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Sun, Jun 28, 2026, 1:46 AM EDT

Tech

AI Summary

  • AI is poised to drive significant growth in digital payments, with companies like Anthropic launching advanced cybersecurity models and Asian startups developing their own, despite export limitations.
  • Instagram is experimenting with more user control over its algorithmic feed, while tech leaders like Apple's Vision Pro executive are reportedly moving to OpenAI, signaling a shift in talent and strategy.
  • Elon Musk's ambitious orbital data center plans are facing skepticism from industry heavyweights like SoftBank's CEO, even as FTC gives his ventures clearance for acquisitions.
  • The tech industry is witnessing a surge in in-house chip development, with major players like Apple and SpaceX investing heavily, challenging Nvidia's dominance in the market.
  • From Tesla settling FSD lawsuits to the challenges of robotaxi operations and the ongoing debate about digital content ownership, the industry grapples with regulatory scrutiny, operational inefficiencies, and evolving consumer rights.

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The Verge

  • Teenage Engineering adds lo-fi mode, USB audio, and more to its KO II sampler 9 hours ago by Terrence O’Brien
    Entertainment, Gadgets, Music, News, Tech

    Teenage Engineering has already issued multiple substantial updates for its surprisingly capable $329 EP-133 KO II sampler . Its latest is one of the biggest yet. OS 2.5 adds audio over USB, selectable sample rates for lo-fi fun, sample reverse, an arpeggiator, equal-length autochopping, and it extends the maximum length of a sample from 20 seconds to 40 seconds by capturing mono, instead of stereo, audio. Sample reverse is such a simple feature that it's shocking it wasn't implemented earlier. An arpeggiator doesn't always make a ton of sense on a sampler, but the KO II sounds so incredible repitching

  • Margaret Atwood says the problem with AI is ‘garbage in, garbage out’ 12 hours ago by Terrence O’Brien
    AI, Books, Entertainment, News

    Margaret Atwood onstage at Detroit Opera House on January 26, 2026 | Photo: Monica Morgan/Getty Images Maraget Atwood, the storied author of The Handmaid's Tale and The Blind Assassin , was interviewed as part of the Babell Literary and Cultural Festival in Porto, Portugal. As it usually does at these things, the issue of AI came up, and Atwood didn't mince words. According to Deadline's recap, Atwood said she'd used an AI chatbot exactly once, Anthropic's Claude, and came away unimpressed. She was looking for information about the British detective series Father Brown and, well: "Claude gave me the wrong

  • Apple wants permission to buy memory from a blacklisted Chinese supplier 13 hours ago by Terrence O’Brien
    Apple, News, Policy, Politics, Tech

    Apple is looking to alleviate some of the pressure on its supply chain by seeking an exception from the Trump administration to buy RAM chips from CXMT, a company blacklisted by the Pentagon over ties to the People's Liberation Army, according to the Financial Times . The skyrocketing prices of RAM and storage have driven Apple to raise prices on almost all of its products this week, so it makes sense that it would seek alternative sources. Legally, Apple isn't barred from buying chips from CXMT, but doing business with a company tied to the Chinese military would carry serious

  • The Guardian’s Kai Wright refuses to buy a new phone 15 hours ago by Terrence O’Brien
    Interview, Policy, Politics, Report

    That is an objectively dope couch. | Image: Kai Wright Kai Wright is the co-host of Stateside with Kai and Carter over at the Guardian. But Wright has been bringing his unique insights to listeners for years. He's also hosted Notes From America , The United States of Anxiety , and Indivisible . He's a Peabody Award-winning journalist who has profiled powerful men, explored what it means to be American, and chronicled the AIDS epidemic. When he's not diving deep on sex, race, and politics, he's gardening, listening to John Coltrane, and steadfastly refusing to buy a new phone. Wright

  • Indie developers got tired of waiting for a new Star Fox, so they’re making their own 17 hours ago by Geoffrey Bunting
    Entertainment, Gaming, Report

    Nostalgia remains a powerful force. So much so that, in exploring the echoes of a late-'90s childhood spent skimming the water of Corneria and sneering "cocky little freaks!" in time with a monkey encased in a Gundam suit, I'm simultaneously describing playing Star Fox 64 ( Lylat Wars if you're nasty) in 1997 and streaming it through Nintendo Switch Online today. The franchise has been revived through a splashy remake on the Switch 2 , but it's also a series that has not seen an all-new entry since Star Fox Zero on the Wii U. Yet Nintendo's neglect of the


Wired


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