Ferrari today unveiled the Luce , its first fully electric car, designed with help from Apple's former design chief Jony Ive. "Designed with Sir Jony Ive and Marc Newson at the creative collective LoveFrom, a singular design language unites the exterior, interior, and interface with clarity and refined simplicity throughout," said Ferrari. The exterior of the car has a "smooth, continuous, and uninterrupted" design, with a "shell-like form" and "floating front and rear aerodynamic wings." The interior has "precision-engineered mechanical buttons, dials, toggles, and switches" combined with "multifunctional digital displays." The three-spoke steering wheel is machined from 100% recycled aluminum. The four-door, five-seat Luce is powered by four electric motors providing up to 1,035 horsepower, and it is equipped with a high‑capacity 122 kWh battery. Ferrari says the car can accelerate from 0-100 km/h (0-62 mph) in just 2.5 seconds. A dedicated app offers climate controls and charging settings, and it displays the car's status. Luce pricing starts at €550,000 ($640,000) in Europe, with production set to begin in late 2026. The car will launch in the U.S. in the second quarter of 2027. Apple was rumored to be working on its own electric vehicle for more than a decade, but the project was ultimately canceled in 2024 . Tags: Ferrari , Jony Ive , LoveFrom This article, " Ferrari Reveals $640,000 EV Co-Designed by Jony Ive " first appeared on MacRumors.com Discuss this article in our forums
After a few years of rumors about the feature, Apple added live translated captions to FaceTime in iOS 26, allowing one-on-one calls to display real-time subtitles spanning languages. Here's where to find live translation in FaceTime, and how it came to be. FaceTime Live translation in FaceTime is a big new feature, but many users don't even know it's there. That's because Apple doesn't make it clear or easy to find as a translation option. Plus, the translation feature isn't found under Apple Intelligence settings or FaceTime menus where you might expect it. Instead, it's tucked away inside Live Captions, an accessibility feature that's been around for years. Consequently even people who use the accessibility features may not have had reason to spot this new addition. But it's worth knowing about, because it is a boon in so many different situations, and while there are still limitations, Apple has implemented it well. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums