7 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Wearable

The Verge is covering the rapidly evolving world of wearables. We test everything from smartwatches like the Apple Watch, to smart glasses like the Meta Ray-Bans, to fitness trackers like the Oura Ring to find out which ones deliver on their promises. Follow along to find out whether covering our bodies in screens and sensors can actually make us smarter and healthier.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Google will stop offering the built-in Weather app for Wear OS 6 (and newer) watches.

Google says the change is due to “your favorite watch brands offering their own default weather apps on Wear OS.” If you have a Pixel Watch, you’ll use the Pixel Weather app. With watches from other companies, new users will have to use the default or download a new app.

We tested six smart rings, and there’s a clear winner

Six smart rings for the wearable reviewer, but only one ring could rule them all.

Victoria Song
Todd Haselton
Todd Haselton
Our hands-on video with all the new Apple Watches is here.

We checked out the Apple Watch Series 11, Apple Watch Ultra 3, and the new Apple Watch SE 3. The Verge’s Victoria Song specifically calls out all the good stuff coming down to the $250 Apple Watch SE 3, like an always-on display, wrist temperature sensor, faster charging, and more. But check ‘em all out:

The eight biggest announcements from Apple’s iPhone Air event

Apple’s thinnest iPhone yet, its most capable wearables, its best AirPods Pro, and a lot more.

Cameron Faulkner
iPhone 17 event live blog: on the ground at Apple’s keynote

We’re here with the latest on iPhones, Apple Watches, and AirPods.

Victoria Song, Allison Johnson and 1 more
The best stuff announced at IFA

A ball-catching robot tennis coach, cuddly AI robots, and a laptop with a rotating screen for optimal doomscrolling.

Andrew Liszewski and Jess Weatherbed
What would actually make the Apple Watch better?

Satellite SOS would be fine, but maybe it’s time for a new wearable thesis rooted in what people really want.

Victoria Song
Emma Roth
Emma Roth
Polar made a subscription-free alternative to Whoop.

The Polar Loop is a lightweight fitness band that can track your activity, sleep, and heart rate for up to eight days without a charge. Unlike with Whoop, you don’t need a subscription to access any features or monitor your metrics in the Polar app. The Polar Loop costs $199.99 and starts shipping on September 10th.

1/4Image: Polar
The future of AI hardware isn’t one device — it’s an entire ecosystem

Google says, ‘The future will be a very diverse set of accessories…’

Victoria Song
Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Meta might be close to launching its smart glasses with a display.

The codenamed “Hypernova” glasses, as well as a third-generation pair of its glasses that only support voice, could debut at Meta’s Connect event in September, CNBC reports. The event takes place on September 17th and 18th.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
The ITC has blocked two Oura competitors from selling their smart rings in the US.

“Yesterday, the United States International Trade Commission (ITC) ruled against Ultrahuman and RingConn for patent infringement related to the Oura Ring form factor,” Oura says. The ITC issued exclusion and cease-and-desist orders to the companies.

Victoria Song
Victoria Song
A sneak peek inside the repairable Pixel Watch 4.

Wired has some sick photos of a Pixel Watch 4 teardown. In my chats with the Pixel Watch team, I was told the inside would resemble a “bento box” and it certainly looks like it. Also: standard T2 screws everybody. This is such a huge step forward. Bravo, Google.

Google Pixel 10 launch event: the 8 biggest announcements
Play

There are a ton of new AI features and plenty of notable device upgrades, too.

Emma Roth
Fitbit’s AI health coach is the first I might actually be interested in

It’s a complete overhaul of the Fitbit app, centered around the concept of adjustable, conversational coaching.

Victoria Song
Google’s Pixel Watch 4 has big ideas — and an even bigger focus on AI
Play

Dare I say it? Google has the wearable juice.

Victoria Song
Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Meta’s ‘Hypernova’ AR glasses could be cheaper than expected.

In his Power On newsletter, Bloomberg reporter Mark Gurman mentions that Meta has decided that when its smart glasses with a heads-up display debut later this fall, the starting price will be around $800 instead of the $1,000 price range previously rumored.