The thinnest iPhone is also now shrinking in price and you can get it at a historic low

A few months ago, Apple launched the iPhone Airwhose hallmark is being Apple’s thinnest mobile phone to date. Its recommended price is 1,219 euros but, now, on Amazon, it has reached its all-time low price: 899 euros. This makes it a perfect opportunity to get one of the latest releases from the bitten apple brand. If Amazon sells out, MediaMarkt you have it at the same price. Apple iPhone Air 256 GB: The Thinnest iPhone Ever Created The price could vary. We earn commission from these links An iPhone that fits in any pocket In September 2025, Apple presented this new iPhone Airalong with the new family of iPhone 17. Its technical specifications are good, but if there is something that has become its hallmark, it is its thickness of only 0.56 cmthus becoming the company’s thinnest smartphone. The chip that acts as a brain is A19 Prowhich is the same one that mounts the iPhone 17 Pro Max and offers extraordinary power. In addition, the internal storage it comes with is 256 GB, more than enough for most users. Even if you think that because it is an ultra-thin mobile, the battery it has will not offer you good autonomy, the company assures that it reaches 27 hours of video playback. On the other hand, its photographic section also deserves mention, with a 48MP Fusion camera and an 18 MP Center Stage front. ⚡ IN SUMMARY: offer for the iphone air today ✅ THE BEST Its thickness: It is only 5.6 mm and it is also a very light mobile (165 grams), so the feeling when holding it is very different from any other current phone, since it seems like you are holding a sheet of glass and titanium. 6.5-inch ProMotion display: The screen is not one of the sections in which Apple has skimped. It is OLED type, with 120 Hz and reaches up to 3,000 nits of brightness. ❌ THE WORST Single rear camera: It is, perhaps, the most controversial point. Due to lack of physical space, it only has a 48 MP lens. Although it offers good results, you lose the wide angle and optical zoom of the Pro models. Mono Sound: There’s also no room for a powerful stereo speaker system. The sound comes mainly through the earpiece and, although it is clear, it can sound more “noisy” and with less bass than an iPhone 17 Pro. 💡 BUY IT IF… You are a design enthusiast and hate heavy phones that bulge in your pocket. ⛔ DON’T BUY IT IF… You are a mobile photographer, you play a lot of demanding titles or you need the battery to last two days. Some accessories that may interest you for this mobile Apple AirPods 4, Wireless headphones The price could vary. We earn commission from these links Otterbox Commuter Series MagSafe Case for iPhone Air The price could vary. We earn commission from these links Some of the links in this article are affiliated and may provide a benefit to Xataka. In case of non-availability, offers may vary. Images | Jose García (Xataka) and Apple In Xataka | Best iPhones. Which one to buy and recommended models based on budget, tastes and quality-price In Xataka | iPhone 17 vs iPhone 17 Pro vs iPhone Air. Which Apple mobile to choose based on your tastes and needs

the entrance to adulthood is shrinking

In Japan, January starts with its own festival, the Seijin no Hieither ‘Coming of Age Day’a day during which the country congratulates young people who have made the leap from children to adults. The problem is that this celebration is less and less celebrated. And not because Japan doesn’t love its new generations. On the contrary. If he Seijin no Hi loses steam is basically because the population that leaves adolescence and enters adulthood is ‘shrinking’, which means a bucket of cold water (one more) for a nation in crisis. Old holidays, new worries. When demography sounds like tragedy. To Japan it’s not going well in demographic terms. That is something known and required. While waiting for the final balance of 2025, the first data that the country manages show that it has not managed to correct the birth rate crisis in which it has been immersed for years: during the first half of the year the Government registered 339,280 births3.1% less than in the same period in 2024. And during the second half the picture was not much better. The initial projections of Asashi Shimbuncarried out with data from December 23, suggest that Japan said goodbye to 2025 with 667,542 newborns, the lowest figure since at least 1899, the year in which the historical series begins. Not only that. The data is below what the authorities expected. When the Population Research Institute did the math in 2023, it estimated that in 2025 there would be about 749,000 babies, 681,000 in the worst case scenario. An increasingly less festive party. With that background it is much better understood that Seijin no Hi has become a bittersweet tradition. ‘Coming of Age Day’ is a day in which the country honors the part of its population that makes the leap from child to adult. It is celebrated at the beginning of January and its protagonists are young people who have turned (or are about to) turn 20, although in 2022 the Government set the legal age of majority in 18 years. The ceremony is showy because young people usually dress in brightly colored kimonos and traditional costumes. The problem is that in a country with fewer and fewer babies, twenty-somethings are also beginning to be missing for Siejin no Hi. What does the data say? The figures disclosed by The Japan Times They leave little room for doubt. As of January 1, the number of people who had reached the age of majority in the last year amounted to 1.09 million people (560,000 men and 530,000 women), the second lowest figure since records began. In fact, it is only surpassed by that of 2024, when that indicator was at 1.06 million. These are interesting data because (unlike other statistics) they include both the local population and foreigners who have been in the country for at least three months. Are there so few? Yes. At least if we take into account the number of young people who were in a position to celebrate the Siejin no Hi not so long ago. In 1994 there were 2.07 million and in 1970 2.46 million, more than double that of the current year. It is true that the data for 2025 is slightly higher than that for 2024 and the proportion of new adults has increased, but as remember The Japan Times It is a poor consolation in a country where the birth rate continues to plummet, draining the territory. Only between January 2024 and January 2025 did the number of Japanese citizens decrease by more than 900,000 peoplethe biggest drop since the 60s. More than a curiosity. That there are fewer people celebrating the Siejin no Hi It could be a simple curiosity if it weren’t for the fact that it is basically an indicator of a much bigger problem: a birth rate crisis with implications that branch out to other areas of the country. Right now in Japan just 59% of the population is of working age (between 15 and 64 years), significantly below the world average, which according to the OECD is usually around 65%. This percentage threatens to strain Japanese society, politics and economy. Especially because (despite their multiple attempts) the authorities have not yet found the key to increasing the birth rate and there are those who warn that the country is running out of time. 2025 marked the ‘red line’ in which a good part of the population born during the Baby Boom of the late 1940s exceeded 75 years of age, an age from which the employed population plummets and the dependent population rises. Images | Bruce Dailey (Flickr) and Wikipedia In Xataka | While Japan’s population is sinking irremediably, Tokyo is growing. There is an explanation: ikkyoku shūchū

Europe is months away from registering a demographic milestone that has not occurred since the Black Death: it is literally shrinking

In June the latest Eurostat data putting the EU median age at 44.7 years (and growing). The reading then seemed more or less clear. Europe’s demographic collapse was bringing it closer to an invisible threshold that was once unthinkable: the Middle Ages. 50 years old. Half a year later, the data has not improved. Historical contraction. Yes, Europe is heading towards a demographic turning point unprecedented since the black plague from the 14th century. After decades of sustained decline in birth rates, the population of the European Union will reach its maximum next year and it will start after a prolonged fallthe first of its kind in centuries. This is not a temporary adjustment, but rather a deep structural change that threatens to redefine the economy, the welfare state and the social balance of the continent. The alarm does not arise only from the total number of inhabitants, but from the aging speed and the thinning of the working-age population, on which the pension, health and care systems built over generations rest. Political panic and a race. counted the Washington Post that, given this panorama, governments of all ideological stripes have entered into a race against time to see if a combination of economic incentives, public policies and cultural messages can reverse (or at least stop) the decline in birth rates. In the Nordic countries, for decades exhibited as a model of conciliation and well-being, commissions of experts have been created to understand why their systems did not prevent the collapse of fertility. In France, the discourse has acquired a almost military tonewith calls for “demographic rearmament” after a drop of 18% in births in just ten years. In the east and south of the continent, especially in countries governed by nationalist forces, the response has been more direct: money, tax advantages and an explicit exaltation of the traditional family as a pillar of the nation. Incentives and results. Italy offers bonuses to working mothers with two or more children. Poland has increased notably the monthly transfers per child and has expanded tax breaks for large families. On paper, these policies seem compelling, even enviable from countries like the United States, where the cost of raising children is systematically cited as the main brake to birth. However, the European experience shows a repeated pattern: even the most ambitious programs barely succeed in slowing the decline, don’t invest it. The problem is not the lack of public effort, but the magnitude of the phenomenon they face. Hungary, the laboratory. No country better embodies the ambitions and limits of this strategy than Hungary. For more than a decade, the government has deployed a support system of a generosity comparable to that of Scandinavia, allocating around 5% of its GDP to family policies, a higher proportion than the United States dedicates to defense. The range of measures it’s wide: leave for grandparents, subsidized mortgages for young married couples, loans of up to $30,000 that become subsidies if the family has three or more children, and lifetime tax exemptions for women with three children, extended to mothers of two children under 40 starting next year. The message is clear: having children is not only desirable, it is a matter of national survival. Initial successes. They remembered in the post that for a time, the data seemed to prove this bet right. Hungary’s fertility rate went from one of the lowest levels in Europe to figures that suggested a sustained recovery. But the relief was short-lived. In recent years, the trend has been reversed and the country has practically returned to the European average. For some demographers, the program did not generate new births, but rather advanced decisions by those who were already planning to have children. Others point out that, although the impact on fertility is limited, the policies have coincided with an increase in marriage, a reduction in child poverty and greater female labor participation. The key question is whether these collateral benefits justify the enormous public spending. State limits. Beyond the checks and exemptions prosecutors, the decision to have children remains deeply personal and increasingly complex. The rise in housing prices, persistent inflation and job insecurity they weigh as much or more than any incentive. Added to this is a factor that is rarely recognized in the political debate: many of the drivers of the decline in birth rates are social advances that no one wants to reverse. Widespread access to contraception, decline in teen pregnancy, and increased education and career opportunities for women have transformed motherhood and fatherhood in a late choice, carefully calculated and, for many, expendable. Modernity as a trap. The fertility drop has spread so widely that many experts interpret it as a consequence inherent to modernity. Parenthood is delayed until one’s thirties, when one has achieved job and economic stability that comes later and later. Social media idealizes a life focused on the individual, travel, and personal freedom. dating apps multiply apparent options, but they make lasting commitment difficult. And a generation raised in small families has less daily contact with babies and children, fueling overly negative perceptions about the sacrifice involved in raising children. A politicized debate. Not everyone considers the population decline to be a tragedy. Some defend assuming it as a gradual transition towards more sustainable societies, questioning apocalyptic visions who talk about “demographic collapse.” In the long term, even in the most pessimistic scenarios, Europe would still have hundreds of millions of inhabitants. But these global figures hide a much more immediate structural problem: the imbalance between workers and retirees. In just a few decades, the ratio of people of working age to each elderly person will increase. will have drastically reducedputting under strain systems designed for a demographic pyramid that no longer exists. The fragility of immigration. For years, immigration has been presented as Europe’s demographic lifeline. However, this option is becomes more uncertain as fertility falls across almost the entire planet. Even countries that until now were large demographic reserves … Read more

Log In

Forgot password?

Forgot password?

Enter your account data and we will send you a link to reset your password.

Your password reset link appears to be invalid or expired.

Log in

Privacy Policy

Add to Collection

No Collections

Here you'll find all collections you've created before.