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AirPods Pro 3 Coming This Fall – Here's What We Know

Despite being over two years old, Apple's AirPods Pro 2 still dominate the premium wireless‑earbud space, thanks to a potent mix of top‑tier audio, class‑leading noise cancellation, and Apple's habit of delivering major new features through software updates. Rumors suggest AirPods Pro 3 could arrive as soon as September 2025 alongside the iPhone 17 lineup, giving prospective AirPods buyers a dilemma: snap up the proven AirPods Pro 2 at today's prices, or hold off for the next‑generation model that could raise the bar once again?


Apart from their sonic strengths, the enduring popularity of AirPods Pro 2 owes much to Apple's ongoing feature rollouts. iOS 17 (2023) introduced Adaptive Audio, mute controls, and faster device switching. iOS 18 (2024) followed up with head‑gesture Siri commands, Voice Isolation, finer Adaptive Audio sliders, and a Personalized Spatial Audio mode for gamers. Apple then used iOS 18.1 and iOS 18.2 to add FDA‑authorized hearing‑aid functionality in supported regions, letting ‌AirPods Pro‌ 2 double as over‑the‑counter hearing aids for mild to moderate hearing loss.

2025 AirPods Pro: What the Rumors Say


Design and Case Tweaks


Every credible report agrees that AirPods Pro 3 will inherit today's software feature set, but hardware refinements are also expected. Multiple supply‑chain sources point to a refreshed look for both the buds and the case, with rumors of a slimmer form factor, a concealed status LED, and a front‑facing capacitive pairing button – an approach taken for Apple's fourth‑generation AirPods.

Audio Processor and ANC Upgrades


Under the hood, Apple is said to be testing a faster audio chip that drives "much better" Active Noise Cancellation than the already‑impressive ‌AirPods Pro‌ 2 manage. That bump will be crucial if Apple hopes to stay ahead of rivals like Sony's WF‑1000XM5 and Bose's QuietComfort Ultra.

Health Sensors: Heart‑Rate Monitoring


According to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, Apple is adding in‑ear heart‑rate tracking to ‌AirPods Pro‌ 3. The company's recent Powerbeats Pro 2 already capture heart data during workouts but cannot stream music to gym equipment simultaneously. Apple will need to nail seamless audio playback alongside biometric reporting if ‌AirPods Pro‌ 3 are to satisfy fitness‑focused users, but Apple Watch owners are unlikely to be enthused by heart rate monitoring, given they already have the feature on their wrist.

In‑Ear Temperature Detection


Apple is also researching ear‑canal temperature sensing, which – if it ships – could offer faster, more reliable body‑temperature readings than the skin‑temperature estimates produced by Apple Watch Series 8 and later. Whether the sensor will be production‑ready in time for a 2025 release remains unclear.

On‑Device Live Translation


One rumor claims ‌AirPods Pro‌ 3 will partner with the iPhone's Translate app to deliver real‑time conversation translation directly through the earbuds. Imagine an English speaker hearing an instant English rendition of a Spanish counterpart's words (and vice versa) without fumbling with handheld devices. Implementation details are still thin, but the idea fits in with Apple's broader AI push.

iOS 26 Feature Updates


Apple's upcoming iOS 26, iPadOS 26, and macOS Tahoe updates will add several new features to AirPods via a firmware update, including the auto-pausing audio when you fall asleep, the ability to use AirPods as a camera remote, an option to keep audio in your AirPods when your ‌iPhone‌ connected to other playback devices (like car stereos), and improved call quality.

Looking Ahead


Longer‑term, analyst Ming‑Chi Kuo believes Apple is prototyping AirPods with infrared cameras to enhance spatial‑audio experiences, while Gurman has heard of small cameras being explored for AI‑driven features. The infrared cameras could potentially enable "in-air gesture control" as well, allowing for device interaction with hand movements. Both projects are said to be high priority inside Apple, but neither is likely to debut before 2026.

AirPods 4 Hints



The fourth‑generation AirPods offer useful clues to Apple's design cues for ‌AirPods Pro 3‌. Apple has replaced the rear setup button with a hidden capacitive sensor under the status light on the case front, and the LED itself now disappears when inactive. These stealth touches make for Apple's smallest and lightest charging case yet, and it is hard to imagine the company not extending them to the Pro line.

Release Date


While there are widespread expectations for a 2025 launch, there have been some conflicting reports more recently. Analyst Jeff Pu of GF Securities Hong Kong suggests Apple may not launch the ‌AirPods Pro 3‌ until 2026, while fellow analyst Ming-Chi Kuo has also hinted at potential delays.

That said, evidence continues to mount for a 2025 release, including recent Apple beta software updates that leaked code hinting at ‌AirPods Pro 3‌ happening soon. ‌iOS 26‌ code includes a specific mention of "‌AirPods Pro 3‌" by name hidden in audio interface elements.

Fortunately, Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, who initially reported on the 2025 timeline, said in his Power On newsletter over the weekend that Apple plans to ship new ‌AirPods Pro‌ models in the fall.

Historically, Apple has launched significant AirPods updates alongside new iPhones, so an early September event, likely shared with the upcoming ‌iPhone‌ 17 series, remains the most plausible window. Apple is expected to hold its annual ‌iPhone‌ announcement event during the week of September 8, 2025, with September 9 or 10 emerging as the most likely dates. According to internal information from German mobile phone providers, the ‌iPhone 17‌ event is scheduled for Tuesday, September 9.

Summing Up


With AirPods Pro 3 potentially arriving soon, should you wait or pick up an existing model? AirPods 4 put Active Noise Cancellation within reach at $179, while AirPods Pro 2 continue to satisfy with top‑tier sound, proven ANC, and hearing‑aid mode. But if heart‑rate tracking, live translation, and even better ANC sound appealing, AirPods Pro 3 promise the biggest leap since the original Pros, and hopefully without raising the $249 price tag.
Related Roundup: AirPods Pro
Related Forum: AirPods

This article, "AirPods Pro 3 Coming This Fall – Here's What We Know" first appeared on MacRumors.com

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Why Apple Isn't Making New AirPods Max Anytime Soon

AirPods Max fans hoping for a second-generation version of Apple's over-ear headphones shouldn't hold their breath, according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman.


In his latest Power On newsletter, Gurman suggests Apple's wireless noise-canceling cans are stuck in commercial limbo – "too popular for Apple to stop selling them, and not popular enough for the company to invest a ton of time and money into creating a new version."

The reality check follows a report from analyst Ming-Chi Kuo earlier this year indicating AirPods Max 2 could enter mass production in 2027. Gurman's assessment paints an equally bleak picture (if not more so), claiming that Apple's audio team is more focused on annual AirPods updates and supporting audio components across other products. Apple is expected to release new AirPods Pro 3 this coming fall.

Apple's minimal commitment to the AirPods Max line became apparent last year when the company only updated the headphones with USB-C charging to comply with EU regulations, as well as some new color options. No other meaningful improvements were made.

It's already been nearly five years since the original AirPods Max launched in December 2020 – "a remarkably long time for an Apple product" to go without a real upgrade, Gurman notes.
Related Roundup: AirPods Max
Buyer's Guide: AirPods Max (Buy Now)
Related Forum: AirPods

This article, "Why Apple Isn't Making New AirPods Max Anytime Soon" first appeared on MacRumors.com

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AirPods Pro 3 Expected to Launch This Year With Key New Feature

Bloomberg's Mark Gurman expects Apple to release new AirPods Pro this year, and he said the earbuds will have a key new feature: heart rate monitoring.


From his Power On newsletter today, with emphasis added:
As for Apple's other devices, there's a lot in the fall pipeline — though many of the new products are only incremental upgrades.

There will be Apple Watch updates, faster Vision Pro headsets and iPad Pros with the M5 processor. You should also expect new AirPods Pro earbuds (I reported earlier this year that Apple is working on a pair with heart-rate monitoring), as well as HomePod minis and Apple TV set-top boxes.
Apple already introduced a heart rate monitoring feature on the Powerbeats Pro 2 earlier this year.

When both Powerbeats Pro 2 earbuds are placed in the ears, and heart rate monitoring is active, Apple says LED optical sensors pulse at over 100 times per second to measure heart rate via blood flow. The feature integrates with popular fitness apps to collect data during workouts and sync it to Apple's Health app on the iPhone.

The feature is based on the Apple Watch's heart rate sensing technology. If someone is wearing both Powerbeats Pro 2 and an Apple Watch, Apple says apps default to using Apple Watch heart rate data, and that will likely be the case for the new AirPods Pro too.

Beyond heart rate monitoring, it is likely that the next AirPods Pro will feature improved sound quality, increased active noise cancellation, design changes, and more.

The current AirPods Pro 2 launched in September 2022, and they were updated with a USB-C charging case and a few other tweaks in September 2023.

Related Roundup: AirPods Pro
Related Forum: AirPods

This article, "AirPods Pro 3 Expected to Launch This Year With Key New Feature" first appeared on MacRumors.com

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FreshRSS 1.27.0

18 August 2025 at 18:03

A few highlights ✨:

  • Implement support for HTTP 429 Too Many Requests and 503 Service Unavailable, obey Retry-After
  • Add sort by category title, or by feed title
  • Add search operator c: for categories like c:23,34 or !c:45,56
  • Custom feed favicons
  • Several security improvements, such as:
    • Implement reauthentication (sudo mode)
    • Add Content-Security-Policy: frame-ancestors
    • Ensure CSP everywhere
    • Fix access rights when creating a new user
  • Several bug fixes, such as:
    • Fix redirections when scraping from HTML
    • Fix feed redirection when coming from WebSub
    • Fix support for XML feeds with HTML entities, or encoded in UTF-16LE
  • Docker alternative image updated to Alpine 3.22 with PHP 8.4 (PHP 8.4 for default Debian image coming soon)
  • Start supporting PHP 8.5+
  • And much more…

This release has been made by @Alkarex, @Inverle, @the7thNightmare and newcomers @Deioces120, @Fraetor, @Tarow, @dotsam, @hilariousperson, @pR0Ps, @triatic, @tryallthethings

Full changelog:

  • Features
    • Implement support for HTTP 429 Too Many Requests and 503 Service Unavailable, obey Retry-After #7760
    • Add sort by category title, or by feed title #7702
    • Add search operator c: for categories like c:23,34 or !c:45,56 #7696
    • Custom feed favicons #7646, #7704, #7717,
      #7792
    • Rework fetch favicons for fewer HTTP requests #7767
    • Add more unicity criteria based on title and/or content #7789
    • Automatically restore user configuration from backup #7682
    • API add support for states in s parameter of streamId #7695
    • Improve sharing via Print #7728
    • Redirect to the login page from bookmarklet instead of 403 #7782
    • Clean local cache more often, when refreshing feeds #7827
  • Security
    • Implement reauthentication (sudo mode) #7753
    • Add Content-Security-Policy: frame-ancestors #7677
    • Ensure CSP everywhere #7810
    • Show warning when unsafe CSP policy is in use #7804
    • Fix access rights when creating a new user #7783
    • Improve security of form for user details #7771, #7786
    • Disallow setting non-existent theme #7722
    • Regenerate cookie ID after logging out #7762
    • Require current password when setting new password #7763
    • Add missing access checks for feed-related actions #7768
    • Strip more unsafe attributes such as referrerpolicy, ping #7770
    • Remove unneeded execution permissions #7802
  • Bug fixing
    • Fix redirections when scraping from HTML #7654, #7741
    • Fix multiple authentication HTTP headers #7703
    • Fix HTML queries with a single feed #7730
    • WebSub: only perform a redirection when coming from WebSub #7738
    • Include enclosures in entries’ hash #7719
      • Negative side-effect: users of the option to automatically mark updated articles as unread will once have some articles with enclosures re-appear as unread
    • Fix cancellation of slider exit UI #7705
    • Honor disable update on update page #7733
    • Fix no registration limit setting #7751
    • Fix XML encoding of sharing functions #7822
  • SimplePie
  • Deployment
    • Docker default image (Debian 12 Bookworm) updated to PHP 8.2.29 #7805
    • Docker alternative image updated to Alpine 3.22 with PHP 8.4.11 and Apache 2.4.65 #7740, #7740,
      #7803
    • Start supporting PHP 8.5+ #7787, #7826
      • Docker Alpine dev image :newest updated to PHP 8.5-alpha and Apache 2.4.65 #7773
    • Docker: interpolate FRESHRSS_INSTALL and FRESHRSS_USER variables #7725
    • Docker: Reduce how much data needs to be chown/chmod’ed on container startup #7793
    • Test for database PDO typing support during install (relevant for MySQL / MariaDB with obsolete driver) #7651
  • Extensions
    • Add API endpoint for extensions #7576
    • Expose the reading modes for extensions #7668, #7688
    • New extension hook before_login_btn #7761
  • UI
    • Improve mark as read request showing popup due to onbeforeunload #7554
    • Fix lazy-loading for <video poster="..."> and <image> #7636
    • Avoid styling <code> inside of <pre> #7797
    • Improve confirmation logic with data-auto-leave-validation #7785
    • Update chart.js to 4.5.0 #7752, #7816
    • Various UI and style improvements: #7616, #7811
  • I18n
  • Misc.

7 features for successful programme management with OpenProject

21 August 2025 at 08:46

Programme management in public administration is complex. Multiple projects need to be coordinated, dependencies managed, and the achieved benefits demonstrated transparently. With PM², the project management methodology of the European Commission, there is a clear framework for this. The German Federal Office of Administration has adapted this standard with PMflex specifically for German authorities – practice-oriented and with checklists for programmes, portfolios, and projects.

To keep an overview as a programme manager, you need a central control point – a kind of cockpit that bundles all relevant information. The open source software OpenProject, developed in Europe, provides exactly this support. In this article, we present seven features that specifically support and empower you in programme management.

What does good programme management mean?

Good programme management means steering several interrelated projects so that they jointly deliver the planned benefits. Unlike project management, it is not only about successfully completing a single initiative, but about keeping the overall impact in focus. While portfolio management sets the strategic selection and prioritization, programme management ensures the coordinated operational execution.

For public administrations, this approach is crucial: programme management creates transparency, enables accountability to stakeholders, and ensures that political or organizational objectives are actually achieved.

Programme management in the public sector in Europe

The European Commission has developed PM², a standard that addresses exactly these requirements: phase models, roles, processes, and tools for projects and programmes. The German Federal Office of Administration has adapted this approach with PMflex to the needs of German authorities – with clear templates and practice-oriented checklists.

OpenProject supports you in implementing both approaches. With standardized workflows, transparency across programme structures, and central documentation, it is an ideal tool for managing programmes according to PM² and PMflex.

Tip

Of course, OpenProject supports not only programme management but also project and portfolio management. Projects form the operational level, programmes bundle several projects with a shared benefit, and portfolios provide the strategic orientation. With OpenProject, administrations have one solution that covers all three levels – integrated, transparent, and compliant with PM² and PMflex.

Seven features for successful programme management

1. Define a life cycle: Phases and Phase Gates

In PM² and PMflex, phases and phase gates are central building blocks. Every programme runs through defined stages – from initiation through planning and implementation to closure. At the phase gates, it is checked whether a phase has been successfully completed and whether the next one may start. This governance ensures that decisions are transparent and traceable.

OpenProject helps you apply this logic in practice. Even in the cost-free Community Edition, you can create and monitor phases and phase gates according to PM² specifications. In the Enterprise Edition, you can customize them individually as well as add new phases or phase gates. This way, you stay in control – and always know whether your programme is on track.

Life cycle with phases and phase gates in the administration in OpenProject

2. Keep the overview: Programme dashboards and baseline

For programme managers, a quick overview at the programme level is essential:

  • Monitor the status of all sub-projects (e.g. phase, phase-gate status, traffic light).
  • Detect deviations and bottlenecks early (schedule, budget, quality).
  • Track upcoming milestones and deadlines.
  • Identify risks and issues that need to be escalated.
  • Consolidate key figures for reporting and decision-making.

With OpenProject, you set up an overview page (dashboard) for each programme that displays all relevant information. In addition, you can create, filter, save and share project lists to consolidate the metrics of all sub-programs or sub-projects in one clear table. To dive deeper into work packages, risks, and recent changes, you can use the Baseline feature.

Returning to the cockpit metaphor from the introduction: in OpenProject, this becomes your cockpit, where all information is available at a glance and forms the basis for well-founded decisions at any time.

Overview page in OpenProject

3. Clarify dependencies: Milestones and relations

Programmes consist of many sub-projects with close content-related and time-related interdependencies. To detect delays or conflicts at an early stage, dependencies and common milestones must always be visible.

In OpenProject, you represent a programme as a project with sub-projects. Dependencies are managed through the diverse relations types between work packages:

  • Temporal dependencies such as predecessor / successor.
  • Logical relations such as blocks / blocked by or includes.
  • Parent-child relations to clearly structure complex tasks.
  • Programme-level milestones that apply to multiple sub-projects.

These dependencies can be visualized in different views – for example, in the Gantt chart for timelines, in table views for detailed overviews, or also in parent-child boards (Enterprise add-on) to visualize the hierarchy of work packages.

Gantt chart OpenProject showing dependencies

4. Make impact visible: Outputs, outcomes, and benefits

In PM² and PMflex, a clear distinction is made between three levels:

  • Outputs are the tangible results of a project, e.g. a new IT system.
  • Outcomes are the direct effects when these results are used, e.g. active use of the system.
  • Benefits are the long-term value for the organization, e.g. more efficient processes or reduced costs.

For programme managers, it is crucial to keep this entire chain of impact in view, rather than focusing only on the completion of individual deliverables.

OpenProject supports you by allowing outputs, outcomes, and benefits to be defined as separate work package types. These types can be equipped with status transitions for custom workflows, attributes, and status values, and tailored exactly to the specific steering needs. This creates a transparent structure that makes it clear at any time whether the programme is actually delivering the planned benefits.

5. Detect problems early: Risk and issue management

Good risk management helps you sleep at night. As a programme manager, you need to keep an eye not only on current problems but also on potential risks and issues that may endanger the entire programme.

In OpenProject, risks and issues can be represented just like Outputs or Outcomes as their own work package types – with individual workflows and attributes. This allows you to manage probabilities of occurrence, impacts, and countermeasures systematically and ensures that critical points are not lost in the daily project routine.

Note

The OpenProject team is currently working intensively on an extended risk module that will soon support the PMflex requirements even more consistently and enable more precise control at the programme level. Stay up to date: Risk module development on OpenProject Community

6. Create transparency: Reports and controlling

For programme managers, it is essential to always have reliable information available – for their own control and for mandatory reporting upwards. You need clarity about the status of your programme, and at the same time standardized documentation to reliably inform portfolio managers, agency leaders, or political decision-makers.

OpenProject provides standardized reports and controlling features for this purpose. Status reports, budget overviews, or progress analyses can be consolidated and exported directly as PDFs – ideal for regular communication with stakeholders. In addition, OpenProject takes PMflex templates into account, so your reports comply with established standards and are ready to use without additional editing.

This way, you keep your own overview while at the same time providing transparent, comparable information for control at portfolio and management level.

PDF report for a portfolio and programme overview, created with OpenProject

7. Strengthen collaboration: Meetings based on work packages

What if your team meetings started exactly where the actual work happens? Instead of meticulously gathering information from emails or external Word or Excel documents, in OpenProject you can directly access work packages stored in the programme or sub-project.

This way, you create agendas with the relevant topics in no time, document results directly during the meeting, and generate minutes immediately – in the OpenProject style, with links to the respective risks, milestones, outcomes, and more. Everyone involved stays aligned, and traceability is ensured at all times. OpenProject’s Meetings module is a highlight for many programme managers, and offers significant advantages, especially in public sector programmes with many stakeholders.

Meeting with risks work packages

Conclusion: Successfully implementing programme management with PM² and PMflex

Programme managers in public administrations face the task of steering complex initiatives transparently and traceably. With PM² and PMflex, clear standards are available – and with OpenProject, a tool that consistently supports these standards in practice.

From phase gates to dashboards, risk management, and meetings: OpenProject provides you with an integrated “cockpit” that ensures governance, creates transparency, and strengthens collaboration. This way, you not only guide programmes reliably through the individual phases but also ensure that the planned outcomes and benefits are actually achieved.

Especially in public administration, where traceability and accountability are crucial, OpenProject is the right solution to bring programmes to success according to European standards.

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