Saturday, 14 January 2017
Entertainment
Johnny Depp and Amber Heard finalise divorce
The divorce of film star Johnny Depp and actress Amber Heard has been finalised after months of wrangling over the final terms of the break up.
She had accused Depp of domestic abuse - a claim he denies.
According to court documents, she said Depp had been physically abusive to her, culminating in him throwing a mobile phone at her face during a fight in February last year. The divorce comes months after the couple split in May 2016
Divorce settlement - who gets what?
Depp to pay Heard $7m (£5.6m; €6.6m)
Heard to keep dogs Pistol and Boo, and a horse called Arrow
Depp to retain sole possession of real estate assets, including properties in LA, Paris and his private island in the Bahamas
He will also keep more than 40 vehicles and vessels, including vintage cars and motorcycle collection
Heard to drop request for continued restraining order against Depp
Confidentiality provision prevents them from discussing relationship publicly
No spousal support for either actor
Tech Bits
Apple bans app that tracks lost AirPod ear pieces
"Finder for Airpods", an app that helped people track lost AirPod ear pieces has been banned by Apple.
Last week, mobile app developer studio Deucks Pty released the app on App Store.
"The app uses iPhone to track the Bluetooth wireless signal emitted by the two AirPod units to help locate the lost piece, displaying a line showing whether the user was getting closer or farther away based on signal strength," Fortune reported on Tuesday.
Apple launched AirPods along with the iPhone 7 in September as a replacement for conventional earphones that require a headphone jack.
AirPods let you access digital assistant Siri with just a double tap -- allowing you to access Siri to select and control your music, get directions, make and receive calls or perform any other Siri task.
In the past, the company has removed other apps also from the App Store for a wide variety of reasons, ranging from inappropriate content to improper use of the iPhone's hardware.
"Finder for Airpods", an app that helped people track lost AirPod ear pieces has been banned by Apple.
Last week, mobile app developer studio Deucks Pty released the app on App Store.
"The app uses iPhone to track the Bluetooth wireless signal emitted by the two AirPod units to help locate the lost piece, displaying a line showing whether the user was getting closer or farther away based on signal strength," Fortune reported on Tuesday.
Apple launched AirPods along with the iPhone 7 in September as a replacement for conventional earphones that require a headphone jack.
AirPods let you access digital assistant Siri with just a double tap -- allowing you to access Siri to select and control your music, get directions, make and receive calls or perform any other Siri task.
In the past, the company has removed other apps also from the App Store for a wide variety of reasons, ranging from inappropriate content to improper use of the iPhone's hardware.
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