Huawei funding US research
We don't want you guys to fall behind
Chinese Telecommunications behemoth Huawei is clandestinely supporting advanced research at American institutions, including Harvard, via a separate foundation headquartered in Washington.
Microsoft orders cops to stop using its AI
Arrested development
Microsoft, the software king of the world, has banned US cops from using generative AI from its Azure OpenAI Service.
Hubble first to make Bluetooth connection in space
Hedy's gear can see the stars now
Hubble Network has become the first company in history to establish a Bluetooth connection directly to a satellite, a critical technology validation that could potentially open the door to connecting millions more devices anywhere in the world.
AMD’s AI results anger Wall Street
Bubble bursts
The Cocaine Nose Jobs of Wall Street are furious after AMD’s results were not as wonderful as they expected.
Google paid Apple $20 billion to go on Safari
Microsoft paid $10 billion to rule AI
Search engine Google paid the fruity cargo cult Apple $20 billion in 2022 as protection money to be the default search engine in Jobs’ Mob’s Safari browser.
Google might be getting cold feet about RISC-V
Too much of a risky business for now
The dark satanic rumour mill has manufactured a hell-on-earth yarn claiming that Google is starting to get cold feet about supporting the RISC-V chip.
Amazon makes a killing from the cloud
We're in the money
Amazon has unfurled its Q1 financial tapestry, revealing sales of $143.3bn (€121.7bn) and an operating income that's nothing to sniff at, $15.3 billion (€13 billion).
Micron ships 128GB DDR5 RDIMM memory
Faster than a speeding bullet
Micron Technology has announced it's shipping its whopping 128GB DDR5 RDIMM memory, which can manage 5,600 MT/s if it is going downhill and has the wind behind it.
Windows 11 use falls
The return of Windows 10
Windows 11 has seen its market share take a tumble, falling below the 26 per cent mark.
Google takes out its core
Wants to be as evil as Apple
Google has bid farewell to 200 of its 'Core' team members. The tech giant, renowned for its 'do no evil' mantra, appears to have adopted a new approach: 'do more cheaper.' With the speed of a game of musical chairs, roles are being relocated to India and Mexico, a move that raises questions about the company's outsourcing strategy.