Results for "AI-native software"
400 results found

DJI Osmo 360 Arrives in a Cloud of FCC Uncertainty
DJI launches the Osmo 360 camera with top-tier 360-degree video, but the FCC's recent drone ruling complicates its value for aerial users.

Data Centers Face Growing Water Scarcity Pressures as Public Opposition Mounts
A Gallup poll shows 7 in 10 Americans oppose data center development due to water concerns. SpaceX and other tech companies now acknowledge water scarcity could limit growth.

Undersea Cables: The Fragile Backbone of Global Internet Connectivity
Nearly all intercontinental internet traffic travels through fragile undersea cables vulnerable to damage from ships anchors natural disasters.

Exam Cheating Goes High-Tech as Smart Glasses and Hidden Earpieces Become Tools for Fraud
UK government warns that cheating using smart devices like glasses and earpieces is rising. Students risk losing all A-level grades. The threat extends beyond British schools.

Utah Data Center Project Halved After Residents Protest Water Use
A massive Utah data center plan was cut 50% after local backlash over water use. Developer Kevin O'Leary admitted regret over lack of transparency.

MANGOS Emerges as New Tech Power Acronym as SpaceX, Anthropic and OpenAI Eye IPOs
SpaceX, Anthropic and OpenAI are preparing public offerings prompting a shift from FAANG to MANGOS.

Facial Recognition Error Leads to False Arrest Lawsuit in Florida
A Florida man is suing police after a facial recognition system wrongly flagged him as a child luring suspect. The lawsuit says officers ignored evidence he was 300 miles away.

Insta360 Challenges DJI With Detachable Display in Pocket Camera Market
Insta360's Luna Ultra introduces a detachable display for vloggers, directly competing with DJI's Osmo Pocket 4. The feature could reshape creator preferences in the compact gimbal camera segment.

Smart Chess Boards Reshape Competitive Play as Two Brands Lead the Market
Chessnut and Millennium are driving a shift in chess with boards that combine physical pieces with digital analysis. These devices offer new training tools and online connectivity for players at all levels.

London's Phone Theft Fight: Met Police and Apple Share Stolen Device Data
London's Metropolitan Police and Apple will share stolen device identifiers to disrupt the city's phone theft market. The collaboration aims to collapse criminal networks and push for new legislation if tech companies fail to act.

Dell and HP Face Off in a Shifting Laptop Market
The rivalry between Dell and HP is evolving as both brands adjust their laptop strategies to meet changing consumer demands for performance, design and price.

Samsung Heavy Industries Wins Approval for Floating Data Center Ships
Samsung Heavy Industries has secured regulatory approval to build floating data centers on ships.

UK Bans Social Media for Children Under 16 in Sweeping Online Safety Move
The UK government has announced a ban on social media for children under 16 and a minimum age for chatbots, aiming to protect young people from online harms.

VoiceDraw Lets Engineers Sketch System Designs by Speaking Aloud
A new tool called VoiceDraw lets engineers create system architecture diagrams using voice commands, aiming to speed up design and documentation.

UK Government Pushes Flawed Facial Age Checks for Asylum Seekers
The UK Home Office will deploy facial recognition for age verification on asylum seekers despite internal tests showing the technology is unreliable and prone to errors.

PostgresBench Brings Reproducible Testing to Cloud Database Choices
A new open-source benchmark, PostgresBench, aims to standardize performance testing for PostgreSQL services. It offers reproducible results across self-managed and cloud providers, helping developers make informed infrastructure decisions.

Cognitive Debt Emerges as the Next Major Challenge for Engineering Teams
CTOs warn that cognitive debt, the mental overhead from complex systems, now rivals technical debt in slowing innovation and team productivity.

Virginia Lawsuit Targets Ring's Visitor Facial Recognition Without Consent
A class action lawsuit alleges Ring's Familiar Faces feature collects biometric data from visitors and passersby without their knowledge, challenging the opt-in model.

SAT Scores Resurface as Job Application Requirement
Some employers are asking job applicants for SAT scores, reviving a controversial hiring practice linked to socioeconomic bias.

San Francisco Nonprofit Deploys Robots to Address Volunteer Shortage in Meal Prep
A San Francisco nonprofit in the Tenderloin district is using robotic arms to prepare meals as human volunteer numbers decline. The tech-enabled kitchen aims to serve thousands more meals weekly.