Samsung’s Galaxy Z TriFold Finally Gets Its Close-Up
Samsung’s Galaxy Z TriFold has been revealed in never-before-seen detail through new YouTube footage. The device was originally shown behind glass on October 28 in Gyeongju, South Korea.
Samsung’s Galaxy Z TriFold has been revealed in never-before-seen detail through new YouTube footage. The device was originally shown behind glass on October 28 in Gyeongju, South Korea.
Defense giant Lockheed Martin is pouring $50 million into Saildrone to create armed autonomous sailboats. The companies plan live fire demonstrations by 2026, integrating lethal systems onto renewable energy-powered vessels. This marks a major step toward militarizing commercial autonomous maritime
Amazon is bringing its enhanced Alexa Plus AI assistant directly into the Amazon Music app. The integration allows users across all subscription tiers to get complex music recommendations and find songs using natural language queries. Early access begins today for beta participants on iOS and Androi
Edge AI deployments are creating massive new attack surfaces that security vendors are scrambling to protect. CRN’s 2025 Edge Computing 100 highlights the companies leading this charge across IT, OT and IoT environments.
Wall Street’s AI-driven rally hit a wall as tech stocks led major declines. The S&P 500 fell 1.2%, Nasdaq dropped 1.7%, and even strong performers like Palantir got hammered despite beating earnings. Federal Reserve uncertainty about rate cuts is spooking investors who’ve been betting big on expensi
Zero trust isn’t failing – we’re just doing it wrong. According to cybersecurity expert Morey Haber, the problem lies in misunderstanding what zero trust actually means and how to implement it properly in today’s AI-driven landscape.
Asian markets faced pressure as growth stocks retreated while value sectors held steady. Yum China reported solid earnings with 17,514 stores operating, up 10% year-over-year. Meanwhile, Tesla’s China sales fell nearly 10% in October.
Private companies are rushing to commercialize solar geoengineering, with startups like Make Sunsets already selling “cooling credits.” Scientists argue this profit-driven approach undermines transparent research and proper governance of planet-altering technologies.