Category: tech
Technology news, AI, gadgets, apps
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The MacRumors Show: WWDC26 Promises Apple Intelligence and Siri Upgrades
On this week’s episode of The MacRumors Show, we discuss Apple’s WWDC 2026 keynote date, the sweeping Siri redesign coming in iOS 27, Apple’s latest accessibility feature previews, and the hinge troubles reportedly plaguing the foldable iPhone ahead of its expected launch in the fall. Apple this week confirmed its WWDC 2026 keynote for June read more
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Modems, Routers, and Gateways: What They Do and How to Tell Them Apart
To get internet access in your home, you need both a modem and a router. They aren’t interchangeable, and they serve two very different functions. If you think of your home as an island, the modem is the port where the big cargo ships come in from the world wide web, and the router is read more
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iPhone 17 Pro Will Make Sports History This Weekend
Apple today announced that this Saturday’s Major League Soccer match between the LA Galaxy and Houston Dynamo FC will be captured entirely with the iPhone 17 Pro. Apple said this will mark the first time an iPhone will be used to capture the entirety of a major professional live sporting event broadcast, rather than studio read more
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NYC and LA Are Teaming Up to Fight for EVs
It is indeed a weird time to be an automaker, as US federal incentives disappear and support dwindles for newer electric-powered cars. “Manufacturers would really like to know what the future will be and what are the rules,” says Mike Finnern, the senior vice president and zero-emission fleet lead at WSP, a consulting firm. Guarantees read more
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5 Great Android Tablets That Aren’t Just for Cheapskates and Apple-Haters
IPad? Never heard of it. I have been using Android tablets pretty much since the first one came out, and I’ve never felt the need for anything made by any fruit companies. Android tablets make great “nice to have” entertainment centers, or they can be complete lightweight laptop replacements for travel. Whatever your use case, read more
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‘Perfect Storm’: How Trump’s Aid Cuts Are Fueling the Ebola Outbreak
As an Ebola outbreak rages in central and East Africa, public health workers say that the response has been stymied by the Trump administration’s cuts to foreign aid and global health organizations. “We are no longer able to get some supplies,” Amadou Bocoum, Democratic Republic of Congo country director for the anti-poverty nonprofit CARE, tells read more
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Election Officials Are Getting Ready for ICE to Show Up at the Polls
A week later, during the Conservative Political Action Conference meeting, now acting attorney general Todd Blanche endorsed the idea of ICE at the polls and repeated the conspiracy theory about noncitizens voting as an excuse to deploy ICE. “Why is there objection to sending ICE officers to polling places?” he asked. “Illegals can’t vote. It read more
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Data Brokers’ and AI Firms’ Opt-Out Forms Are Built to Fail, Report Finds
EPIC’s researchers were unable to locate an opt-out process at all on Meta, X, OpenAI, and Tinder without first logging in. And HireVue and the surveillance vendor DataTrust frame their opt-out instructions as available only to California residents, even though 20 other states have passed laws granting opt-out rights. Palantir, the defense and intelligence contractor, read more
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Apple Taps Virtual Avatar Firm Animato's Expertise and Intellectual Property
Apple has quietly agreed to hire employees and license intellectual property of Animato, a small California-based company that has developed software for creating virtual avatars used in video chats and tutoring, according to a European Commission filing spotted by MacRumors. The acquisition was filed under the EU’s Digital Markets Act in January 2026, and appears read more
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Nintendo's New 'Pictonico' iOS Game Turns Your Photos Into Minigames
Nintendo today announced a new mobile game called Pictonico, which is set to launch on Thursday, May 28. Pictonico turns photos into minigames like those you see in WarioWare. The app’s website features players taking photos of themselves and their friends, with the app altering the photos in different ways. In one example, the person’s read more
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Google I/O 2026 Live Blog: All the Gemini and Smart Glasses Updates as They Happen
It’s Google’s big day. Every year in May, the tech giant hosts developers and media in its hometown of Mountain View, California, for Google I/O, its developer conference. Google uses the I/O keynote address to showcase the latest projects it has been working on—services and features that will soon trickle into the many products we read more
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You Can Get Some of Your Nudes Removed From the Internet Under a New Law
Once someone submits a takedown request, a platform has up to 48 hours to determine whether it is valid. If it decides that it is, then it has to remove both the content reported and any identical copies. Several larger platforms say they use an industry tool called StopNCII, which uses matching algorithms to identify read more
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Theo Baker spent four years investigating Stanford. Before he leaves, here's what he found. | TechCrunch
Most members of Stanford’s class of 2026 are smart, ambitious, and poised for remarkable careers. Theo Baker already has one. In his first semester of college, Baker broke the story that forced Stanford president Marc Tessier-Lavigne to resign — work that earned him a George Polk Award, one of journalism’s highest honors. Warner Brothers and read more
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New research enables a robot to chart a better course
In the aftermath of a devastating earthquake, unpiloted aerial vehicles (UAVs) could fly through a collapsed building to map the scene, giving rescuers information they need to quickly reach survivors. But this remains an extremely challenging problem for an autonomous robot, which would need to swiftly adjust its trajectory to avoid sudden obstacles while staying read more
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SandboxAQ brings its drug discovery models to Claude — no PhD in computing required | TechCrunch
Drug discovery is one of the most expensive pursuits in modern industry. Finding a single viable molecule can take a decade and cost billions, and most candidates still don’t make it. A generation of AI startups has promised to fix that — most have made the problem less painful for researchers, who are already technically read more
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NYC Health + Hospitals says hackers stole medical data and fingerprints during breach affecting at least 1.8 million people | TechCrunch
New York public health provider NYC Health + Hospitals says a months-long data breach that allowed hackers to steal personal data, medical records, and fingerprints scans affects at least 1.8 million people. NYCHHC is the largest public health system in the United States and provides healthcare to over a million New Yorkers, the majority of read more
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Kin Health raises $9M to build an AI notetaker for patients | TechCrunch
The market for AI notetaking devices has exploded in the U.S., with the category generating over $600 million in revenue last year, according to a Menlo Ventures report. And as startups like Heidi Health and Freed have shown, there’s decent demand for this tech in healthcare, where doctors and clinics see the potential for an read more
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Amazon's new Alexa+ powered feature can generate podcast episodes | TechCrunch
Amazon announced the latest update to Alexa+ on Monday: the ability to generate podcast episodes on demand. The new feature, called “Alexa Podcasts,” is rolling out to customers in the U.S. today. Amazon describes the capability as a way to “turn any topic you’re curious about into a podcast episode, ready in minutes.” To use read more
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Open source tool maker Grafana Labs says hackers stole its code, refuses to pay ransom | TechCrunch
Grafana Labs, the maker of its eponymous popular open source web visualization software, confirmed it had been hacked but that it refused to pay the hackers who had threatened to release the company’s codebase. In a series of posts on social media, the lab said its investigation found that the hackers had abused a stolen read more
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South Korea's LetinAR is building optics behind AI glasses | TechCrunch
Imagine you’re riding a motorcycle at 160 kilometers per hour when an arrow appears, floating on the road ahead, telling you exactly where to turn. No phone, no dashboard. Just your helmet, and a lens the size of a thumbnail. This is not a concept video. It’s heading to European roads as early as this read more
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