now reads charming rather than cheap.
NBC notes that another reason for the renewed interest is the camera. One of the on-screen captions specifically notes that the iPhone 5C is trending thanks to its grainy photo quality. The softer and lower image quality fits neatly into the broader social media obsession with imperfect digital aesthetics, particularly with older digital cameras.
So what used to feel outdated now reads as character.
Apple
Nostalgia plays a big role
Back when it was first released in 2013, the iPhone 5C failed to meet sales expectations because it failed to be affordable, despite its “budget iPhone” pitch. It lacked the popular Touch ID, and the plastic was perceived as “cheap”.
The segment brought in Clay Routledge, an existential psychologist and author of Past Forward, to explain the deeper pull behind retro tech. He also gives the story a broader cultural frame. The comeback is not just about one old iPhone model. It is about how younger users are increasingly drawn to gadgets that feel less optimized, less overwhelming, and less trapped in today’s hyper-polished digital culture.
Snap’s AR glasses ambitions might be starting to look a lot more real. In an official announcement, Snap has said it has expanded its partnership with Qualcomm through a multi-year strategic agreement that will bring Qualcomm’s Snapdragon silicon to future generations of Specs.
The company describes this as the first flagship engagement for Specs Inc, which will be launching Specs wearable later this year.
Chesnot / Getty Images
What was revealed in the announcement
According to Snap, future Specs devices will run on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon XR platforms, while the company says it will provide the foundation for edge AI, on-device processing, advanced graphics, and lower-power performance. Snap is framing this mix as essential for building AR glasses.
Snap is clearly trying to position Specs like an always-on computer instead of the tethered demos.
Why this actually matters for Snap
Sony has been working on AR eyewear for years through Spectacles, but this latset announcement seems more serious because it is tied to a long-term hardware roadmap. The company says its collaboration with Qualcomm already stretches back more than five years, with Snapdragon platforms having powered multiple earlier generation of Spectacles.
Snap
So the new agreement is meant to provide a more predictable foundations for developers and partners building apps for the platform. Snap also added that the collaboration will focus on things like on-device AI, improved graphics, and advanced multiuser digital experiences. In simplers terms, Snap is saying it wants its glasses to handle AR interactions without feeling slow, power-hungry, or dependent on a phone.
There is still a lot that Snap isn’t saying yet. The company hasn’t shared detailed consumer hardware specs, pricing, or launch timing beyond later in 2026. Though, Snap clearly wants developers and buyers to see Specs as a long-term computing platform, and Qualcomm is now being positioned as the chip partner that could help make it possible.
Running out of storage is one of those problems that almost everybody understands, and almost nobody handles properly. Storage can almost never be enough, so some people keep paying for cloud space. Meanwhile, others keep promising that they will “sort it out later”. And a lot of people just end up deleting things when the warning gets too annoying.
But Google’s upcoming Android feature could finally offer a better answer, with an automatic local backup to a PC. This functions wirelessly like a cloud storage service, but it is also free of charge since you’re using your own device.
Android Authority’s recent teardown of Google Play Services beta v26.15.31 revealed that Google is working on an Automatic backup feature inside Quick Share that can copy selected files from your phone to your PC without using the cloud.
Why this might be the storage fix normal people actually use
Cloud backup is useful and all, but a lot of people still do not want to pay for it. Considering the tiny amount of free storage space that you do get, stuff like WhatsApp backups, and photos and videos from a year can easily eat into this free storage immediately.
But Google’s in-development feature appears to let users automatically back up camera photos, camera videos, and audio files directly to a household PC, thanks to a new auto sync option and a Back up now button for manual transfers.
Dung Caovn / Unsplash
The report also revealed that deleting a file from your phone will not remove its copy from the PC backup. So the feature isn’t just about syncing—it is about finally permitting people to clear space without feeling like they are throwing memories away.
Your Android, your computer, your storage
The part that really matters is the “free” tagline. Most homes already have a laptop, desktop, or even both. And oftentimes, hundreds of gigabytes of storage sitting there are mostly unused. Unless somebody in the house is gaming, editing high-resolution gaming, or hoarding massive files, there is usually plenty of room for old phone footage, family photos, and voice notes.
Microsoft
So Google’s feature appears to take advantage of that reality instead of pushing people into buying more cloud space. Because it lives in Quick Share, it will likely use the same local transfer system, which also suggests that you don’t need an internet connection for backup. You just need to be in close proximity. From the start to the finish, your data stays with you.
This is the boring feature Android needed
There is still one catch though. The details arrive from an APK teardown, so Google has not formally launched the feature yet, and it could change before release. But if it does arrive, it’s the quality-of-life upgrade that could matter more than a lot of flashy AI nonsense. It is practical, wireless, and free.
The software development life cycle relies heavily on the integrity of containerized environments. As secure software delivery becomes standard in the development process, more teams seek hardened container images and similar hardened container solutions that deliver security without slowing build times. This change shows that container security has become a common need, not just an extra feature for a few specialized sectors. It has become a baseline for security teams that want faster deployment, smaller attack surfaces, and cleaner production environments from the very beginning of the coding process.
The Rise of Hardened Image Standards
For years, many developers treated container hardening as something only large enterprises needed, long after a product had matured. That idea is fading as organizations understand the numerous threats present in the current digital environment. Today, smaller teams, maintainers of open source projects, and growing SaaS companies are under pressure to ship software that is secure from the first commit.
This helps explain the rising interest and how hardened images are constructed and distributed. Developers are not only asking which images are secure but also which ones naturally fit into the tools they already use. A secure image only helps if it works within real development cycles, including local testing and CI pipelines. Security tools only stick when developers don’t feel they have to fight them constantly during a sprint.
Adoption is ultimately driven by practicality and the need for stronger defaults. Teams work to reduce their vulnerability risk while keeping their operations quick and flexible. They prefer to stick with their current workflows instead of switching to completely new methods just to secure a primary image. The industry has focused on specialized, lightweight container solutions to meet this need for balance.
The Practical Appeal of Minimal Images
Minimal container images are attractive because they reduce complexity by design. Using fewer packages typically leads to having fewer components to update in libraries to monitor. This reduces the risk that hidden vulnerabilities will be missed in production. When developers remove unnecessary binaries and shells, they reduce the attack surface. This makes it harder for exploits to succeed.
The technical community emphasizes that image composition is a primary factor in overall system safety. As noted in research by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), “Containers provide a portable, reusable, and automatable way to package and run applications.” However, the agency also notes that the image itself can pose a risk if organizations do not manage trusted content and configurations carefully.
Many developers focus on image size and composition as their first line of defense. A smaller image is not automatically more secure, but it is often much easier to audit and maintain over time. For instance, an independent developer who employs a lightweight API may not require a comprehensive basic image that includes numerous features. They can maintain a rapid runtime and reduce the number of products that require security vulnerability checks by employing a compact, secure image.
In the real world, this includes updating old workflows.
Think about a situation where a group of developers needs to update an old container configuration for an app that offers financial services. There are likely many terminals, debugging tools, and package managers that were useful when the app was first created in the old images. While these tools helped with troubleshooting early on, they stay in the image even after it goes to production, which can create a risk.
By adopting a stronger strategy with minimal images, the team can eliminate unnecessary parts. This speeds up the security review for the compliance department. It also helps keep consistency across different environments. This makes sure that the software on a developer’s device is the same as the software that is running in the cloud. This example shows that it is often better to get rid of unnecessary parts than to add more security features to a system that is already complicated.
Prioritizing Developer Workflow Speed
The adoption of new security tools often fails when it adds too much friction to the daily routine. Teams are looking for approaches that improve security without demanding a complete change in how they build, test, and scan software. For a developer, the primary question is whether the image will work with the registry and scanner they already depend on.
If a security solution requires proprietary tooling or unique commands, it becomes hard to justify the migration efforts. This matter is particularly significant for open-source contributors and smaller teams without a dedicated security department. They need secure faults that do not create weeks of additional migration work or break existing automation scripts.
A project maintainer updating a public service may prefer a hardened image approach that aligns with common container tooling. If a strategy can offer security-first images while respecting the developers’ time, it will see much higher adoption rates. The goal is to make the secure path the path of least resistance for the person writing the code.
Ecosystem Fit and Long-Term Stability
Compatibility with the broader technical ecosystem is becoming a major differentiator in how teams choose their base images. Organizations do not buy or implement image security in isolation. They need it to fit with internal policies, software bill of materials (SBOM) workflows, and deployment automation.
When a hardened image works well only within a narrow ecosystem, some teams hesitate to use it. They worry about being locked into a specific vendor, especially if their underlying infrastructure is still under construction or in flux. Companies with mixed cloud environments want the ability to plug secure images into the existing processes rather than rebuild everything.
This worry is growing because the ability to adapt is important for staying safe from cyberattacks. Attackers keep changing their methods and adopting new technologies. New ways to protect against them also emerge. Since these attack methods are always evolving, development teams prefer tools that help them respond to threats more quickly. They want to be able to swap components or update base images without a total system overhaul.
The Evolution of Developer Priorities
The industry is seeing a clear shift in how developers view their security responsibilities. It is no longer a task relegated to a final check before a release. Instead, developers expect security to be built into the regular tools from the start. They want minimal images, faster builds, and better support for the languages they use most.
Many fortified image options show how important security efforts are for everyone. The ability to find and use these images will help teams of all sizes include security in their software delivery processes. This shift towards transparency and honesty strengthens the software supply chain’s resilience against new challenges.
The development community is working to create a more stable foundation for future applications by prioritizing minimalism and compatibility. Secure images play a key role as the foundation for this stability. When security is invisible and integrated, the entire ecosystem benefits from higher quality, more reliable code.