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How to see your history of cities and countries visited on Google Maps


We are going to explain to you how to see your history of visited cities in Google Maps, so that you can have a quick look at the summary form. It is an option integrated into Google Maps that travel-loving users will surely like, since it will allow them to see all their adventures at a glance and be able to remember them.

First we are going to get into the subject by quickly telling you how to make these queries, and being able to see a summary of your cities and countries visited. Then, in the event that they are not registering correctly we will tell you how to activate your location history so that your trips are recorded, since if you have tried to maximize your privacy on Android or iOS, deactivating these records is usually one of the first steps to take.

See your history of cities and countries visited

The first thing you have to do is enter Google Maps. Now, after changing the new interface of the application, you must click on your profile picture located in the upper right, just to the right of the upper search bar.

When you click on your profile photo, you will go directly to the application’s options and settings menu. In this menu, click on the option Your chronology that will appear in fourth place, and that has the icon of several interlaced points in the shape of a lightning bolt.

The timeline will take you directly to the list of places Maps has recorded that you have been in the last day. Now, within the chronology, click on the Cities tab that you will see at the top, and you will see all the cities in which Google Maps has registered you.

You can also click on the World tab to see a summary of the countries where Google Maps has detected that you are. Remember, that to be able to register everything correctly it is necessary that you have the location history activated, and also that the application has permission to access your location.

Also, having the location history activated, Google will send you emails with weekly and annual summaries with the countries, cities and places you have visited according to the Google Maps log. This will be done automatically just by having the location history active.

How to check that Maps records where you are going

For Google Maps to correctly record your visits, you will have to sacrifice privacy. The first thing to do is make sure you have the location history active. To do this, enter Google Maps, and click on your profile picture located at the top right, just to the right of the top search bar.

When you click on your profile photo, you will go directly to the application’s options and settings menu. In this menu, click on the option Your chronology that will appear in fourth place, and that has the icon of several interlaced points in the shape of a lightning bolt.

The timeline will take you directly to the list of places Maps has recorded that you have been in the last day. Now, within the chronology, click on the icon with the three dots at the top right, and on the drop-down menu click on the Settings and privacy option that will appear to you.

In the settings, scroll down to the Location Settings section. In her you should check the status of the options Location and Location history. Both have to be activated in order to have Google Maps automatically record your journeys. In the case of the location, you would go to the application permissions on your mobile, where you can make the location be activated always or only when you open the app.

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YouTube Premium increases in price in several countries, although Spain is saved for the moment


If the trend is to raise the price of subscription platforms, Google does not want to be left behind. Disney+ is more expensive from today, Netflix no longer has a basic plan and we are still waiting for the arrival of Max in Spain with the, surely, consequent price increase.

However, it is not the only thing that is increasing, since in July Google announced a price increase for YouTube Premium. It was only produced in the United States, but we already mentioned that we had to keep an eye on the movement and, now, YouTube Premium rises again in countries in Europe, Asia and South America.

Spain, for the moment, is free from the YouTube Premium price increase

A few weeks ago we learned about the disappearance of the YouTube Lite account, so the cheapest modality is no longer available and we can only access Individual for 11.99 euros per month, the family for 17.99 euros or the student rate.

It did not imply a price increase, but this movement, together with the one announced a few hours ago, makes us suspect that we will soon have a more expensive subscription in our country.

And, as we read in SamaGame, starting this November 1, the monthly subscription in Argentina, Australia, Austria, Chile, Germany, Poland and Turkey It is more expensive in both the individual plan, the family plan and the student plan.

At the moment, Spain is not on the listbut if we already look with suspicion at the rise in Premium in the United States, now even more so, since it is much closer to us.

According to YouTube, The increase will allow us to continue improving the service, referring to both Premium features and the platform’s support for creators and artists. Now, we just have to wait for the announcement of a price increase for Spain, since it is a possibility that is closer than ever.

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The iPhone 15 costs almost the same in all countries. But in Spain it is three times more expensive than in the US


This year Apple has surprised us with the prices of the iPhone 15: all of them are cheaper than their predecessors. That does not mean that we are faced with a smartphone that is still expensive at the same time. from 959 euros in Spain.

Precisely that is a particularly interesting point, because in reality how cheap or expensive the iPhone is for those who buy it depends not only on the price, but on what that price represents in each person’s economy. And that is where a unique ranking appears: where is an iPhone 15 most expensive or cheapest?

Well, logically, it is cheaper for those who earn more money, and more expensive for those who earn less. At CompareDial they wanted to carry out a study that precisely tries to reflect how expensive or cheap the iPhone 15 is in different countries around the world.

In their list they have analyzed 85 countries, and in each of them the fundamental factor that reflects how cheap or expensive the iPhone is for its citizens is the average annual salary in these countries. The countries with the best average salaries on average enjoy a fundamental advantage over those with the lowest salaries, and that gives an idea of ​​how expensive the iPhone 15 may seem to those who buy it depending on the country where they live.

Source: CompareDial

That table shows a curious “iPhone 15 index” on the right side in percentage form. That percentage represents the percentage of annual salary What the iPhone 15 costs for each citizen of each country, based on the average annual salary in that country.

The data comes from Our World in Data, World DataBank and data published by each country. On the comparison website you can click on any country to display the specific statistics for that country, and that allows us to quickly get an idea of ​​how expensive or cheap the iPhone 15 is in each of the economies included in the comparison. study.

According to these data, it is easy to see how someone who works in Spain has to spend 4.83% of your annual salary to buy the iPhone 15 in its base model with 128 GB capacity. That annual salary in Spain has a median—remember, different from the average—$21,308.85 according to the study data.

The cost of that iPhone according to the data from this study is $1,029.66. It is a conversion quite close to the 959 euros that it officially costs here, which at the current euro-dollar exchange rate is equivalent to 1,024.58 dollars.

In the United States, for example, that index is 1.69%: Someone who works there has to spend on average that percentage of their annual salary—the median of which is $50,371.33—to be able to buy an iPhone. There, by the way, the cost in dollars is also significantly lower, since with taxes included – although they vary by state – they indicate that the base iPhone 15 costs $849.73.

What does that mean? That someone who works with that reference salary in the United States earns a significantly higher figure according to that median and therefore for him the iPhone 15 is “cheaper.” In fact, it is if one also looks at the price difference once taxes and the euro-dollar exchange rate have been applied, but that median income reveals that The iPhone is more or less three times more expensive in Spain than in the United States according to that index.

There are, of course, many more possible comparisons: the iPhone 15 is only cheaper in Luxembourg and Switzerland than in the US, while the cost is absolutely exorbitant for a large number of countries in which this index is greater than 20% of the annual salary.

In Mexico (median salary, $5,922.89) the rate is 19.24%: a worker there spends almost a fifth of his annual salary on an iPhone. In Argentina the situation is even more terrible. Although the median salary is somewhat higher, 6,793.32, the price of the iPhone 15 is the highest in the world: equivalent to $2,048.27, something motivated by high inflation and restrictions on imports. That makes the iPhone rate there 30.15%: the cost of that mobile phone is almost a third of the annual salary in the country.

This data also includes countries like China (rate of 11.58%) for whose citizens the iPhone 15 “costs” more than double what it costs us in Spain. These figures seem to be misleading, because in 2022 Apple became the second in mobile phone sales in the Asian giant, according to CounterPoint Research.

India, the most populous country in the world and Apple’s great commercial objective for the future, is another contradictory example of the situation of their mobile phones: there the rate is 38.60%, so theoretically a 128 GB iPhone 15 costs Indian citizens almost 2/5 of their annual salary. Even so, quarterly sales in the last quarter of 2022 were two million units according to CMR, which seems to reflect the great economic inequality of the country, which has more than 1.4 billion inhabitants.