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244 articles
The arrest of a Google employee over more than $1 million in Polymarket profits is not a story about a clever bet, but about a boundary prediction markets still struggle to defend.
A new 7-Zip vulnerability shows why tools few people treat as security perimeter software can become one of the quietest routes into a system.
Amazon’s latest networking claim matters because the future of cloud computing increasingly hinges on a less glamorous problem: how fast data centers can move information between their own machines.
If qubit randomness can be generated and independently verified, cryptography gets something more valuable than a faster chip: a more reliable source of secrets.
Huawei is trying to turn the end of easy chip scaling into an industrial opening, not just a consequence of US restrictions.
Microsoft is preparing a C# change that does not ban low-level unsafe code, but makes it more visible and harder to ignore.
Floppy disks in archives are no longer charming relics of computing history, but fragile magnetic media carrying real data that is moving toward loss.
MFA prompt bombing shows that the second factor is not a wall if the access decision still lands on a tired user.
Intel’s USB4STREAM turns a USB4/Thunderbolt cable into a direct Linux channel for raw packets between two hosts, without relying on the traditional network stack.
Node.js could gain a built-in virtual file system, but the sharper question is how large and how verifiable an AI-assisted contribution to the platform core should be.
Linux 7.1-rc5 is not a spectacular release, but it is a useful signal: AI coding agents are no longer just demo tools, and are beginning to leave a mark in routine, sensitive kernel maintenance.
FreeBSD 15.1-RC1 is a small release candidate with a larger signal: AI tools are no longer only surfacing Linux bugs, but are entering the BSD security workflow too.
AV2 is expected to make its formal debut next week, but for an open video codec the decisive question is not the announcement; it is how quickly it can become real internet video infrastructure.
Quantum jamming sounds like a laboratory trick, but its real weight is that it pushes cryptography toward a deeper question: what can an attacker know if causality itself becomes part of the protocol.
A new high-resolution map estimates the second-century Roman road network at roughly 300,000 kilometers and moves the debate from legend to data.
Inside glass formed by the Trinity test, researchers found a crystal phase that shows how a brief nuclear extreme can produce matter outside normal synthetic chemistry.
Micron's 256 GB DDR5 module is not consumer excess, but an attempt to move the memory wall in AI and HPC servers with more capacity, speed, and lower power per node.
The University of Virginia has demonstrated a laser method that removes a solar panel backsheet without damaging the glass or silicon wafers, at an estimated cost of $0.22 per module.
Muneeb and Sohaib Akhter deleted 96 US government databases within minutes of being fired, using access that had not been revoked in time.
Rivian is rolling out an AI voice assistant for Gen 1 and Gen 2 R1 owners, with vehicle access competitors still limit carefully.
Huazhong University researchers used laser pulses to smooth perovskite films, boosting tandem cell efficiency to 29.8%.
A Fayette County data center used about 30 million gallons of water before the metering problem became visible.
If voice-first AI tools become routine at work, the next major shift will not be software itself but how people behave around each other.
The Vivo X300 Ultra matters less because of one headline spec and more because it tries to fix a problem most flagships now treat as normal: one great camera and two supporting lenses pretending to be equals.
Work on quantum dots shows why moving spin qubits matters for future error-corrected processors.
TSMC’s move toward wind power is not green decoration. It is a response to the real cost of AI demand.
Fortum has started large heat pumps that will recover excess heat from Microsoft's data centers in Finland.
A Wired investigation found thousands of AI-built apps exposing sensitive data on the open web.
Oxford physicists demonstrated quadsqueezing on a single trapped ion and sped up quantum-state manipulation by more than 100 times.
A month-long compromised update channel turns a normal installer into a security event.
Segway has launched the Xaber 300, an electric dirt bike with 21 kW peak power and a top speed of 60 mph.
CopyFail is a Linux exploit that gives an ordinary user root without distro-specific tuning.
The European Commission is targeting Google’s Android advantage because Gemini has system integration rival AI assistants cannot easily copy.
Samsung employees are demanding the removal of bonus pay caps to match the competitive wages offered by SK Hynix.
The Epaminondas came under Iranian fire and was later boarded in the same week that shipowners were warned about fake BTC/USDT clearance demands in Hormuz.
A single compromised VPN may have unlocked China’s most guarded military research, exposing flaws in global cybersecurity defenses.
FBI data reveals crypto thefts now account for **56% of all cybercrime losses**, outpacing every other category combined.
TOPCon solar cells just got a laser-powered tune-up that could let them punch above their weight class—without changing the factory blueprint.
Cloudflare has successfully automated the generation of malware trigger packets from BPF bytecode, significantly reducing analysis time.
APT28’s campaign turns millions of TP-Link routers into silent data harvesters for Russian intelligence.
Storm-1175 reportedly uses zero-day vulnerabilities for rapid ransomware attacks, changing the defender's response window.
Commercial silicon solar modules now deliver nearly triple the specific power of two decades ago, but that figure conceals a precise engineering war against the panel's own construction.
Storm-0558’s $900/month malware kit turns session cookies into skeleton keys for enterprise and crypto accounts—no phishing or MFA prompts required.
Russian state hackers turned 1,000+ residential routers into passive surveillance tools, siphoning passwords and tokens without triggering a single antivirus alert.
Cloudflare’s new 2029 post-quantum deadline cuts at least a year from its original timeline, citing unclassified advances in error-corrected quantum computing.
Jakkaru’s team reverse-engineered AP Systems’ firmware to demonstrate AI-assisted remote shutdowns—no physical access, no user interaction required.
The issue is not today's attack, but the migration clock that starts before hardware matures.
Apple’s $3,499 Vision Pro headset left its retail workforce grappling with frustration and fatigue during its launch.
Custom BIOS patches tricking a Z790 motherboard into recognizing Intel’s Core i9-273PQE as a Raptor Lake chip took one modder just days to develop—yet the CPU itself remains locked behind OEM contracts.
Lab-grown *Tyrannosaurus rex* protein now costs less to produce than it did five years ago—though ‘less’ still means thousands per square inch.
GandCrab’s operators allegedly pocketed $150 million in 18 months before vanishing—now German police say they’ve identified the men behind it and REvil.
Australian scientists claim TOPCon cells are reducing the open-circuit voltage gap with heterojunction cells to under 10 mV.
A memory chip built from tungsten-diselenide and boron nitride just survived 700°C—twice the max temp of industrial-grade DRAM—while performing calculations mid-inferno.
Samsung's decision to hike memory prices by 30% comes amidst softer demand for DDR5 RAM, affecting the tech industry's bottom line.
CXMT, YMTC, and SMIC—three names now locked out of ASML’s $150M deep ultraviolet lithography machines—just became the industry’s biggest bottleneck.
Microsoft’s LinkedIn scans users’ browsers for installed extensions but won’t say what it does with the data—or how long it’s been happening.
Semi-transparent silicon PV greenhouses grew tomatoes 25% heavier while generating 726.8 kWh—outperforming cadmium telluride and shaded controls in a Spanish study.
NotebookCheck’s reviewer compared the HP Dimension with Google Beam to childhood wonder, a rare reaction in an industry jaded by incremental upgrades.
A 17th-century Baroque painting recreated in five days using software designed for children reveals more about modern creativity than any spec sheet.
Tokyo’s metro tunnels now host a silent experiment: modular data centers enduring 100+ decibels of train noise and constant vibration to prove urban resilience.
A 2023 USDA study found 30% of food waste occurs at distribution—now evidence suggests digital systems are accelerating the problem by rejecting perfectly edible stock.
Four tech giants—Google, Meta, Microsoft, and Snapchat—just lost their legal cover to scan Europeans’ private messages for illegal content.
Founders Fund’s $220 million Series D in Halter values the cattle-tech startup at over $1 billion, a rare nine-figure agtech gamble.
Intel’s Core Ultra 270K Plus outperforms AMD’s Ryzen 9700X by up to 20% in AI and rendering tasks, according to early benchmarks.
Via Licensing Administration just turned a $100,000 annual H.264 streaming license into a $4.5 million liability for high-volume platforms.
The refreshed EQS sedan will debut Mercedes’ first steer-by-wire system—and a controversial yoke steering wheel—later this year.
MIT researchers’ radiation-hardened Wi-Fi receiver survived 6.4 million rads—enough to fry conventional electronics in seconds—using a gallium nitride substrate instead of silicon.
Samsung’s Exynos 2600 finally matches Snapdragon’s AI benchmarks in lab tests—but real-world usage reveals why Qualcomm still leads.
Product Hunt’s latest quantum darling skips the press release and drops straight into GitHub, where the real barriers to entry aren’t qubits but credibility.
German engineers just built solar cells without masks or lithography—using laser-guided indium islands on glass to cut two major production steps.
Apple's LGTM framework is designed to improve high-resolution 3D scene rendering with greater efficiency, according to a new study.
GDDRHammer and GeForge exploits let attackers flip CPU memory bits by abusing Nvidia GPUs’ own high-speed GDDR memory controllers.
Flipboard’s new feature stitches together Bluesky threads, Mastodon posts, and YouTube videos into a single publisher-controlled feed—without requiring users to juggle seven different apps.
Security researcher discoveries reveal Duc’s Amazon-hosted server leaked thousands of government IDs—with no password standing between hackers and the data.
Federal evaluators privately called Microsoft’s cloud security docs ‘a pile of shit’—then approved the system anyway in late 2024.
Nvidia's market share in China has dropped significantly, with local suppliers gaining ground.
IBM’s partnership with Arm marks the first time mainframes will run native Arm workloads without emulation layers, slashing latency for cloud-native apps.
A chat app with over a million downloads stores private keys on its servers, making a mockery of encryption.
Android 17 Beta 3 reveals Notification Rules, a feature that could let users silence or highlight alerts from specific apps and contacts with unprecedented precision.
Researchers have achieved a major breakthrough in lithium-metal battery technology, with a new battery boasting an impressive 700 Wh/kg energy density.
A single military tactic has erased $200M+ in logistics tech overnight in the Gulf, forcing drivers to navigate like it's 1999.
The allegations against Delve show why open-source attribution is a business risk, not just developer etiquette.
DarkSword’s leaked exploits, now circulating in criminal markets, forced Apple to break its own rules and patch iPhones as old as the 5s.
Meta’s discovery of Italian spyware disguised as WhatsApp reveals how easily trust can be weaponized against even security-conscious users.
A startup with no commercial track record just claimed to solve the two biggest battery problems—charging speed and lifespan—using sodium and carbon instead of lithium.
TrendForce’s latest forecast pins Q2 2026 DRAM contract prices at **58–63% higher** than Q1, with NAND Flash climbing **70–75%**, both on the heels of a **95% Q1 spike** already baked into budgets.
Russian iPhone users woke up to payment errors this week after carriers silently complied with a Kremlin order to block Apple ID transactions.
Macro tools usually demand memorizing obscure key combos—Slapppy instead lets users trigger actions by tapping out Morse-code-like rhythms on their trackpad.
A team at IIT Bombay used ion beams to slash defects in silicon solar cells, but the real story is whether factories can afford the upgrade.
Cornell’s lowered-first-row solar panel design cuts shelter-zone wind speeds by 86%—outperforming decades-old tree windbreaks without sacrificing airflow for crops.
A single compromised maintainer account turned Axios into a malware distribution vector for North Korean hackers.
The Axios npm package was compromised by hackers, affecting millions of developers worldwide.
Duolingo’s CEO didn’t just critique blockchain—he declared it a ‘complete waste of time’ for any real-world application, including his own 500-million-user platform.
Argentina and Mexico didn’t just place orders—they placed identical 50,000-unit bets on BYD, all routed through Brazil for 2027 delivery.
ZDNet reports the Flipper One will pack Linux into a modular device half the size of a Raspberry Pi.
An official teardown reveals the app pulls executable code from an unverified GitHub account and tracks GPS without clear consent.
While AI teams scramble for NVIDIA H100 allocations, ScaleOps has raised $130 million to solve a quieter crisis: the estimated 40-50% of cloud GPU capacity that sits idle or poorly utilized.
New rules could add £50–100m in annual compliance costs for UK energy providers, per industry estimates.
Amazon’s AWS US East campus now consumes more power than a mid-sized city, forcing Dominion Energy to halt new residential hookups to keep servers running.
Tongwei’s new HBC solar cells ditch front-side metal grids entirely, a move that could cut shading losses by 5%—if factories can stabilize a three-layer tech stack.
Google and Samsung’s ‘tap to share’ code is live in Android 17 and One UI 9, but seamless adoption remains the biggest hurdle.
According to XDA Developers, smart TVs are taking screenshots of everything users watch, and this has significant implications for their privacy.
JonesE’s viral video reveals Star Citizen’s greatest strength—and its fatal flaw—all in one 30-minute clip.
A CNET router reviewer suggests a hold on purchases due to an FCC ban on foreign-made devices.
Seven years and 15,000 V3 Supercharger deployments later, Tesla’s transition to V4 stations marks a deliberate pivot toward higher efficiency and denser energy delivery.
Intel’s cancellation of the Core Ultra 9 290K Plus leaves AMD’s 208MB cache monster without a high-end rival.
Nvidia’s GTC just became the first major tech conference to showcase four competing quantum systems running on the same GPU-backed framework.
Two sanctioned PLA-affiliated universities acquired Nvidia A100-powered servers in 2025–2026 despite US export bans.
Ubuntu and Fedora have already integrated systemd’s new age-verification module, while Tails and Alpine push back.
The European Commission’s 350GB data breach reveals a chasm between terrestrial cybersecurity and the unprotected flank of orbital science.
A widespread internet outage is affecting multiple sites, including Discord, X, and ChatGPT, with over 100,000 users impacted.
A single unsecured Google Cloud bucket exposed five million voice recordings from a Sony- and Paramount-backed English app, turning practice sessions into public data.
Crusoe’s 12GWh order for Form Energy’s iron-air batteries marks the first major test of whether multi-day storage can tame AI’s erratic power needs.
Google’s latest Android beta lets OEMs expose proprietary camera features to third-party apps for the first time.
Australia's National Broadband Network has spent years defending its multi-technology mix approach, but NBN Co's latest fibre trial reveals something the company has rarely advertised: the full-fibre network has massive untapped headroom.
DarkSword, a zero-click iPhone exploit previously restricted to elite hackers, leaked online this week—with no patch available.
Australia isn’t just planning to power itself with solar—it’s eyeing a role as the world’s renewable battery.
New prototype analyzes thousands of molecules simultaneously.
California jury awards $3M to 20-year-old over social media addiction.
Wi-Fi 8’s distributed resource units and multi-AP coordination target interference-heavy environments like factories and hospitals, not home users.
Kentucky produces over 95% of the world's bourbon whiskey.
Vizio TVs now require a Walmart login to access smart features.
For years, the ritual was simple: set a PIN, maybe add a fingerprint, and assume your Android phone was locked down.
University of Kentucky chemists turn bourbon waste into high-performance carbon.
Microsoft and Nvidia's AI partnership cuts nuclear plant construction timelines by decades.
Swansea University’s data shows perovskite cells retain 95% efficiency when made outside cleanrooms, cutting capital costs by up to 80%.
A New Mexico jury just handed Meta a $375 million reality check.
Smart meters pose a 'massive' cybersecurity risk to millions of homes.
The FCC just drew a hard line on network security, and it runs straight through your home router.
Porous carbon electrodes slash supercapacitor self-discharge rates, transforming a niche backup component into a viable battery alternative for EVs.
SK hynix’s $8 billion ASML order is the largest in semiconductor history, targeting 30 EUV machines for HBM and advanced DRAM by 2026.
Google is announcing a new version of Android Automotive that goes beyond infotainment use cases to control more of the car.
FCC bans all foreign-made Wi-Fi routers, impacting brands like TP-Link and ASUS.
Imagine waking up to a car that won’t start—not because of a dead battery or a mechanical failure, but because a hacker thousands of miles away disrupted a calibration system you didn’t even know existed.
German researchers say they can store solar energy for days and release it later as hydrogen, but industry will judge the idea by cost per useful cycle.
China’s first commercial order for perovskite-silicon tandem solar modules isn’t just a milestone—it’s a stress test.
Satellite ground stations—from Starlink’s global terminals to university CubeSat labs—now face an FCC import ban on the foreign-made routers they depend on for mission-critical data links.
Chinese researchers' energy tower heat pumps outperform gas boilers on efficiency and cost.
The UK government just turned new homes in England into mini power plants.
Neuralink’s first public gaming demo proves brain implants can handle complex inputs—but reliability remains untested.
Google’s disclosure just became a ticking clock for millions of iPhone users after the DarkSword exploit hit GitHub.
The Federal Communications Commission’s abrupt ban on foreign-made Wi-Fi routers landed like a controlled detonation in the tech industry this week.
Leaving 10% of SSD space empty now throttles performance by 15% in sustained workloads.
The FBI’s warning about Russian hackers targeting Signal users marks the first major breach of the encrypted app’s reputation for invulnerability.
AMD’s Helios platform and MI500 GPUs aim to unseat NVIDIA’s AI dominance by 2027, but the battle hinges on software, not just silicon.
Ghana's 200 MW battery storage plan may boost renewables, but deployment is key.
Intel has finally found AMD's weak spot: the assumption that performance justifies premium pricing.
Everest AI claims its new IPMI board is the world's fastest—but will server admins trade reliability for speed?
Instagram’s encryption retreat turns DM privacy into a paid luxury—leaving activists, journalists, and dissenters scrambling for flawed VPN workarounds.
Seoul researchers turn body heat into wearable power—battery-free tech thins down to paper size, no charging needed.
Meta’s Ray-Ban smart glasses videos of private moments reviewed by workers—trust in wearables just hit a new low.
The US Departments of Justice and Defense just pulled the plug on one of the largest botnet operations ever discovered.
Stellantis becomes the first major automaker to accept Tesla’s long-standing offer to access its Supercharger network.
The indictment tied to Super Micro alleges top-tier Nvidia GPUs were rerouted toward China through dummy servers and hardware identity manipulation.
Qualys’ discovery of critical AppArmor flaws forces a reckoning for Linux’s most widely used distributions—and their users.
Phison’s 50% NAND flash price spike threatens SSDs, AI servers, and PCs—with no relief in sight.
EV owners face $250 fees while gas cars pay $70—turns out roads aren’t the real budget sinkhole.
EPFL and CSEM researchers cracked 30.02% efficiency by tweaking perovskite crystal growth and adding light-trapping nanoparticles—no vaporware, just .
Python 3.15's experimental JIT compiler is already outperforming its targets, delivering 11–12% speedups on macOS AArch64 a full year ahead of schedule and 5–6% on x86_64 Linux several months early.
DarkSword does not need a suspicious app or an obvious scam: according to available reports, the risk starts on vulnerable iOS 18 releases from 18.4 through 18.6.2.
At 08:05 on March 10, 2026, The Baltic Whale began its first commercial rotation across the 18.5-kilometer Fehmarn Belt strait between Germany and Denmark, moving battery-electric freight ferry operations from pilot phase into scheduled service.
German photovoltaic systems degrade at just 0.52–0.61% annually—roughly half previous estimates—according to a 16-year study analyzing 1.25 million installations.
Eclypsium researchers have disclosed nine vulnerabilities in IP KVM devices from four manufacturers that let attackers gain root access and execute malicious code at the firmware level.
H&M is backing Rubi Labs, a startup converting industrial CO₂ into cellulose powder chemically identical to lyocell and viscose feedstock — a potential pivot for textile production without agricultural land use.
Rubin Ultra is not just a larger GPU package; it signals that AI infrastructure is increasingly judged by memory, interconnect and whole-rack power design.
DAS Solar’s latest TOPCon cells hit 25.5% efficiency after cracking the code on passivating pinholes—no new materials, just a process tweak.
A ternary RISC CPU just proved 3-state logic works—so why is the world still stuck on 1s and 0s?
Another expiration deadline is looming over the Windows ecosystem, and this one hits closer to home than most.
Samsung’s Galaxy Connect app just turned C: drives into ghost folders—permanently revoking access—and Microsoft yanked it from the Store.
Samsung’s 12GB RAM deal for foldable iPhone spikes prices 133%—AI’s memory greed just squeezed Apple’s supply chain.
Hua Hong Group, China’s second-largest chipmaker, is readying 7nm production in Shanghai with direct support from Huawei.
Apple’s MacBook Neo tears up its glued-shut repairability playbook—modular ports, glue-free battery—sending rivals scrambling to catch up.
CIEMAT’s new solar simulator hits 0.4% precision in 500ms pulses—can labs afford the upgrade?
Swift Solar’s \$XM Meyer Burger HJT buy aims to revive US-made high-efficiency solar cells—bypassing global polysilicon bottlenecks.
Fonts are Turing-complete code engines—LaTeX proves it, and Unicode’s 143k chars just made the attack surface explode.
MIT researchers swap platinum for aluminum in catalysts, cutting costs by up to 90%—a game-changer for green tech.
A single Unicode character—rendered as invisible whitespace—has compromised 151 GitHub repositories, slipping past every major code editor and terminal.
Europol and the DoJ just dismantled a proxy network older than the iPhone, built from 360,000 hijacked routers still running decade-old firmware.
Meta’s AI training clusters already spend 40% of their budget moving data between GPUs—now they’re betting optical cables can cut that waste.
The Strait of Hormuz is exposing how much the AI economy still depends on tankers, industrial gases, metals and power plants, not just models and GPUs.
ByteDance reportedly plans to use a Malaysia-based cluster with about 500 Nvidia Blackwell systems, turning US export controls into a question of compute access rather than chip shipments alone.
Alcatel Submarine Networks has declared force majeure on work tied to the Pearls section of Meta’s 2Africa cable because, according to Tom’s Hardware, it can no longer safely operate in the Persian Gulf.
A reported method uses ultrashort flashes of light for logic operations and points toward 10,000 GHz operation, far beyond today’s processor clocks.
MediaTek’s budget chipsets—powering brands like Xiaomi, Oppo, and Realme—now host a hardware vulnerability with no immediate fix.
A Qualcomm Generic Boot Loader vulnerability shows how thin the line is between owner control of a phone and the security model vendors are trying to lock down.
PowerRange targets a problem the energy sector has kept too long in slide decks: how to rehearse a cyberattack on the grid without endangering real generation and distribution.
Antimony is not the headline trick in this solar story; it is a candidate for reducing variation inside the silicon wafers that carry the economics of a cell.
Anthropic’s free-claude-memory-import lets users defect from rivals—turning a feature into a Trojan horse for user poaching.
Quantum chips finally model a twisted Möbius molecule—proving they can crack chemistry’s toughest simulations.
CATL’s new solid-state patent is not a slide-deck promise, but a look at the chemistry the world’s largest EV battery maker wants to carry from lab work into production.
A VPN app can show one country while the real server and network path sit in a very different physical and legal environment.
Google Home’s Gemini update finally tames voice chaos—multi-step commands now work without a three-act negotiation.
MWC 2026’s “next-gen” phones debut as global sales stall and AI boosts die on the vine.
The NRC has approved TerraPower’s Natrium project, but approval is only the first hurdle.
Apple produced 55 million iPhones in India in 2025, about a quarter of new units, according to a report cited by GSMArena.
8th Wall is now free and open source, but the shutdown of hosted services means XR teams are getting code, not a finished operating layer.
SK hynix’s LPDDR6 is not just another flagship spec label, but a memory answer to on-device AI workloads that keep demanding more bandwidth.
Gemini API leak racked up an $82K bill in 48 hours—exposing how API economies prioritize access over accountability.
OpenAI’s Windows Codex lets devs deploy multi-agent AI coding tasks natively—finally bridging the gap between demos and daily workflows.
Multiverse Computing claims it cut OpenAI model memory needs in half—saving costs, but who’s really gaining?
Ray-Ban Meta glasses are now being tested not just as a gadget, but as a privacy promise that has to survive legal scrutiny.
Google slashes Play Store fees to 20%—a retreat under antitrust pressure or just a bandage fix?
UC Berkeley researchers have embedded single-atom-thin thermometers in processors, slashing response time from microseconds to 100 nanoseconds.
BYD’s next-gen Blade Battery reportedly charges in under 15 minutes, a feat Tesla’s latest models still can’t match.
PureLiFi's 10Gbps system falters in shadows, highlighting LiFi's line-of-sight limitations.
BYD didn’t just unveil a faster charger—it exposed how poorly the industry’s current infrastructure matches real driver needs.
Cisco’s two CVSS 10.0 firewall flaws—no auth, full remote takeover—force a rare enterprise trust reset in March 2026.
Cloudflare's QUIC upgrade yields 2x throughput boost, slashing latency for remote workers.
Leaked specs for Walmart’s next Onn 4K Pro box reveal a 6nm chip—an efficiency leap rare in sub-$50 streamers, per Android Authority’s sources.
A 2025 MIT study outperform 60% of human writers—yet the same systems still miss sarcasm in a partner’s *“sure, we’ll hit the deadline”* as they push back their chair.
Dario Amodei, Anthropic's CEO, has resumed talks with the Defense Department, according to reports from Financial Times and Bloomberg.
MSI’s MAG X870 motherboard—typically a $220 part—now ships with AMD’s gaming-dominant Ryzen 7 9850X3D and 32GB of DDR5-6000 RAM for $999 total, undercutting DIY builds by 16%.
Apple’s 24GB M4 MacBook Air now costs less than a maxed-out iPad Pro—$1,299 at Amazon, a price that undercuts Apple’s own retail channels by 19%.
Hisense’s new U7SG lineup crams a 330Hz gaming mode into TVs larger than most apartment walls, a move that exposes the gap between marketing numbers and real-world hardware limits.
MediaTek’s Dimensity 9500s—previously reserved for $1,000+ flagships—will now power Poco’s sub-$500 X8 Pro Max, a move that rewrites the mid-range rulebook.
The nubia Neo 5 GT features a built-in cooling fan, a feature typically found in more expensive gaming phones.
The Infinix Note 60 Ultra packs a 7,000mAh battery and two-way satellite calling—features even flagship brands haven’t combined yet.
Micron’s first 256GB LPDDR5X samples arrive as NVIDIA’s GB200 and AMD’s Turin push RAM needs higher.
XDA Developers reports that Wi-Fi 7 routers are now available for purchase, but with significant caveats.
Apple’s Studio Display XDR ships with a silent asterisk: its 120Hz mode works only on Macs with M2, M3, or top-tier M1 chips.
ANBERNIC’s teaser confirms the RG VITA Pro packs a under its dual-OS hood—no vaporware, just a direct shot at Valve’s blind spots.
Most 2023–2024 smart TVs default to \"Enhanced Format\" or \"HDMI Ultra Deep Color,\" capping PS5 and Apple TV 4K HDR at 60Hz instead of 120Hz.
Early adopters report 30–40% faster renders, but most laptops still lack OCuLink ports.
Apple's 3-day launch event reveals iPhone 17e and M4 iPad Air, with more to come.
Google’s March 2026 updates add no flashy features, just deeper integration across six device categories—phoning home to Mountain View.
OpenAI’s board now includes a former NSA director—yet the company still lacks a public framework for how its tech intersects with intelligence agencies.
Paramount CEO David Ellison confirmed the merger is contingent on closing the Warner Bros. Discovery deal, with no timeline announced.
1,100 ships stranded in the Middle East as GPS jamming surges.