Category: tech

Technology news, AI, gadgets, apps

  • OpenClaw Agents Can Be Guilt-Tripped Into Self-Sabotage

    Last month, researchers at Northeastern University invited a bunch of OpenClaw agents to join their lab. The result? Complete chaos. The viral AI assistant has been widely heralded as a transformative technology—as well as a potential security risk. Experts note that tools like OpenClaw, which work by giving AI models liberal access to a computer, read more

    OpenClaw Agents Can Be Guilt-Tripped Into Self-Sabotage
  • Wristband enables wearers to control a robotic hand with their own movements

    The next time you’re scrolling your phone, take a moment to appreciate the feat: The seemingly mundane act is possible thanks to the coordination of 34 muscles, 27 joints, and over 100 tendons and ligaments in your hand. Indeed, our hands are the most nimble parts of our bodies. Mimicking their many nuanced gestures has read more

    Wristband enables wearers to control a robotic hand with their own movements
  • A former Thiel fellow's startup just launched a drone it says can replace police helicopters | TechCrunch

    When I speak to Blake Resnick, he’s walking around his drone startup’s newest office space in Seattle—a cavernous 50,000-square-foot facility that, Resnick estimates, won’t be fully set up until later in the year—potentially November. Still, the big (and for now, largely empty) building offers the promise of a fast-growing company intent on conquering its particular read more

    A former Thiel fellow's startup just launched a drone it says can replace police helicopters | TechCrunch
  • ARM Silicon

    While Arm primarily licenses CPU and GPU designs to other manufacturers, they also produce their own silicon for specific datacenter and AI infrastructure applications. ARM AGI CPU# Announced at the Arm Everywhere Keynote on March 24, 2026, the ARM AGI CPU is Arm’s first production silicon, designed for AI infrastructure at scale. It delivers a read more

    ARM Silicon
  • Lasers, robots, action: MIT workshop explores Raman spectroscopy

    Could a three-hour workshop on an advanced materials analysis technique turn someone into a detective — or perhaps an art restorer? At MIT’s Center for Bits and Atoms (CBA) in late January, about a dozen students explored that possibility during an Independent Activities Period (IAP) workshop on Raman spectroscopy, a technique that uses laser light read more

    Lasers, robots, action: MIT workshop explores Raman spectroscopy
  • A New Game Turns the H-1B Visa System Into a Surreal Simulation

    More than half of the nine developers who worked on the game have either obtained a US visa or tried and failed to do so. Most of them are from China, but the team also intentionally recruited talent from other countries in the hopes of incorporating more diverse immigrant perspectives. “Everybody knows somebody that’s on read more

    A New Game Turns the H-1B Visa System Into a Surreal Simulation
  • Generative AI improves a wireless vision system that sees through obstructions

    MIT researchers have spent more than a decade studying techniques that enable robots to find and manipulate hidden objects by “seeing” through obstacles. Their methods utilize surface-penetrating wireless signals that reflect off concealed items. Now, the researchers are leveraging generative artificial intelligence models to overcome a longstanding bottleneck that limited the precision of prior approaches. read more

    Generative AI improves a wireless vision system that sees through obstructions
  • The Gemini-powered features in Google Workspace that are worth using | TechCrunch

    Google has been steadily integrating Gemini across Google Workspace, embedding AI into Docs, Gmail, Sheets, Slides, Drive, and Meet. With so many updates rolling out, the real question isn’t what Gemini can do; it’s what’s actually useful in day-to-day work. The best Gemini features are arguably the more practical tools that help you manage information read more

    The Gemini-powered features in Google Workspace that are worth using | TechCrunch
  • Mozilla is launching a free built-in VPN on Firefox 149 — but with some conditions

    Firefox 149 is adding a built-in free VPN starting from March 24 It has a cap of 50GB of monthly data in the US, UK, Germany, France to start Mozilla is also rolling out a set of new tools to boost productivity Firefox is gearing up for its biggest browser update in years, and privacy read more

    Mozilla is launching a free built-in VPN on Firefox 149 — but with some conditions
  • Spigen’s New AirPods Pro 3 Case Is Modeled After the Original Macintosh Mouse

    Accessory maker Spigen this week expanded its lineup of case options that are designed to look like vintage Apple Macs. The clever new Classic LS AirPods Pro 3 Case resembles a the iconic Apple Macintosh mouse, so it goes well with Spigen’s Mac-style iPhone cases. Priced at $25 from Amazon, the case features the stone read more

    Spigen’s New AirPods Pro 3 Case Is Modeled After the Original Macintosh Mouse
  • MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab seed to signal: Amplifying early-career faculty impact

    The early years of faculty members’ careers are a formative and exciting time in which to establish a firm footing that helps determine the trajectory of researchers’ studies. This includes building a research team, which demands innovative ideas and direction, creative collaborators, and reliable resources. For a group of MIT faculty working with and on read more

    MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab seed to signal: Amplifying early-career faculty impact
  • COBOL Is the Asbestos of Programming Languages

    Early in the Covid-19 pandemic, the governor of New Jersey made an unusual admission: He’d run out of COBOL developers. The state’s unemployment insurance systems were written in the 60-year-old programming language and needed to be updated to handle the hundreds of thousands of claims. Trouble was, few of the state’s employees knew how to read more

    COBOL Is the Asbestos of Programming Languages
  • The Sony WF-1000XM6 Earbuds Offer Insane Levels of Silence

    The small black buds (they also come in a silvery tan) have two microphones visible on the outer shell, simple Sony logos on the side, and a pair of memory-foam eartips in four sizes. A word to the wise on fit: Once you figure out which size of ear tips you want (I stuck with read more

    The Sony WF-1000XM6 Earbuds Offer Insane Levels of Silence
  • Logitech Finally Made a Keyboard to Pair With Its Top Mouse

    Options, of course, also have built-in integration for AI assistants like ChatGPT, with a dedicated “Prompt Builder” UI that can be summoned with the press of a button. Thankfully, unlike some keyboards, AI functionality can easily be disabled, with the key defaulting to Page Down and being remappable to anything else. Unlike other new keyboards, read more

    Logitech Finally Made a Keyboard to Pair With Its Top Mouse
  • Apple's First Foldable Displays Nearing Mass Production

    Advanced display panels destined for Apple’s first foldable iPhone are reportedly nearing mass production. The Weibo leaker known as “Instant Digital” today said that Samsung Display is set to begin mass production of OLED panels for the first foldable iPhone in May 2026. Meanwhile, the user “Fixed Focus Digital” claims that the foldable iPhone’s screen read more

    Apple's First Foldable Displays Nearing Mass Production
  • Before quantum computing arrives, this startup wants enterprises already running on it | TechCrunch

    Eighteen months after selling his startup to chipmaker AMD for $665 million, Finnish entrepreneur Peter Sarlin has left his role as CEO of the unit now known as AMD Silo AI. He is now chairman at two new ventures: physical AI lab NestAI, and Qutwo, an AI startup aimed at helping companies prepare for the read more

    Before quantum computing arrives, this startup wants enterprises already running on it | TechCrunch
  • iPhone 17 Pro is Now Part of MLB History

    Back in September, the Apple TV streaming service’s broadcast of the pivotal Boston Red Sox vs. Detroit Tigers game at Fenway Park incorporated live footage captured with the iPhone 17 Pro, and now the device has been enshrined in MLB history. Apple this week announced that the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum has read more

    iPhone 17 Pro is Now Part of MLB History
  • Peacock expands into AI-driven video, mobile-first live sports, and gaming | TechCrunch

    Peacock is making a clear bet on two things: AI and mobile-first entertainment. Based on what the streamer previewed at a press event yesterday, Peacock’s mobile app is about to look a whole lot more like a mix of TikTok, a casual gaming hub, and a streaming service. From an AI-powered “Bravoverse” vertical video experience read more

    Peacock expands into AI-driven video, mobile-first live sports, and gaming | TechCrunch
  • China’s OpenClaw Boom Is a Gold Rush for AI Companies

    George Zhang thought OpenClaw could make him rich, even though he didn’t really understand how the viral AI agent software worked. But he saw a video of a Chinese social media influencer demonstrating how it could be deployed to manage stock portfolios and make investment decisions autonomously. Zhang, who works in cross-border ecommerce in the read more

    China’s OpenClaw Boom Is a Gold Rush for AI Companies
  • Gamers’ Worst Nightmares About AI Are Coming True

    The gaming community freaked out last week when Seamus Blackley, the original creator of Xbox, claimed the console was sunsetting in an interview with Gamesbeat. However, if you read the interview or his comments on Bluesky, you’ll realize he meant that something at the core of Xbox feels off: The console he built is in read more

    Gamers’ Worst Nightmares About AI Are Coming True