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I ran 10km wearing the Google Fitbit Air and the Apple Watch Ultra 3 — here are all the differences in heart rate, calories & more
By Matt Evans published
How the new Fitbit compares with the Apple Watch Ultra 3 on a 10 kilometer run

Leica says generative AI ‘makes perfect sense’ for smartphones, but admits it's unlikely to come to Leica M cameras
By Axel Metz published
At a roundtable attended by TechRadar, Leica shared its thoughts on the relationship between photography and generative AI.

Google Health has taken over from Fitbit but I still don't trust AI
By David Nield published
The Google Health Coach is an AI-powered assistant ready and waiting to improve your fitness — but is it useful?

ICYMI: the 8 biggest tech stories of the week
By David Nield published
It's been a frenetic week of tech — here are some of the major stories we published over the past seven days.

Proton joins the backlash against Canada's surveillance bill
By Rene Millman published
Proton and tech allies demand UK regulators crack down on Apple and Google's dominance

The best camera phone 2026
By Roland Moore-Colyer last updated
Updated After a lot of photo snapping, we've ranked the best camera phones you can get right now

Canada vows to amend Bill C-22's encryption and metadata rules amid massive tech backlash
By Rene Millman published
Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree says the government will clarify how the lawful access bill impacts encryption, but insists the legislation "needs to happen"

Quote of the day by Google co-founder Larry Page: "When you aim for the stars you may come up short, but still reach the moon" — comments on the scale of ambition
By Keumars Afifi-Sabet published
The legendary tech entrepreneur outlines a philosophy at the heart of Google's meteoric rise in the last few decades

I've tried the new Google Fitbit Air — and Whoop should be worried
By Matt Evans published
Pulling the weather in and updating my fitness plan is easier than ever.

Google joins privacy backlash and warns Canada Bill C-22 could 'break end-to-end encryption' and create a 'surveillance infrastructure'
By Rene Millman published
After the privacy tech industry, Google and Apple are warning that Canada's proposed Bill C-22 could force developers to build backdoors into their devices, and push for strict judicial oversight.
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