Technology
Jio’s Cloud PC revolution, Adobe Photoshop for iPhone, and Alexa+

“At Jio, we bear the responsibility of launching products that can scale to millions and millions of Indians at giving the best customer experience and at a very affordable rate,” the words of Akash Ambani, Chairman of Reliance Jio Infocomm, during a fireside chat at the Mumbai Tech Week. It is impossible to disagree. An era of affordability ushered by Jio’s 4G network, and then with 5G when they led the way with unlimited data usage bundles. The JioPhone and JioBharat mobile phone attempts as a bridge between feature phones and often more expensive smartphones. Yet, it is clear to me that Jio is now looking at the future too. Perhaps they’re more sure of their hardware game, likely they feel confident of the quality they can deliver. JioAirFiber tries to take broadband connectivity to every potential user who either doesn’t want a wired broadband line, or isn’t residing in the vicinity of a fiber network. JioBook affordable laptops, are a good example of that. As would be the nifty JioTag Air and JioTag Go luggage/object trackers.
The reason I begin our conversation this week with Jio’s widening tech portfolio, is because of something Akash Ambani said. “We have an application that we’ll be shortly launching, which is a cloud PC, which is a complete PC in your cloud that is accessible in each of your homes, but really be device agnostic,” he revealed. Quite what the specifics of this are remains to be seen, but the take could be relevant for many a user. Here’s some perspective — India’s PC market saw 14.4 million units shipped through 2024. Jio, on its part, has more than 450 million subscribers across India — a base they can easily tap. This is not to be confused with JioCloud, an online storage platform sprinkled with some AI features (of course) and DigiLocker access.
- Priced well, this could immediately have a much wider impact on India’s PC landscape than any PC maker has had till now. And that includes attempts at affordability by many a Chromebook (these are laptops running Google’s nimbler Chrome OS), and those underpowered ‘netbooks’ from a few years ago.
- Whether Jio relies on Microsoft or Google for the underlying cloud PC operating system, or uses their own, remains to be seen. They’ve done the latter previously too. Just for context, the JioBook uses JioOS, an Android-based operating system.
The cloud PC promise to have a potential computing experience on any device with a screen, may sound too good to be true to you — but I wouldn’t at all bet against Jio delivering something no other computing device brand has been able to piece together. More than jolting a slumbering PC ecosystem, it’ll immediately be relevant for students, home entertainment and even workplaces. Cost-wise too.
EDIT
After desktop and the web, Adobe’s finally unlocked a proper Photoshop experience for the iPhone. And indeed the iPad. That’s proper competition for the iPhone focused Photomator, LumaFusion, Darkroom and pretty much every platform that brings imaging and design tools to editors. Layering, masking and of course, generative fill flexing its capabilities with Firefly as the underlying AI model.
As of now, a few of the Photoshop for iPhone functionalities are free to use, while others require either an Adobe Creative Cloud plan or a new Photoshop mobile and web plan (that’s onwards of ₹733.96 per month). Remove tool, content-aware generative fill, object select and magic wand are premium features which need a subscription. It is never a bad thing to have cross platform compatibility. Soon enough, you’ll notice how well Photoshop on the iPhone integrates with other Adobe products, including Lightroom.
An Android version of Photoshop arrives later in 2025.
Our extensive coverage of AI in Adobe’s platforms, in a pivotal year…
RELEVANCE

In April, Apple Intelligence adds support for English (India). This AI wrapper for iOS is very much work in progress, and the tech giant understands it too (you may have seen some online media mentions about Gemini too; but that’s for another day). Also in April, users will be able to set from Bangla, Gujarati, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Odia, Punjabi, Tamil, Telugu, or Urdu as the primary iPhone language. HT has seen a first glimpse at iOS working in these languages, and the language implementation is deep — it extends to all Apple apps, including Weather, Health and Settings. We don’t have the exact dates yet, but the iOS 18.4 update as well as the iPadOS 18.4 updates will bring along this linguistic feature set. The timing for this experience was the arrival of the iPhone 16e in India, which went on sale Friday past.
As I sat down for a conversation with Bob Borchers, who is Apple’s vice president of Worldwide Product Marketing, there were quite a few pertinent questions and little time to waste. I asked Borchers if the expansion of Apple Intelligence’s scope of language understanding also requires a change in any approach of training the generative models to factor for regional and linguistic nuances?
Borchers doesn’t believe the basics of AI training change, but there is of course wider training and the need for more care. Being locally relevant, he says. “We want it to respect the traditions and the cultures. We want all of those nuances to be ready. It takes time to do them, and to do them right,” he explains. There’s a lot more in that conversation, including about Apple’s first C1 modem which is sure to worry Qualcomm.
More coverage of the iPhone 16e, and Apple’s broader India plans…
ROADMAP

Many, many years ago, Xiaomi took India’s TV market by storm. It was the year 2018, to be precise. That set off a chain of events which saw a transformation — larger screen sizes at much lower prices than conventional wisdom that preceded it. Every brand had to follow, and the TV market (and neither the consumers) haven’t looked back since. More than the product, I reference this memory from the past, because it has a link to the future. The people behind that evolution, and having left Xiaomi since, are back at it. Tech start-up Circuit House Technologies has unveiled a consumer tech brand Lumio. Home entertainment category is in focus, and TVs shall lead the way.
The people behind include Raghu Reddy and Kailash S who are co-founders, while product focus is led by Sudeep Sahu, Abhishek Kumar and Vaibhav Gupta. The keys to success, they say at least with TVs, include different screen sizes with 4K which you’d expect with an assortment of HDR tech, QLED/OLED/MiniLED displays, Google’s TV software to define the smart TV functionality, and installation as well as service available across the country. The first TVs are expected later this month. I’ll most certainly review them for you.
KNOW
- Mozilla is updating the Terms of Use for Firefox, and this doesn’t seem to the Mozilla of old which seemed to have a different approach to handling user data, than some of the more commercially oriented web browser rivals. “You give Mozilla the rights necessary to operate Firefox. This includes processing your data as we describe in the Firefox Privacy Notice. It also includes a nonexclusive, royalty-free, worldwide license for the purpose of doing as you request with the content you input in Firefox. This does not give Mozilla any ownership in that content,” the wordings now read as this.

- The much-delayed and perhaps somewhat awaited Amazon Alexa+ evolution has finally seen the light of day. Not that you or I will get to use it anytime soon — it begins rolling out in the US over the next few weeks as an early access period. Global availability? I wouldn’t even waste my breath with that question, for now. Anyway, Amazon insists they’ve rebuilt Alexa as more conversational, personalised and with agentic capabilities. It’ll cost $19.99 per month separately, but if you’re an Amazon Prime subscriber in the US, then it is bundled. Quite where it is in the pecking order that also has Google Gemini, Microsoft Copilot, OpenAI’s ChatGPT and xAI’s Grok 3, remains to be seen. Amazon’s advantage would be availability on 600 million devices with Alexa — that’d include smart speakers, smart displays and Fire TV devices they’ve been selling for years.
Read more of our AI coverage…
Technology
Google I/O 2025: Android 16, Material 3 Expressive and what else to expect

Google I/O 2025 is now just under a month away, scheduled for 20 and 21 May 2025. Like the past couple of years, this year’s event is also expected to focus heavily on artificial intelligence features. This should excite many people who tune into the event each year to learn about what Google is working on next. One of the key highlights will be the latest version of Android. New features that users can expect to see on their devices will also be revealed.
All in all, Google I/O 2025 is shaping up to be a big event for tech enthusiasts. Let us walk you through what we expect from the event so far, based on reports.
Also Read: Apple could bring this iPhone 16 AI feature to AirPods and Apple Watch: Report
Android 16
Android 16 is undoubtedly going to be one of the major highlights. What makes it even more interesting is that it’s arriving earlier than usual this time. Android releases, this time around, seem to be moving faster this year compared to what we have seen in the recent past.
With Android 16 in particular, a lot of information has already emerged. The beta versions are already available, but Google is reportedly expected to introduce several new additions at I/O, and that’s definitely something to look forward to.
Material 3 Expressive Design Language
Google is expected to introduce a brand new design language this year at Google I/O 2025, and it could be called Material 3 Expressive. It would be another addition to the Material Design language that was introduced several years ago.The current descriptions for the same are vague at the moment, Android Authority recently reported that it was spotted in the Android Settings app.
Also Read: Instagram Blend explained: How to use this new feature
Android TV And More
Android Authority also reports that Google could be working on Android 16 for Android TV. And if this turns out true, it would mean Google might skip Android 15 altogether for Android TV platform. Alongside this, there could be a new Android XR version, updates on Gemini Nano, and desktop windowing for Android.
MOBILE FINDER: iPhone 16 LATEST Price, Specs And More
Technology
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Technology
WhatsApp’s new ‘Advanced Chat Privacy’ explained: Why is it important?

WhatsApp, in a bid to boost privacy for users, is has launched a new feature called Advanced Chat Privacy. This feature works in both group and personal chats, and allows users to have extra peace of mind, considering how it prevents content from being taken outside of WhatsApp. WhatsApp says the feature can actively block others from exporting chats, and this is where the real benefit lies.
Also Read: Gmail scam: Google says users have 7 days to recover hacked accounts
WhatsApp Advanced Chat Privacy Feature Explained
This feature is designed for times when you want more privacy, such as during a sensitive conversation with someone you’ve just started talking to, or someone who has yet to earn your trust.
“When the setting is on, you can block others from exporting chats, auto-downloading media to their phone, and using messages for AI features,” WhatsApp said in its blog post.
Not being able to take chats outside the chat is certianly going to make many feel secure, especailly more so considering media won’t be auto-downloaded, too.
If you’re wondering about the use cases, WhatsApp says it could be useful in situations such as discussing health challenges in a support group or organising your community around something important to you.
That said, there are a few drawbacks, including the fact that users can still take screenshots of chats, but WhatsApp notes that it is working on adding further protections soon.
Also Read: Instagram Blend explained: How to use this new feature
How To Start Using It
To start using Advanced Chat Privacy in WhatsApp, go to a chat and tap on Advanced Chat Privacy. This will enable the feature for you.
It should be noted that this is part of the latest WhatsApp app update, and WhatsApp has confirmed that it is indeed rolling out for everyone.
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