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ВСУ рвут врага по всем фронтам: Сырский назвал потери РФ за 2025 год

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С начала 2025 года Силы обороны Украины продолжают успешно отражать наступление противника, уничтожив более 305 тысяч российских солдат и почти 30 тыс.
С начала 2025 года Силы обороны Украины продолжают успешно отражать наступление противника, уничтожив более 305 тысяч российских солдат и почти 30 тысяч единиц вражеской техники.
Об этом сообщает РБК-Украина со ссылкой на публикацию главнокомандующего Вооруженных сил Украины Александра Сырского в сети Telegram.
По данным главнокомандующего Вооруженных сил Украины Александра Сырского, за первые восемь с половиной месяцев 2025 года украинские защитники ликвидировали более 305 тысяч военнослужащих армии РФ. Этот показатель демонстрирует эффективность оборонительных действий и высокий профессионализм войск.
«Силы обороны Украины уничтожают врага: с начала года обезврежено более 305 тысяч оккупантов (305 630)», — написал Сырский в официальном сообщении.
Кроме того, украинские войска нанесли значительные потери вражеской технике. По его словам, за этот период поражено почти 30 тысяч единиц автомобильной техники противника, что существенно подрывает возможности армии РФ по снабжению и передвижению.
Сырский также опубликовал видео с боевых операций, на котором видно уничтожение личного состава и техники противника. Он подчеркнул важность поддержки и профессионализма украинских воинов в ходе боевых действий.
«В то же время разрушаем и вражескую логистику: в 2025 году уже поражено 29 095 единиц автомобильной техники. Спасибо воинам за профессиональную боевую работу. Борьба продолжается. Слава Украине!», — отметил главнокомандующий.
Эти данные свидетельствуют о системной работе украинских подразделений по нейтрализации угроз, а также о значительных потерях противника, что укрепляет позиции Украины на фронте и поддерживает моральный дух защитников.
Напоминаем, что главнокомандующий Вооруженных сил Украины Александр Сырский освободил от должности командира 17-го армейского корпуса Владимира Силенка и командира 20-го корпуса Максима Китунина.
Отметим, что Сырский заявил, что украинские войска продолжают успешно отражать попытки российской армии укрепить свои позиции на Донбассе, нейтрализуя переброшенные на фронт подразделения.

Trump’s takeover of American society is nearly complete

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The public mourning of Charlie Kirk is more about Donald Trump than the deceased.
At NFL games across the United States this past weekend, tributes were made to a man who claimed Black women like Michelle Obama “do not have the brain processing power” of their white colleagues. In the commonwealth of Pennsylvania, three days of mourning, with flags at half-staff, were ordered by the Democratic governor “in respect for the memory” of an activist who called for “a ban on all third-worlders” — some 50 million Americans are foreign-born — “legal or illegal,” citing a racist conspiracy theory about how “they” are seeking to supplant God-fearing Caucasians with altogether inferior people of color.
“They want to replace white, Anglo-Saxon Christian Protestants with Mexican[s], Nicaraguans and El Salvadorians,” he said over the summer, lamenting the size of the Latino population in a former Mexican territory called “Los Angeles.”
Enough has been said about Charlie Kirk, who was killed not by an immigrant, police say, but by a 22-year-old white man from Utah. Too much, even: the founder of Turning Point USA was an important ally of President Donald Trump, but most people had never heard of him before he was shot and killed last week. That, in fact — that the murder of a MAGA activist has been given a full-court media treatment as if he were a nonpartisan national hero or an actual pope, with liberals from The New York Times to the governor’s office dutifully performing their subservience to Donald Trump’s hegemony — is what now requires scrutiny.
It was just three months ago that democracy was directly and explicitly attacked. Melissa Hortman, the former Democratic speaker of the Minnesota House, was gunned down in her home, alongside her husband and golden retriever, by a right-wing, anti-choice assassin who friends say was a devoted follower of the president of the United States. The 57-year-old admitted killer, who also wounded state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife and was subsequently given a platform to justify his actions on MAGA pundit Glenn Beck’s website, tilted the balance of power in what had been an evenly divided House of Representatives.
But the liberal opposition was largely unwilling to be so uncouth as to connect the dots. While the Trump White House has leaped to exploit the murder of a political ally before their blood was even dry or the killer’s motive established, seeking to justify a longstanding desire to purge the left from public life — something now being accomplished with the help of media owners and college administrators — Democrats responded to the cold-blooded stalking and murder of one of their own with sheepish paeans to shared, bipartisan responsibilities.
“Leaders across our country must speak and act with the moral clarity this moment demands,” Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro said at the time. “This is unacceptable — we all have a responsibility to stand up and work to defeat the political violence that is tearing through our country.”
Fine words — indisputable, even — but also out of touch with the times, when only one side feels a responsibility to uphold democratic norms and the other is led by a man who openly rejects them; who, rather, encouraged his supporters to march on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021 in an effort to retain power after losing an election, and then proceeded to pardon each and every man who assaulted a police officer that day on his behalf.
Shapiro, himself a target of political violence, did not lower his state’s flags, either.
As for Trump, asked Monday why he didn’t do for Melissa Hortman what he has done for Kirk — ordering flags to be at half-staff at government properties across the country — he responded: “I’m not familiar. The who?”
Trump could almost be forgiven for not remembering the targeted killing of a Democrat. The slaughter, just 90 days ago, was not observed with a moment of silence at a New York Yankees game, nor was remarked upon as “a turning point for us as a society” by a Supreme Court justice; even the deceased’s own colleagues felt it vulgar to attribute blame for avowedly right-wing, anti-abortion violence, even as Trump routinely charges Democrats with murdering babies.
The disparity is more grotesque than that: while the right falsely accused Hortman’s killer of being a left-wing extremist, Trump openly defends, in his own words, the “radicals on the right,” claiming they “oftentimes are radical because they don’t want to see crime,” or are motivated by simple, American xenophobia. They just don’t “want these people coming in,” he told Fox News last week (he’s not wrong: the neo-Nazi who murdered 11 people at a Pittsburgh synagogue in Trump’s first term did indeed blame Jews for bringing “invaders in that kill our people”).
What is there to say? One side is too timid to weaponize its martyrs, while the other denies that the extremists who create them are even a problem. And America’s largest institutions, from its sports leagues to its universities, play along with this farce in the name of national unity.
While those on the left are sometimes perpetrators of political violence, if not the most likely, what is increasingly clear is they are not allowed to be its victims, as any such national tributes would be divisive. Recognizing a dead Democrat, on national television? It would be provocative, and certainly partisan, in a country where no facet of life is now considered outside the purview of the American president and a federal government willing to investigate each and every one of his irritants.
The killing of Charlie Kirk did not just show that the United States is a violent country with too many guns; it showed that those who see a future for themselves in politics and society are now eager to display their submission to a man who would, in turn, not even notice if they died. That’s an indication that, a decade after the country began its descent into right-wing autocracy, America’s culture is now as degraded as its democracy.

Thinking of upgrading? Here are 7 reasons to skip the AirPods Pro 3

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A discounted pair of AirPods Pro 2 is a better deal for many customers.
During its iPhone 17 launch event, Apple introduced the highly anticipated AirPods Pro 3. Prior to the keynote, some leaks suggested we might see bigger changes, including a design with much shorter stems. That didn’t materialize.
Instead, Apple delivered the rumored Live Translation feature, along with stronger ANC, longer battery life, and heart rate sensors. On paper, these all sound like welcome upgrades that could entice many users to opt for the new model. However, a closer look at the spec sheet reveals 7 reasons you may want to stick with the AirPods Pro 2.
I don’t think I even need AirPods Pro 3 #airpods #apple #upgradeCommon tongues
Live Translation is one of the neat additions that certain rival brands have offered for a while. As its name suggests, the tool lets you convert someone’s speech from one language to another in real time. The AirPods Pro 3 will pick up the foreign phrases using the embedded mics, translate them to your preferred language, activate ANC to muffle the original speaker, and play the translated audio directly in your ears.
The Live Translation feature is available in English, French, German, Portuguese, and Spanish, with Italian, Japanese, Korean, and Chinese (simplified) to follow later this year. If the other party isn’t wearing AirPods, your iPhone can display translations of your speech for them to read and optionally read them out loud.
We’re not downplaying how powerful and handy this utility can be for tourists and digital nomads, but it’s not exclusive to the AirPods Pro 3. Any AirPods 4 (with ANC) or AirPods Pro 2 user can take advantage of it. So, if you’re getting the latest earbuds for this particular feature, you don’t have to.So 20H2
The availability of Apple’s new software features is generally tied to the device’s processor. For example, the Apple Watch Series 9, 10, and 11 all offer the same main watchOS perks, as they pack similar chipsets. Likewise, the H-branded chip embedded in Apple’s AirPods line typically dictates what new additions a certain model receives.
Apple first introduced the H2 chip when it launched the AirPods Pro 2 in late 2022. Naturally, some customers may assume the AirPods Pro 3 pack an upgraded, more powerful H3 variant. In reality, the AirPods Pro 3 reuse the H2 chip, which suggests that the Pro 2 and Pro 3 models will continue to receive similar feature updates. And when Apple eventually drops software support for the H2 chip, both models will likely stop receiving updates at the same time—despite the Pro 3 being three years newer. You shouldn’t pay a premium price in 2025 for 2022’s technology.The case of missing hours
Apple boasted that the AirPods Pro 3 offer up to 8 hours of continuous playback on a single charge. Given these earbuds’ compact size, it’s honestly a significant improvement over the AirPods Pro 2’s 6-hour limit. What the company conveniently forgot to mention during the keynote, however, is the charging case’s reduced capacity.
When taking the charging case into account, the AirPods Pro 2 offer up to 30 hours of listening away from a power source. The AirPods Pro 3 downgrades said value to just 24 hours. My AirPods listening sessions rarely exceed 6 hours in a row. And, arguably, charging the AirPods case is less convenient than placing the AirPods themselves in their case for a quick charge. So, looking at the whole picture, I would say the AirPods Pro 3 downgrade the overall battery life coming from the Pro 2 model.A redundant beat
Another key AirPods Pro 3 hardware upgrade is the implementation of a heart rate monitor in each earbud. Like the Powerbeats Pro 2, users can now measure their heartbeats when recording workouts in compatible apps.
If you’re reading this, however, chances are you are an Apple enthusiast and already have the company’s smartwatch on your wrist. In this case, the AirPods Pro 3’s heart rate sensor is pointless, as your Apple Watch can collect the same data and more—and not just during exercise.Truly wireless
Ever since Apple completed its transition from Lightning to USB-C, I started placing multiple charging cables in different parts of the house. Whether I’m using my iPhone, iPad, or something, I can quickly top up its battery no matter what room I’m sitting in. Thus, I always appreciated the bundled cable in AirPods and other devices’ boxes, as it spared me from needing to pay for one out of pocket whenever a cord decayed.
Unfortunately, this generous tradition is coming to an end, as the AirPods Pro 3 no longer includes a charging cable in the box. You’ll need to buy one separately if needed.Sound value
Taking the above into consideration, if you’ve already got a pair of AirPods Pro 2, you may want to stick with them for the time being. Otherwise, if you’re an OG Pro user or buying your first pair, I’d advise you to look into AirPods Pro 2 deals. Many third-party retailers may discount the earbuds as Apple phases them out. So, if you can find a pair for significantly less than $249, it would arguably be a better package than the full-priced AirPods Pro 3.A new wave of control
The final reason to avoid the current AirPods Pro 3 is the upcoming iteration rumored to launch next year. If the reports materialize, Apple could release a higher-end AirPods Pro 3 edition in fall 2026, featuring IR cameras for gesture controls. Instead of clicking the stems to adjust music playback, you’d potentially be waving in the air.
To accommodate the new controls, the company could possibly introduce a more powerful H3 chip, which would future-proof the accessory for years to come. Logically, the rumored model could cost more than $249, but it would at least include a fresh batch of features to justify the price markup. Our advice? Especially if you have an Apple Watch, just wait for the rumored earbuds or settle for the AirPods Pro 2.

iPhone 17 Reviews: Choosing the Standard iPhone 'No Longer Means Missing Out'

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The first set of reviews are out for the new 6.3-inch base iPhone 17 model ahead of the full iPhone 17 lineup launching on Friday. As noted in our.
The first set of reviews are out for the new 6.3-inch base iPhone 17 model ahead of the full ‌iPhone 17‌ lineup launching on Friday.
As noted in our buyer’s guide, the ‌iPhone 17‌ features Apple’s biggest display upgrade to a non-Pro model in years, with a larger 6.3-inch display (up from 6.1 inches) and a 120Hz ProMotion display for refresh rates up to 120Hz. There are also some major camera improvements, faster performance, and big battery life gains. So what do these enhancements mean for users in real terms?
According to The Verge’s Jacob Kastrenakes, the new display is a game changer:

In size, resolution, and specs, the iPhone 17’s display is the same as what you’ll find on this year’s Pro. And the most notable thing about the change is that the iPhone 17 finally has an always-on display. The feature works exactly the same as it does on the Pro phones, too. When you set the iPhone 17 down, the screen dims, showing a faint version of your wallpaper, widgets, clock, and notifications.
Being able to quickly glance at your phone for information is extremely handy and instantly makes the device a whole lot more useful.
TechRadar’s Jacob Krol also had only positive things to say about the new 6.3-inch Super Retina XDR display, calling it «the star of the show.»

Yes, the iPhone 17’s 6.3-inch Super Retina XDR OLED display now supports ProMotion, meaning it delivers a buttery-smooth experience for scrolling, swiping, gaming, streaming, and even general navigation, as it will adjust on the fly from 1Hz all the way up to 120Hz depending on what you’re doing. The iPhone 16, 15, and 14 before it were all locked at 60Hz, which wasn’t a big deal if you weren’t coming from a 120Hz device, but this is a really nice upgrade.
The iPhone 17’s display story is really about the sum of its parts. ProMotion, Always-On, and a slightly larger screen make for a great experience, and there’s a serious amount of value to be found through this display alone. Oh, and it’s also coated in Ceramic Shield 2, which makes it three times as scratch-resistant as the screen on the iPhone 16 – that’s a win, especially if you’re prone to dropping your iPhone.
The ‌iPhone 17‌ features two rear cameras consisting of a 48-megapixel Wide camera and a 48-megapixel Ultra Wide – an upgrade over the 12-megapixel Ultra Wide lens on the iPhone 16.
CNET’s Abrar Al-Heeti particularly welcomed the camera upgrades and noted how the new features allow the ‌iPhone 17‌ to punch above the iPhone Air:

It’s interesting to have more photo-taking flexibility on a less expensive iPhone model, since the iPhone Air can’t take 0.5x photos or Cinematic mode videos. It’s another way this baseline device makes a case for itself. Like the iPhone Air, the iPhone 17 takes 12-megapixel 2x telephoto images, which maintain a solid level of detail as you punch in. Photos default to 24 megapixels, but you can switch to 48 megapixels to capture a bit more detail.
The ‌iPhone 17‌ features 8GB of RAM – the least of all new iPhones – and Apple’s base A19 processor, including a six-core CPU, a five-core GPU, and Apple’s Neural Engine. The GPU cores also each have their own Neural Accelerator, which Apple says boosts the chip’s ability to process AI calculations.
PC Mag’s Eric Zeman put the phone through its paces and came away impressed:

I ran the phone through the typical battery of benchmark tests to see how it fares against the competition. Surprisingly, it runs a bit faster than the iPhone Air, which becomes much hotter than the 17 under load. Meanwhile, the Pro iPhones are about 10% faster, which isn’t as big a difference as I expected.
The iPhone 17 buries the Pixel 10’s Tensor G5 processor in testing, though Google tells us it designs its chips to run AI calculations, not perform well on benchmarks. The iPhone 17’s A19 also bested the Galaxy S25’s Snapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy chip in CPU performance, though it fell behind in GPU calculations.
Ultimately, the iPhone 17 and its combination of memory and A19 power are more than enough to handle all your apps, daily tasks, and Apple Intelligence requests. In my tests, the phone had no trouble generating AI images, conjuring up new Genmoji, and powering Apple Photos’ editing tools.
Apple claims that the ‌iPhone 17‌ offers an additional 8 hours of video playback compared to the ‌iPhone 16‌. But how does that translate to real world gains? Tom’s Guide’s John Velasco reported a subtle improvement in his tests:

Our battery drain test reveals an improvement, albeit a small one. It reaches a time of 12 hours and 47 minutes, an improvement of 34 minutes over the iPhone 16. That might not sound like a whole lot, but it’s worth remembering that the iPhone 17 has a larger 6.3-inch display this time.
I can affirm that I’m getting all-day battery life with a full charge. Roughly speaking, I’m seeing 15% battery life right before bed time. Most of my time was spent on checking emails, watching a few videos on my break at work, and looking through all of my social feeds. It’s undoubtedly nowhere as close to offering the endurance I’ve been having with my iPhone 16 Pro Max for just about the last year, but most people will suffice getting through a work day.
I’m excited to report that Apple also upgrades the iPhone 17’s charging speeds, with its 35W wired charging getting its battery to 39% in 15 minutes — and then to 71% in 30 minutes. That’s a marked improvement over the iPhone 16, but Apple didn’t stop there as it also adds 25W Qi 2.2 charging support.
Like the ‌iPhone Air‌ and iPhone 17 Pro models, the base ‌iPhone 17‌ can be pre-ordered now.

МАГАТЭ сообщило об обстреле и дыме вблизи Запорожской АЭС

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Наблюдатели МАГАТЭ на Запорожской АЭС заявили об обстреле и черном дыме вблизи электространции. Сообщений о пострадавших или повреждениях пока не было, заявил глава МАГАТЭ Рафаэль Гросси.
Международное агентство по атомной энергии (МАГАТЭ) во вторник, 16 сентября, сообщило об обстреле рядом с оккупированной РФ Запорожской атомной электростанцией (ЗАЭС). Наблюдатели МАГАТЭ видели после обстрела «черный дым, поднимающийся из трех локаций поблизости», говорится в пресс-релизе агентства.
МАГАТЭ было проинформировано назначенным Россией «руководством» станции, что несколько артиллерийских снарядов «попали на территорию за пределами периметра ЗАЭС, примерно в 400 метрах от хранилища дизельного топлива», указывается в пресс-релизе. Ни Россия, ни Украина пока не прокомментировали заявления агентства ООН.
«Хотя сообщений о пострадавших или повреждениях оборудования не поступало, этот инцидент вновь подчеркнул постоянную угрозу для ядерной безопасности», — заявил генеральный директор МАГАТЭ Рафаэль Гросси. Он в очередной раз призвал к «максимальной сдержанности» вблизи атомных электростанций, «пока не стало слишком поздно». «То, что когда-то было практически невообразимым — обстрелы или другие военные действия вблизи крупных ядерных объектов — стало обычным явлением во время этой ужасной войны», — добавил Гросси.Опасные инциденты на ЗАЭС в июле
Запорожская АЭС — крупнейшая атомная электростанция в Европе, расположенная в украинском городе Энергодар Запорожской области, на берегу Каховского водохранилища. ЗАЭС была оккупирована российскими войсками в марте 2022 года в ходе полномасштабного военного вторжения РФ в Украину. Москва назначила новое лояльное России «руководство» электростанции и, по данным экологической организации Greenpeace, которые приводит газета The New York Times, планирует подключить ее к своей энергосистеме.
В июле текущего года на ЗАЭС произошли как минимум два серьезных инцидента. 4 июля станция была полностью обесточена в результате российского обстрела, сообщил министр энергетики Украины Герман Галущенко. 13 июля наблюдатели МАГАТЭ заявили, что слышали сотни выстрелов за ночь, а утром обнаружили многочисленные гильзы малого калибра, разбросанные на земле вблизи пятого и шестого реакторов.

Today in History: September 17, aircraft crash kills a person for the first time

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Lt. Thomas E. Selfridge of the U.S. Army Signal Corps became the first person to die in the crash of a powered aircraft, the Wright Flyer.
Today is Wednesday, Sept. 17, the 260th day of 2025. There are 105 days left in the year.
On Sept. 17, 1908, Lt. Thomas E. Selfridge of the U.S. Army Signal Corps became the first person to die in the crash of a powered aircraft, the Wright Flyer, at Fort Myer, Virginia, just outside Washington, D.C. The pilot, Orville Wright, was seriously injured but survived.
In 1787, the Constitution of the United States was completed and signed by a majority of delegates attending the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia.
In 1862, more than 3,600 men were killed in the Civil War Battle of Antietam (an-TEE’-tum) in Maryland.
In 1944, during World War II, Allied paratroopers launched Operation Market Garden, landing behind German lines in the Netherlands.
In 1978, after 12 days of meetings at the U.S. presidential retreat of Camp David, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin (men-AH’-kem BAY’-gihn) signed the Camp David Accords, a framework for a peace treaty.
In 1980, former Nicaraguan President Anastasio Somoza was assassinated in Paraguay.
In 2001, six days after 9/11, stock prices nosedived but stopped short of collapse in an emotional, flag-waving reopening of Wall Street.
In 2011, a demonstration calling itself Occupy Wall Street began in New York, prompting similar protests around the U.S. and the world.
In 2021, a Los Angeles jury convicted New York real estate heir Robert Durst of killing his best friend 20 years earlier. (Durst, who was sentenced to life in prison, died in 2022.)

В Британии арестовали двух мужчин за запуск дронов во время визита Трампа

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Полиция арестовала 37-летнего мужчину по подозрению в запуске дрона над Виндзором накануне государственного визита президента США Дональда Трампа в Ве.
Полиция арестовала 37-летнего мужчину по подозрению в запуске дрона над Виндзором накануне государственного визита президента США Дональда Трампа в Великобританию. За несколько часов до этого был задержан другой мужчина, и тоже из-за запуска дрона.
Об этом сообщает РБК-Украина со ссылкой на Daily Mail.
Подозреваемый из Эйлсбери находится под стражей после вероятного нарушения временных ограничений на перелеты. Они были введены в рамках масштабной полицейской операции по безопасности, необходимой для кратковременного пребывания президента США в Великобритании.
Полиция долины Темзы сообщила, что мужчина управлял дроном в деревне Датчет, недалеко от Виндзорского замка.
Это произошло через несколько часов после того, как другой 37-летний мужчина из Брентфорда также был арестован по подозрению в управлении дроном над Большим Виндзорским парком.
Тем временем Дональд Трамп вместе с женой прибыли в Великобританию. Визит Дональда Трампа в США
Это второй государственный визит президента США в королевство. Супругов Трампов будет сопровождать госсекретарь США Марко Рубио. Он ранее прибыл в аэропорт Станстед, где его встретила министр иностранных дел Великобритании Иветт Купер.
В среду, 17 сентября, высокие гости из США посетят Виндзорский замок, где встретятся с членами королевской семьи и почтят память Королевы Елизаветы II. Запланирован также государственный банкет в честь визита.
В четверг, 18 сентября, состоится встреча президента США с премьер-министром Великобритании Киром Стармером, а также с ключевыми британскими бизнес-лидерами. После чего запланирована совместная пресс-конференция Трампа и Стармера.

AT&T’s has a new way to stop those scam calls from ruining your day

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Your next call might be handled by your own digital AI receptionist.
AT&T is taking on phone scammers in a new way – with a digital AI assistant that can answer your calls for you.AT&T tests new AI digital receptionistHaving AI screen calls is quickly becoming the norm, and AT&T is also stepping into the game. The carrier is piloting a new digital receptionist, rolling out to select customers throughout the year.AT&T already offers tools like its ActiveArmor spam and scam filters, but this experiment takes things further. Instead of just blocking sketchy numbers, the digital receptionist actually talks to callers to figure out what’s going on.The digital receptionist can handle incoming calls and filter out spam, so customers spend more time talking to the people they actually want to reach. | Image credit – AT&TIt uses advanced voice-to-voice tech and agentic AI to screen calls, powered by large language models (LLMs) that process speech, generate responses, and turn them back into natural-sounding audio. AT&T says it’s designed to feel as quick and natural as talking to a human.This is just a taste of what AI agents could do with your phone to make your life easier. Eventually, a future AI agent could autonomously connect you to make reservations at the hottest restaurant. Just tell it the name of the restaurant, and it will connect you – or even book your reservation – all on its own. This digital receptionist could also eventually handle phone calls that are important, but you can’t take at the time, by getting directions from you in real time with text prompts.– AT&T, September 2025Think of it as having a personal assistant built into your phone. It answers calls on your behalf, asks questions like “Who’s calling?” and “What’s this regarding?”, and then decides what happens next. It can figure out if the caller is human, how urgent the call is, and whether it meets your own criteria.If it’s important, the receptionist connects the call and then disappears from the conversation. If it’s something the AI can handle – like taking a message or confirming a delivery window – it does that instead.This type of call screening is starting to spread. Apple, for example, just introduced its own Call Screening in iOS 26. It automatically answers unknown numbers, asks for the caller’s name and reason, then rings your phone with that info so you can decide. You can also send unknown callers directly to voicemail. AT&T’s twist is that it’s carrier-level, so it could reach far more users, regardless of whether they own an iPhone, Galaxy, or a budget phone.With AI advancing so quickly – and scammers using it to their advantage – it’s promising to see carriers fight back with the same tools. AT&T’s approach has the potential to give every customer a built-in layer of protection, not just those on the latest flagship devices.Sure, it might be annoying at first to fine-tune who gets screened and who doesn’t, but if it spares you from endless robocalls and scam attempts, the tradeoff is worth it. Of course, the real test will be how smooth and reliable it feels once more users get access. For now, it is just a trial, but it could end up becoming a default feature that changes how we deal with calls entirely.
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As officials searched for Charlie Kirk's shooter, suspect confessed to his partner, prosecutor says

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Court documents reveal that as authorities worked feverishly to find the person who assassinated Charlie Kirk at Utah Valley University, the 22-year-old man now charged with the crime was texting with his partner and acknowledging he was the shooter
As authorities worked feverishly to find the person who assassinated Charlie Kirk at Utah Valley University last week, the 22-year-old man now charged with the crime was texting with his romantic partner and acknowledging he was the shooter, court documents revealed.
Tyler Robinson fired a single fatal shot from the rooftop of a building overlooking the outdoor venue where Kirk was speaking to about 3,000 people on Sept. 10, investigators say. Afterward, prosecutors say he texted with the partner, who he lived with near St. George, Utah, about 240 miles (387 kilometers) southwest of the campus.
He said to look under his keyboard at their home. There was a note that said, “I had the opportunity to take out Charlie Kirk and I’m going to take it.”
After expressing shock, his partner asked Robinson if he was the shooter. Robinson responded, “I am, I’m sorry.”
The partner apparently never went to law enforcement with the information. Robinson remained on the run until the next night, when his parents recognized he was the person in a photo released by authorities as they searched for the shooter. They helped organize Robinson’s peaceful surrender.
The partner was not named in the charging documents that contained the narrative of the shooting and were made public Tuesday when authorities charged Robinson with capital murder and other counts. He could face the death penalty.
Law enforcement officials say they are looking at whether others knew about or aided Robinson in the assassination. They have not said if the partner is among those being investigated but have publicly expressed appreciation for the partner sharing information.
Prosecutors allege Robinson used a bolt-action rifle to shoot Kirk in the neck on the campus in Orem, about 40 miles (64 kilometers) south of Salt Lake City. DNA on the trigger of the rifle matched Robinson, according to Utah County Attorney Jeff Gray. The rifle had been Robinson’s grandfather’s.
Robinson appeared briefly Tuesday before a judge by video from jail. He nodded slightly at times but mostly stared ahead as the judge read the charges and said he would appoint an attorney to represent him. Robinson’s family has declined to comment to The Associated Press since his arrest.
Kirk, a 31-year-old father of two, was a prominent force in politics credited with energizing the Republican youth movement and helping Donald Trump win back the White House in 2024. He gained a large following through social media, his podcast and campus events that featured him responding to a line of questioners who could query and debate him on any topic.
Authorities have not revealed a clear motive in the shooting, but Gray said that Robinson wrote in a text about Kirk to his partner: “I had enough of his hatred. Some hate can’t be negotiated out.”
The prosecutor said Robinson also wrote in one text that he spent more than a week planning the attack on Kirk. Authorities have not said what they believe the planning entailed.
Gray declined to answer whether Robinson targeted Kirk for his anti-transgender views. Kirk was shot while taking a question that touched on mass shootings, gun violence and transgender people.
“That is for a jury to decide», Gray said.
Robinson was involved in a romantic relationship with his roommate, who investigators say is transgender.
While authorities say Robinson hasn’t been cooperating with investigators, they say his family and friends have been sharing information.
Robinson’s mother told investigators that their son had turned hard left politically in the last year and became more supportive of gay and transgender rights, Gray said.
Those decisions prompted several conversations in the household, especially between Robinson and his father. They had different political views and Robinson told his partner in a text that his dad had become a “diehard MAGA” since Trump was elected.
Robinson’s mother recognized him when authorities released a picture of the suspect and his parents confronted him, at which time Robinson said he wanted to kill himself, Gray said.
The family persuaded him to meet with a family friend who is a retired sheriff’s deputy. That person was able to get Robinson to turn himself in, the prosecutor said.
Robinson was arrested late Thursday near St. George, where he grew up.
In a text exchange with his partner released by authorities, Robinson wrote about planning to get his rifle from his “drop point,” but that the area was “locked down.”
Later he sent: “I can get close to it but there is a squad car parked right by it. I think they already swept that spot, but I don’t wanna chance it.” The texts cited in court documents did not include timestamps and it was unclear how long after the shooting Robinson was texting.
“To be honest I had hoped to keep this secret till I died of old age. I am sorry to involve you,” Robinson wrote in another text to his partner.
Robinson discarded the rifle and clothing and asked his roommate to conceal evidence, Gray said.
Robinson also was charged with felony discharge of a firearm, punishable by up to life in prison, and obstructing justice, punishable by up to 15 years in prison.
He also was charged with witness tampering because he had directed his partner to delete their text messages and told his partner to stay silent if questioned by police, Gray said.
FBI Director Kash Patel said Tuesday that agents are looking at “anyone and everyone” who was involved in a gaming chatroom on the social media platform Discord with Robinson. The chatroom involved “a lot more” than 20 people, he said during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in Washington.
The charges filed Tuesday carry two enhancements, including committing several of the crimes in front of or close to children and carrying out violence based on the subject’s political beliefs.
Kirk, a dominant figure in conservative politics, became a confidant of President Donald Trump after founding Arizona-based Turning Point USA, one of the nation’s largest political organizations. He brought young, conservative evangelical Christians into politics.
In the days since Kirk’s assassination, Americans have found themselves facing questions about rising political violence, the deep divisions that brought the nation here and whether anything can change.
Despite calls for greater civility, some who opposed Kirk’s provocative statements about gender, race and politics criticized him after his death. Many Republicans have led the push to punish anyone they believe dishonored him, causing both public and private workers to lose their jobs or face other consequences at work.

King Charles III prepares to welcome Trump for historic second state visit at Windsor Castle

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The carriages are being polished, the family silver is being laid out, and diamonds are being dusted off as King Charles III prepares to host U.S. President Donald Trump on an unprecedented second state visit to Britain
It’s the sort of experience you just can’t buy.
The carriages are being polished, the family silver is being laid out, and diamonds are being dusted off as King Charles III prepares to offer a royal welcome to Donald Trump for what will be the highlight of the U.S. president’s unprecedented second state visit to Britain.
Hundreds of soldiers, gardeners and chefs are putting the finishing touches on their preparations to make sure the president and first lady Melania Trump get the full royal treatment. But it’s a spectacle with a purpose: to bolster ties with a world leader known for a love of bling at a time when his America First policies are putting pressure on trade and security arrangements globally.
The second leg of the visit will take place on Thursday, when Trump and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer meet at Chequers, the 16th-century redbrick mansion in the Chiltern Hills northwest of London that serves as the official country estate of British prime ministers. The government hopes a technology deal to be signed during the trip will underline the trans-Atlantic bond remains strong despite differences over Ukraine, the Middle East and the future of NATO.
The backdrop for day one will be Windsor Castle, an almost 1,000-year-old royal residence with gilded interiors, crenelated towers and priceless artworks.
It’s a scene that has seemed to enchant Trump, who ditched his trademark bluster and described the invitation to Windsor as “a great, great honor.”
“I think that also is why he seems so visibly excited about the second meeting, because it isn’t an invitation given to (just) anyone,” said George Gross, an expert on the British monarchy at King’s College London.
Trump said Tuesday after arriving in London that he loved being back in the United Kingdom, calling it a “very special place.” Asked if he had a message for Charles, he said the king was a longtime friend of his and well-respected.
While Britain’s royals long ago gave up real political power, their history, tradition and celebrity give them a cachet that means presidents and prime ministers covet an invitation to join them. That makes the invitations, handed out at the request of the elected government, a powerful tool to reward friends and wring concessions out of reluctant allies.
No U.S. president, or any other world leader, has ever had the honor of a second U.K. state visit. That won’t be lost on a president who often describes his actions with superlatives and has made no secret of his fondness for the British royals.
The day will begin when the king and Queen Camilla formally welcome the Trumps to Windsor Castle.
That will be followed by a horse-drawn carriage ride through the estate — 6,400 hectares (15,800 acres) of farms, forest and open space that includes a one-time royal hunting ground which is still home to 500 red deer.
Back at the castle, a military band will play “God Save the King” and “The Star-Spangled Banner” before Trump and the king inspect an honor guard of soldiers in traditional scarlet tunics and tall bearskin hats.
After a private lunch and a visit to an exhibit of documents and artwork illustrating the ties between Britain and the U.S., it will be time for the glitz and glamour of a state banquet.
Tiaras and medals will be on display as up to 160 guests in formal wear gather around a 50-meter long mahogany table set with 200-year-old silver to honor the president. Charles will deliver a speech, then the king and president will offer toasts.
Trump won’t, however, have the chance to address a joint session of Parliament as French President Emmanuel Macron did in July during his state visit, because the House of Commons is in recess. The president also missed out on that honor during his first state visit amid opposition from then-Speaker of the House John Bercow.
Most state visits are staged in London, against the grand backdrop of Buckingham Palace and the broad, flag-lined boulevard known as The Mall. But this one is taking place in the cozier confines of Windsor, a historic town of just over 30,000 people about 25 miles (40 kilometers) west of central London.
That makes it easier to control protests and protect the president at a time of increased international tensions, especially after the fatal shooting of Trump ally Charlie Kirk last week in Utah. Even so, British police have mounted a massive police operation to ensure the president’s safety.
When Trump was in London on his first state visit in 2019, he was met by thousands of protesters who filled the streets outside the Houses of Parliament as a balloon shaped like a giant, diaper-wearing baby Trump floated overhead.
Robert Lacey, a royal historian and the consultant on the Netflix television series “The Crown,” said Windsor is also a more “photogenic setting” for a state visit.
“Buckingham Palace has got its balcony, it’s got its façade,” he said. But “inside it’s very dreary and it’s currently being renovated, which is one reason why Mr. Trump will not be staying there. Windsor is a proper castle.”

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