That there is no perfect defense. There is no protection. Being alive means being exposed; it's the nature of life to be hazardous—it's the stuff of living.
This is a completely fair requirement for government subsidies.
The US already has multiple world class CPU designers covering x86, ARM and Risc-V. Intel's foundry is the only leading semiconductor foundry based in the US.
How come the consultants haven't moved to Canada if they are so experienced in immigration?
There is also the "brand power" component to Razer (not saying their devices are bad or don't deserve the rating).
...the new company — named “/dev/agents” — will revisit the leaders’ “Android roots.”
The company is working on a cloud-based “next-gen operating system for AI agents” intended “for trusted agents to work with users across all of their devices,”
These guys had enough "edge" to give Carl Pei and his Nothing venture a run for their money.
It remains to be seen if this anything more than a fishing expedition to cash on some VC/investor money.
/dev/agents is shooting for “an Android-like moment for AI.”
At 26.5 lbs this is not your next portable speaker.
That is one truly unique design. Would fit will in a modern-styled living room.
The $4,000 price makes this a true luxury category product. And this is just one 2.1 speaker. I am surprised they don't have a 5.1 SKU with similar design.
At 26.5 lbs this is not your next portable speaker.
From post-Athlon 64 dive into near obscurity to chip market stalwart
Having a captive audience and government mandate creates its own set of benefits and disincentives.
Would be interesting to see how their iGPU performs compared to top iGPUs from 5-7 years ago.
This was just a glib, off-hand remark on my part.
Corporate PR copytext (not only Apple) often includes lyrical polemical poetry about power of markets and so on (like how requiring USB-C charging is an attempt to subvert innovation).
And then you have price competition - arguably a fundamental element of markets.
So in my mind, I imagined the Apple executives speaking to each other in a overly posh Victorian accent:
What is this foul marxist-leninist price competition these smelly plebs are demanding? Since when did they decide they have a right to speak?
Nothing more and nothing less. 😆
To be fair, it is not a £50 product.
Price competitiveness leads to race to the bottom. Outside of the 90s Apple whole brand has been the exact opposite of race to the bottom. Plus making a cheaper “good enough” device makes it much harder to justify also having the more expensive and profitable device.
But isn't that the core of free market thought (the more conceptual variant, not the polemical variant). Thousands of companies fighting for every last minuscule hundredth of a percentage point of margin. Optimal intersection of supply and demand requiring both multiple competing producers and of course hundreds of millions of consumers.
My comment was somewhat glib, I admit. But I do think the framing in the article is interesting.
New FTC (circa Jan 20) will require that you buy a new device each time you want a software update.
You're joking, but it's not unreasonable to assume an oligarch-run regime (nothing to do with US or Trump specifically) is going to leverge its power to get kickbacks and benefits for their own gang and partner gangs.
Huawei was secretive about the chipsets inside the new models, saying only that they are 40% faster. Huawei unveiled the new Mate 70 series earlier today,...
Asus ZenWiFi BQ16 Pro Wi-Fi 7 mesh router review: Quad-Band Wi-Fi 7 Performance Champion
The ZenWiFi BQ16 Pro is the fastest Wi-Fi 7 router we’ve tested
This will realistically drive up the prices of such devices.
Don't get me wrong, I would support such an initiative. If you can't afford the device (with the cost of 7 year security fix support), you should probably not get the device. However, I am thinking more about the political component of implementing such a rule (if it would even be possible in the US).
I love how that Apple executives are portrayed as “detesting” the notion of a price competition.
It makes sense from a margins perspective and from a brand power perspective (people seeing the Apple brand as intro status symbol of sorts), just funny to see alleged capitalists being so repulsed by price competition.
I love how that Apple executives are portrayed as "detesting" the notion of a price competitive.
It makes sense from a margins perspective and from a brand power perspective (people seeing the Apple brand as intro status symbol of sorts), just funny to see alleged capitalists being so repulsed by price competition.
Apple’s executives are strongly against the idea of launching a ‘cheap’ TV stick, but a report says that it is the only way to gain traction
Apple’s executives are strongly against the idea of launching a ‘cheap’ TV stick, but a report says that it is the only way to gain traction
FTC urges smart device makers to disclose software update lifecycles
You need to know in advance when your kit will be bricked or downgraded – it's the law
Quad-fan array sounds like an air-raid siren starting up.
I posted the headline as-is. Updated it with the new headline.
But the main thing is this while story is some bizarre idea that a new device getting nearly 1% of global sales in its first quarter is doing badly?
There was a lot of hype for this and some sketchy work by Qualcomm around benchmarks (initially posted benchmarks that were based on a linux setup with 100% custom cooling, none of the released products came close to this result and it's not really viable to run Linux on Snapdragon X devices even to this day).
- Ars Technica - Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite looks like the Windows world’s answer to Apple Silicon
- The Verge - Qualcomm’s next round of PC chips will fight Apple under the name Snapdragon X
- Tomshardware - Snapdragon X Elite Outperforms Intel, AMD, Apple CPUs (In Vendor Benchmarks)
And the funny thing was the first, rather impressive, Geekbench 6 benchmarks that Qualcomm revealed were for Linux (the results did not represent real world performance).
But the transaction faced numerous financial, regulatory and operational hurdles, including the assumption of Intel’s more than $50 billion in debt. It likely would have drawn a lengthy and arduous antitrust review, including in China, which is a key market for both companies.
Qualcomm would have had to handle Intel’s money-losing semiconductor manufacturing unit, a business where it has no experience.
Sounds like Qualcomm got a little bit ahead of itself during their initial inquiries about acquiring Intel.
AI-capable PCs grow 49%, and take 20% of shipments, but Snapdragon X PCs struggle
Relevant quote regarding Snapdragon X
>“As this was the first full quarter of shipments for Snapdragon X Series PCs, we saw sequential growth of around 180% compared to Q2 2024. However, as a proportion of the total Windows market, the products remain very niche, at less than 1.5% share. The top shipping vendor was Microsoft, which has transitioned most of their Surface line to the platform. Behind them was Dell who has embraced the new platform quite strongly in terms of SKU count, followed by HP, Lenovo, Acer and Asus (all four with similar volumes).”
And there was so much hype about about Qualcomm Snapdragon X. To quote Ars' title "Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite looks like the Windows world’s answer to Apple Silicon".
If anything I think Nvidia's attempt at Windows-on-ARM devices might be more successful, but it's best to never buy into the hype and wait for independent reviews once the products are actually released.
AI-capable PCs grow 49%, and take 20% of shipments, but Snapdragon X PCs struggle
Considering the size and scope of Apple's investment into India (which has strong incentives around local production for market access), Indonesia is unlikely to be satisfied with a mere $100 million investment. India's market is much larger of course, but Indonesia's population of 283 million is not something Apple can ignore in the long term.
M4 MacBook Pro shows Apple is still glued to the idea of unfixable laptops
Mac Mini and iPhone repairability strides have yet to make it to flagship computer
M4 MacBook Pro shows Apple is still glued to the idea of unfixable laptops
Mac Mini and iPhone repairability strides have yet to make it to flagship computer
Indonesia tells Apple $100 million investment isn't enough to lift iPhone 16 sale ban
Wants Cook to look under the couch again and find at least another $15 million
Samsung could ditch Snapdragon and use the Exynos 2500 on the Galaxy Z Flip 7 and the Exynos 2400e on the Galaxy Z Flip FE. Read on for more!
The RP2350 finally gets Wi-Fi!
The RP2350 finally gets Wi-Fi!
I wouldn't be surprised if your 1660 Ti offers better performance for many local use cases than even the top end NPU.
Claim a 100% jailbreak success rate for the trio of robotics LLM systems targeted.
With the introduction of LPCAMM2 memory, it's not possible to remove or install the memory module in laptops easily.