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Tech Deciphered
74 – The Prediction Episode

Tech Deciphered

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2026 62:52


Who dares to make predictions in the current landscape? We do!  Our Predictions are back. Will our track-record continue on a high or will we be fundamentally wrong? Listen in to our Predictions for 2026 Navigation: Intro What will 2026 be all about? AI, AI and … more AI The big Hardware movements Of Start-ups and VCs Regulatory & Geopolitical Headwinds… and the Wars Fintech, Crypto and Frontier Tech Conclusion Our co-hosts: Bertrand Schmitt, Entrepreneur in Residence at Red River West, co-founder of App Annie / Data.ai, business angel, advisor to startups and VC funds, @bschmitt Nuno Goncalves Pedro, Investor, Managing Partner, Founder at Chamaeleon, @ngpedro Our show:   Tech DECIPHERED brings you the Entrepreneur and Investor views on Big Tech, VC and Start-up news, opinion pieces and research. We decipher their meaning, and add inside knowledge and context. Being nerds, we also discuss the latest gadgets and pop culture news Subscribe To Our Podcast Bertrand Schmitt Introduction Welcome to Tech Deciphered Episode 74. That would be an episode about some predictions about 2026. What will be 2026 all about? I guess this year is probably starting with a bang. We saw the acquisition of xAI by SpaceX. We saw an acquisition from Grok by NVIDIA. What’s your take about what would be the big themes in 2026? I guess it would be for sure about AI and space. Nuno Goncalves Pedro What will 2026 be all about? Yeah. I predict a year that will be a little bit more of a year of reckoning in some way. There will be a lot of things that I think we’ll start seeing through. The fact that we are in the midst of an amazing transformational era for technology, the use of AI, but at the same time, obviously, a ridiculous bubble that is going alongside it as we’ve discussed in previous episodes. I think that we’ll start seeing some early reckonings of that, companies that might start failing, floundering, maybe a couple of frauds along the way, etc. I’ll tell you what I will not make many predictions about today, which is geopolitics. Geopolitics, I will not make predictions at all. Who the hell knows what’s going to happen to the world this year in 2026? I don’t dare making any predictions on that. Back to things where I would make predictions. I think on AI, we’ll have a little bit of reckoning. We’ll talk about it a little bit more in detail during this episode. Interesting elements around the hardware and physical space. Physical space, we just dedicated a full episode to it. We won’t go into a lot of details on that, but definitely on the hardware side, we’ll talk a little bit more about it. The VC landscape is going through an incredible transformation. We’ll talk about it today as well and some of our predictions for this year. What will happen to the asset class? It seems to be transforming itself dramatically. Obviously, that has a very direct impact on startups, so we’ll talk about that as well. And then to close a little bit the chapter on this, we will address some regulatory and geopolitical, let’s call it, headwinds without making maybe too many complex predictions. We shall see. Maybe by that time of the episode, we will be making some predictions. You guys should stay and listen to us, and maybe we will actually make some predictions about the geopolitical transformations that we will see this year in the world. Then last but not the least, we’ll talk about fintech, crypto, frontier tech, and a couple of other areas before concluding the episode. A classic predictions’ episode. We normally have a pretty good track record on some of these, but right now, the world is going a bit interesting, not to say insane. Bertrand Schmitt Yes, and going back to some news, Groq technically was not acquired, but, practically, it’s as if it got acquired. I’m talking about Groq, G-R-O-Q. The AI semiconductor company focused on inference AI, and it was late December. It was a way to end the year. This year, we started again with an acquisition of xAI by its sister company, SpaceX. I guess that’s where we are starting. AI, AI and … more AI We are going to start on AI. That’s definitely the big stuff. Everything these days, I guess, is about AI or has to have some connection with AI, or it doesn’t matter. I think every company in the world has seen that. You have to have the absolute minimum on AI strategy. You better execute on this strategy and show results, I would say. For the companies that were not AI native, you truly have to have a way to transform yourself. I guess at some point, the stretch might be too much, and it’s not really reasonable. Then you maybe better stay on what you are doing, especially if you’re in tech, you better be moving faster to AI. Nuno Goncalves Pedro Just to highlight, and I think throughout the episode, you’ll see that there’re obviously a lot of implications that would manifest themselves into capital markets. I mean, we’ll specifically talk about VCs and startups later on. But the fact that everything needs to be AI, the fact that there’s so much innovation happening right now, in my opinion, and this is maybe the first pre-topic to AI, is we’ll see a tremendous increase in M&A activity this year across the board. I mean, we’ve seen already some big acquihires we mentioned in some of our previous episodes, but we’ll see a lot more activity on M&A this year. Normally, that’s a precursor to the opening of capital markets. I predict also that there will be a reopening of the IPO market that never really reopened last year, to be honest. M&A, a lot more, reopening of the IPO market. Normally, it happens in the second or third quarter of the year. That’s what my M&A friends tell me. First quarter of year, everyone’s figuring out stuff. Then last quarter of the year, things should be more or less closed. Maybe the third quarter is the big quarter. We shall see. But definitely, as a precursor to our conversation today, I think we’ll see a lot of M&A, and we’ll see reopening of the IPO mark. Bertrand Schmitt I guess last year was not as big as you could expect on M&A given the tariff situation announced in April and May. I mean, it became quite tough to do IPO in such market conditions. Definitely, we can hope for something dramatically different in 2026. I guess talking about public markets and IPO, I guess the big one everyone is waiting for is SpaceX. SpaceX getting even more interesting with its xAI acquisition. Nuno Goncalves Pedro Do you think that because of the acquisition, it’s more likely that it will happen this year, or because of the acquisition, it’s less likely that it will happen this year? Bertrand Schmitt That’s a good question. My guess is the acquisition of xAI is all about xAI needing more financing and cheaper financing. This acquisition is a pathway to that. SpaceX being a much bigger company, a company that is also making much more revenues. I could bet that there is higher probability that, actually, SpaceX will go public in order to finance itself. At the same time, will it have enough time to prepare itself for the IPO given this acquisition just happened? Can they do that in 6 months? I mean, if anyone can do it, I guess it’s Elon Musk. It’s a strategy to present an even more attractive company with an even more interesting story, a story of vertical integration from AI to space. I guess the story as it’s presented itself right now, it’s one about having your AI data centers in space. Because in space, you have much better solar energy production with solar panels. You have a perfect cooling situation because you are in space. Thanks to Starlink, you have the mean to communicate between the satellites and with Earth itself. I think if someone can pull up a story like AI data center in space, I guess Elon Musk can. There is, of course, a lot of questions about is it practical? Is it economical? Yes. I certainly agree. I’m not clear on the mass, and can you make it work? Again, I mean, Elon Musk single-handedly, with SpaceX, managed to transform the space market on its head. I mean, they are the biggest satellite launching company in the world. They have the most satellites in the world. I mean, I’m not sure I would bet against him, and I guess I would probably believe that he could pull up something. Time frames, different story. The 2-3 years data center in space for AI as cheap as on Earth, I have more trouble with that one. I mean, it’s a usual suspect with Elon Musk. You promise something unachievable in a few years, but, ultimately, you still manage to reach it in 5 or 10. Again, I would not bet against the strategy. Nuno Goncalves Pedro Yeah. I’ve talked to a couple of space experts, people that have launched rockets, and have worked JPL, NASA, and a couple of other places, etc. For what it’s worth, their feedback is, “No way in hell, and we’re decades away.” We’ll see. I mean, to your point, Elon has pulled very dramatic stuff. Not as fast as he normally says he’s going to pull it, but within a time span that we all see it. Difficult to bet against him. In terms of actually the prediction, maybe to respond to the prediction as well, will SpaceX IPO? I’m going to make a prediction that has a very high likelihood of missing the mark, but I think Tesla’s going to buy and merge them both into it. It’s going to become a public company through Tesla. That’s my hypothesis. Bertrand Schmitt No. That’s supposed to be it. That’s how you solve that. Nuno Goncalves Pedro And Elon controls the whole universe. X, xAI, Tesla, SpaceX, all under one umbrella beautifully run. And SolarCity is well in there, of course, so wonderful. Bertrand Schmitt That’s possible. Certainly, you are not the only one thinking Tesla will acquire or merge with SpaceX. To remind everyone, Tesla is around 1.3, 1.5 trillion market cap. Depending on the day, SpaceX seems to be valued at similar range, 1.2, 1.3 trillion. It looks like it’s the most valued private company at this stage. These are companies of similar size, so that’s one piece of the puzzle. When you think about the combined company, we could be talking about a 3 trillion entity. Playing right here with the biggest companies in the marketplace today. Nuno Goncalves Pedro With a couple of tweets from Elon, it will rapidly get to 4 to 5 trillion. Bertrand Schmitt That’s so tricky. Nuno Goncalves Pedro Yes. On AI and back to AI, one thing I think that we’re about to see is this will probably be the year of agentic AI. Obviously, we predict a lot of growth on that side of the fence, in particular on the enterprise B2B side. We see a lot of opportunities coming through. From our perspective, at least at Chamaeleon, we generally believe that there’s going to be a lot of movements on agentic AI. It’s also going to be probably the year of the first big fails of agentic AI that will be newsworthy. There will be some elements about that loop and how it gets closed that will happen. I think we might see some scandals already. We’re already seeing the social network of bots talking to bots. We will see other scandals going on this year even in the consumer space and in the bot to bot space, which we now can talk about or in the AI agent to AI agent space. My prediction is we will see some move forwards. There’ll be some dramatic funding rounds along the way. We’ll see a couple of really cool things out of the gates coming out that are really impressive, but we’ll also see the first big misses of the technology stack. I don’t think we’ll go fully mainstream yet this year, so it’s probably maybe something more for 2027 along the way. That would be my prediction again. I think enterprise will lead the way. We’ll definitely see a lot of stuff on consumer as well that is cool. Then we’ll all have our own personal assistance in our hands, basically, literally in our phones. Bertrand Schmitt Going back to agentic AI, we also started the year with some pretty dramatic move. I mean, the launch of Clawdbot, renamed OpenClaw. I mean, this stuff took fire in like a week or 2. It was coded by just one person who actually didn’t even code the product but used AI to build the product, 100% used AI, proposing some new ways also to leverage AI to do coding. He has a pretty unique approach. It’s not vibe coding. I would say it’s a better way to do that. Then the surprising evolution with the launch of a social network for AI agents, Moltbook. I mean, this stuff, probably there is some fake in it. But at the same time, I think it’s quite impressive because it’s the first time we see truly 100,000 plus agents communicating directly to each other. Yeah. I mean, that’s the first time we see surfacing the possibility of some sort of hive mind on the Internet. It’s pretty surprising. Right now, all of this is a hack done in a few days. By end of year, by 2 years, 3 years, we might discover that, actually, the best approach to AI might not be the AI assistant like we are doing today, but a combination of hundreds of thousands of AI working closely together. We might be witnessing the first sign of new intelligence in a way. Nuno Goncalves Pedro Things like this social network might either be Skynet, the beginning of Skynet. They might be the beginning of Her, or they might just be a fad and nothing really happens. It’s just interesting to see what these agents are doing. Bertrand Schmitt Totally. Nuno Goncalves Pedro Obviously, there are real and clear and present dangers of some of the integrations of AI we’re seeing in the market. Interesting enough, and I’ll ask you for your prediction a bit, Bertrand. I think we’ll probably see the first big mishap of AI being used in some infrastructural decision in the age of AI. I mean, we’ve seen AI issues in the past and software issues in the past. We talked in previous episodes about that as well. Mishaps of software that have led to people dying. But I think probably the first big mishap will happen this year as well. Very public mishap of the use of AI and serve its interactions with infrastructure or something that’s very platform related, etc, that will have big impact that everyone will notice. That’s my prediction for the year as well. We’ll have the first big oops moment, as I would call it, for AI in this new age of full on AI. Bertrand Schmitt I would say first some perspective. I think today, people are not using AI directly for life and death decision, at least not that I’m aware. We’re not going to let AI fly a plane, for instance, tomorrow so you can be, reassured. At the same time, given there is such a race to AI, there definitely might be some mistakes. We were talking about the social network for AI agents, Moltbook. Apparently, all the keys used to secure the AI were shared by mistake because it was not properly locked down. We can see that indirectly, mistakes will be made for sure. Two, it’s highly probable that some people will trust AI too much to do some stuff, and this stuff might not work and might have some grave consequence. Hopefully, there is not so much of this. Hopefully, it’s mostly AI used for the good. But you’re right. I mean, at some point, the more we use the technology, the more there would be issue. I mean, it’s highly probable. Nuno Goncalves Pedro That will lead me to another prediction, which is, and we’ll talk about more of it later, but it probably will lead to the first significant movement in terms of regulatory environment certainly in the US at some point if it happens in the US in particular, where there will be some movement that will be like, “Hey, you guys can’t do this anymore.” Because this will probably emerge from mismanaged interfaces. From systems having access to stuff that they shouldn’t have access to in the first place. Talking a little bit more about what’s happening in AI. You’ve already mentioned some of the issues that relate actually to security and cybersecurity. We keep talking about AI. We keep talking about all these infrastructure pieces and platforms that are being built. I think we’ll have a lot more incidents like the one you just mentioned where things will be shared that shouldn’t have been shared, where people will break systems and get into it, etc. Let’s see where that takes us, which is a little bit ironic because, obviously, with AI, the promise is that cybersecurity becomes more robust as well because there’re agents working on our behalf on the cybersecurity side. There’s also agents working on the other side. Bertrand Schmitt It’s a constant race. It’s the attackers, defenders. Each time you have new technology, you have a new race to who is going to attack or defend the best. Each new wave of technology, it’s an opportunity to challenge the status quo. Nuno Goncalves Pedro The attackers have been winning, and I feel they’ll continue winning in 2026. I think it’s going to still be a year of attack. We’ll see more and more breaches, more and more stuff that will happen. Bertrand Schmitt I don’t know if they will win. I mean, it’s normal that they win once in a while. For sure, some infrastructure is not updated as it should. Some stuff are not managed as it should, so there will always be breaches. I don’t know if things are dramatically going to change because, again, everyone who cares who is going to update his infrastructure with AI for defense. There is no question that you have no choice. We will see. That I don’t know. For sure, AI will be used to attack directly with AI. Maybe you’re able to do bigger, larger scale attack. Or thanks to AI, you are simply able to create new type of attacks more easily. AI can be used behind the scene as a way to prepare and organise new type of attacks, even if it’s not used directly live in the battle. Nuno Goncalves Pedro One topic that we’ll come back to later is the geopolitics of everything, but maybe more broadly. On the geopolitics of AI, it’s very clear that we have an arms race going on. Obviously, the US on the one hand, China on the other hand is the two extremes, putting tremendous amount of capital into data centers just at the base of that infrastructure. Chipset development, chipset access, a huge theme in terms of the export restrictions, etc, that are being forced by the US. I think it will continue. From a European standpoint, obviously, they’re stuck between a rock and a hard place, to be very honest. Let’s see what happens on that side of the fence. My view of the world is that certainly from a US and China perspective, we’re going to see a lot more movements in 2026, like big movements. The Chinese movements we always see in delay.  It takes us a couple of months, sometimes even more than that to understand exactly what’s going on. I think we’re going to see some huge moves this year in terms of the States, the United States of America, and China really pouring capital into the creation of the next big winners around AI. I think the US is obviously more visible. We see a lot of these companies. We’ve just discussed xAI and its acquisition by SpaceX or merger. I don’t know what they’re calling it exactly. Effectively, on the China side, the movements I think are already very big. As I said, it will take a while to figure out exactly what those moves are. One thing that I propose is that at some point, China will have very little dependency on chipsets from the US. I’m not sure it’s going to happen this year, but I think the writing is on the wall. Irrespective of any other geopolitical issues that is coming to the fore at this moment in time. That’s one of the key areas or in arenas of fight. Bertrand Schmitt It makes sense. If you are China, you will look at what happened. You would think that you cannot just depend on the largest of one country. It makes rational sense, the same way it makes rational sense for the US to limit exports to China because there is value to delay some peer pressure that could use these technologies for good but also for bad. If you were an ally of the US, that would be one thing. But when you are not an ally of the US, that certainly should be a different perspective. Maybe one last point concerning agents, I think there will be a lot that will revolve around coding. We can see OpenAI with Codex. We can see Cloud with code. There was, of course, [inaudible 00:18:28] that was trying to be big on agentic coding. I think agentic coding was one of the big transformation in 2025 and is going to get bigger in 2026. I think for a lot of people who do coding, there was a radical transformation in terms of what you can achieve, what you can do, how much you can trust AI to help you code. I start to think we might see this year, the replacement of not just one AI replace one coder, but one AI replace a full team because of the new ability to manage that at scale. Coding might be a common activity where you are going to think about outcomes, think about objective, think about how you organise, but not really coding by itself anymore. A big change, like you used to code, directly your hand on the stuff, but step by step, everyone is going to become a manager of agent. I think in one year, we saw enough transformation to think that in the coming year, the transformation can be even more dramatic. Nuno Goncalves Pedro The big Hardware movements Now switching gears to hardware. Obviously, a lot of movements in 2025 and over the last few years. One piece of thesis that we’ve had long-standing at Chamaeleon is that we will see the emergence of AI devices. Some of them have been tremendous failures as we discussed in the past. I predict that we’ll have a couple of really interesting full stack AI devices in the market this year. Why does that matter? Because, as many of you know, obviously, there’s compute that can happen in data centers and cloud infrastructure all over the world, but also there’s compute that can happen at the edges. The more you can move to the edges and the more you can create devices that actually allow you to have user experiences that are very distinctive at the edge, the more powerful some of these devices might become. I predict Apple will not be the first to launch anything on this. I predict probably OpenAI, after the acquisition of IO, will maybe not launch something this year, but will announce something this year. I’ll step back on that prediction. They’ll announce something this year, but maybe not launch. But we’ll start seeing some devices that have some interesting value in the market, probably devices that are AI devices, but they are very focused on very specific user flows, and so very much adequate to specific activities. I won’t make a prediction on that, but I think areas that would make sense for that to happen would be obviously around fitness, health, et cetera, et cetera, where we already have the ascendancy of products like Oura Ring and others out there. Definitely, that’s one area that might have quite a lot of developments. I think AI-first devices, devices that are very focused on compute at the edges, providing user flows that are AI-enabled to end users, we’ll see a lot more of that and a lot more activity this year. Again, I don’t think Apple will be necessarily ahead of the game. Again, maybe OpenAI will give us something to at least think about and look forward to. Bertrand Schmitt First, I’m not sure it will be that transformational because if it’s not in your phone, in your pocket, there is only so much you can do with it, and there is only so much computing power you will have. I’m doubtful it would be really impactful this year. Nuno Goncalves Pedro I feel we’ve been discussing this shift of paradigm in input and output. For me, some of these devices could lead to that shift. Because, again, a mobile phone is not a great long-term paradigm for the usage that we have because it’s really constrained by the screen. The screen is really what takes most of the battery life away. If we didn’t have that screen, what could we do? If we have the block that is as big as a mobile phone, and it didn’t have a screen, it was just compute, that’s a mini computer, a microcomputer. Bertrand Schmitt That’s a fair point, but I don’t see that transformation this year. That’s really more my point. I can see that you can have AI-enabled smart glasses, and it’s clear there is a race to AI-enabled smart glasses. My point is more to go beyond the gadget, it would take quite a while. It would need to have cameras. It would need to analyse what you see. It would need to hear what you hear. Again, it might come, but then at some point, it would be okay, what do you do with it? We have the example of the movie Her. That’s showing Her what it could be. There are definitely possibilities. It’s clear that if you take the big VR headset like the Apple Vision Pro, there is a failure from that perspective in the sense that I think it’s a great, amazing device. The big problem is that it’s doing way more that makes sense. I think there will be a clearer separation between your smart AR glasses that has to be light, that has to be always unconnected, and that’s primarily there to help you make sense of the world around you. The true VR headset that doesn’t really require much in terms of AI, and it’s just there to immerse you in a different world. For this, we know, unfortunately, in some ways, that there is not a lot of demand for it. Maybe there is little demand because you are too hidden in your own world. The technology is not working well enough yet. There are a lot of reasons. But I think Apple trying to do both at the same time, AR and VR, with the Vision Pro, was a pretty grave structural mistake. I think we would see a clearer line of separation between the two. There is bigger market opportunity for AR glasses. That, I certainly agree. There is opportunity to connect that to a computing device. As you talk about, your glasses are your screen, your phone becomes something in your pocket connected to your glasses. Nuno Goncalves Pedro For me, Apple has their way of doing things. From the perspective of what you said, they normally really plan their devices. Even if it’s a big shift in terms of a new area, like they tried with the Vision Pro, and we criticised them for launching it as a device that should have been more of a dev device that they really launched as a full-on device, but that’s their playbook, classically. I think Apple needs to change how they put products out and how they experiment with those products, et cetera. I think they have enough money to be doing everything all the time and figuring it out. If they don’t want to put it out, then they need to do a lot more hell of testing internally with their silos, but they should be playing across all these arenas, VR, AR, everything. They just should put devices out that are either ready for prime time, or they should call it something else. They should call it like this is a dev device or whatever it is. Bertrand Schmitt I agree with you. My complaint is more that it was marketed as a consumer device when it was not. It was a true developer device. Two, they tried to mix the two at once, and it made no sense. No one is going to walk in their home or in the street with their Vision Pro on their head. You have to be deranged, quite frankly, to have use cases like this. I think that for me is a crazy mistake from a company like Apple that prides itself in pure UI, pure user interface, very well-designed device for one specific use case, not mixing the two use cases. We still don’t have Macs with a touchscreen, you know?  We still don’t have an iPad with a good OS that makes use of this great hardware. For some strange reason, they decided to mix everything in the Vision Pro with a device that weighs a ton on your head and is so uncomfortable. That’s why, for me, I’m like, “Guys, what is wrong? Why did you let this team run crazy?” I hope at some point, Apple will go back to the drawing board. My understanding is that that’s what they are doing. They are going to have two devices, one smart glasses, an evolution of the Vision Pro, just focus on VR. They might actually abandon the concept of the pure VR-oriented headset. Because, from a market size perspective, it might not be big enough for Apple, quite frankly. Nuno Goncalves Pedro I read on all of the above, and people at this point was like, “Why are then players like Samsung and others not doing it. LG, et cetera?” Because those players historically have not invented new categories. They’re amazing at catching up once the category is invented, and then they scale the hell out of it, and that’s what these companies have been exceptional at. I wouldn’t see a dramatic innovation, I think, in terms of devices coming from any of the big ones on that side of the fence. Not to disrespect them in any way, but I think that’s not been their playbook ever. Again, if the origination doesn’t come from a start-up or from an Apple, I don’t see those guys going after it. My bet is that we’ll see some start-up activity and, again, hopefully, some announcement from IO now within the OpenAI world. Bertrand Schmitt I would slightly disagree with you. I see where you are coming from. But take the Samsung Galaxy Note, that sudden much bigger headphone that no one was doing that was launched by Samsung, at some point, it forced Apple to launch an iPhone Max. Let’s look at the Z Fold that Samsung launched 7 years ago, copied by everyone. Now Samsung launching a trifold. Apple has still not launched their foldable phone. I think there is a mix, actually, of sometimes- Nuno Goncalves Pedro For me, that’s not a proper new category. It’s still a mobile phone. It just happens to have a screen that folds in half. Bertrand Schmitt The iPhone was still a mobile phone, you could argue.  Nuno Goncalves Pedro No. I think the iPhone was…  I could actually agree with you on that point. Maybe Apple is not as innovative in that case. I think what Steve Jobs was exceptionally good at in terms of his ability as this master product manager was to be an exceptional curator of user flows and user experiences, and creating incredible experiences from devices based on that. That was his secret sauce. Could you say, “Wasn’t all of this stuff already around?” It was. You just put it all together very neatly and very nicely. But if you’re talking about significant shifts in how a category is done, the iPhone was a significant shift in how the category was done. The Fold is still an interesting device. I actually have a Fold right now in front of me. The 7 that you highly recommended to me that we both got, the Z Fold 7. I think they do amazing devices. I don’t think they normally are the most innovative players. Then, when they come to innovation, it comes from technology edges. Obviously, they have Samsung Display, there’s a bunch of other things. They had the ability to do foldable screens in-house themselves. Bertrand Schmitt I don’t disagree with you. I think there is an interesting situation where some companies have some strengths, another one has some strengths. My worry with Apple is that this was not demonstrated with the Vision Pro. The Vision Pro was a hot pot of technologies barely integrated together, with use cases absolutely not well-defined and certainly not something that makes sense for most of us. There is a question of has Apple lost it? While Samsung actually keeps doing their own stuff, that, yes, might be more minor improvements, but at least they are doing it. Because it looks like Apple is missing the train on even the minor improvements. By the way, you might not be aware, but Samsung launched its Vision Pro competitor. Interestingly enough, it might be a better product in some ways, being much lighter and much more comfortable. Nuno Goncalves Pedro We should play around with that and report back to our listeners. Of Start-ups and VCs Moving to venture capital and the startup ecosystem and what’s happening there, I think it is very much a bifurcated environment, and it’s bifurcated for both VCs and for startups. If you’re a startup in the AI space, and you have the hottest team since sliced bread, and you can create FOMO at the speed of light, you can raise ridiculous rounds. Five hundred million at the $3 billion, or $4 billion, or $5 billion valuation, and you still haven’t really even started. First round, you can raise 500 million. That’s back to the whole discussion on Bubble and where are we, et cetera. Some of these companies might actually become huge, some of them might not. But definitely, we are seeing really the haves and have-nots on the startup ecosystem with incredible teams raising a lot of money very, very early on or mid-stage if they’ve already existed for a while, and then the rest not being able to raise. We see a lot of non-necessarily AI sectors, some of the areas of SaaS that don’t necessarily have AI in it, or fintech, or the consumer space that are really, really struggling. If you don’t have an AI story for your startup right now, it’s extremely difficult to raise money unless your numbers are just the best numbers ever. That’s, I think, the first part of the element of bifurcation that we’re seeing today. The second element of bifurcation that we’re seeing today in terms of fundraising is for VCs themselves, and really propelled by the large VC firms raising more and more capital in recent orbits, announcing 15 billion across funds raised. Lightspeed, I think, had made an announcement a couple of weeks ago as well. They’ve raised a bunch of money as well. The big guys are all raising a lot of money. At some point in time, the question some of you might ask is, “These VCs are redeploying more and more money if they have a couple of billion for a VC fund. How does that look like? Is that still VC?” My perspective, I’ve shared before in some of our previous episodes, is that that’s no longer venture capital. At that point in time, we’re talking about something else. Private equity hedge funds, if you want to call them, maybe funds that are really driven by growth investment or late-stage investment. If you have a couple of billion under management, you’re not going to make your returns by writing a $3 million check in a series seed and leading that round.  That has implications for everyone in the ecosystem. It has implications for smaller funds that obviously have a lot more difficulty in raising capital. It’s difficult to differentiate. Last but not least, also for startups that really continue searching for that capital that is out there. Andreessen Horowitz, for example, runs Speedrun, which is a great program for companies around consumer in particular. Initially, it was a lot for gaming. But at some point in time, Andreessen Horowitz could decide that they don’t want to invest more in you. They just put money from Speedrun, which is obviously a very small check compared to the very large checks they could write mid to late stage and that will have an effect on you as a startup. What happens at that point in time if Andreessen Horowitz is not backing you up in later stages? More than that, what happens if I can’t get these big funds interested in me? Are the small funds still valuable to me? Punchline, my view is yes. Obviously, we’re a smaller fund, so there’s parochial interest in what I’m saying. Small funds can still create a ton of value for you, also in terms of credibility, ability to accompany you in those first stages of investment, and the ability to bring other larger investors later down the road as well. There’s definitely a big movement happening in terms of the fundraising for VC funds, which we shouldn’t neglect, which is the big guys are raising a lot more capital and are therefore emptying the market to smaller funds that are having more and more difficult raising at this point in time. We had discussed that there would be a need for concentration in the industry, that micro funds would need to concentrate, and we didn’t have the space for so many micro funds as we had around. But the way it’s happening is extremely dramatic at this moment in time. I think it will continue through 2026. Bertrand Schmitt Remember a few years ago, with the rise of AI, there was more and more of the question about, “What’s the point of SaaS at this stage?” Because SaaS was around for 15 years. Basically, how do you come up with something new that was not already tested, validated by the market? How do you bring something new? We say this was reinforced to the power of 10. If your product is not clearly built from the ground up for a new use case enabled by AI, anyone could then might have built your product 5, 10 years ago, and therefore, why now has no clear answer, and it’s a big problem. I’m still surprised myself to still see some entrepreneurs where you talk to them about AI because you don’t see them in the deck, and they explain to you, “It’s not yet there,” and you’re like, “What’s wrong with you guys?” Fine. Do whatever you want. Do a small business and whatever, but don’t think you can come up pitch and raise without an AI story. The second category is people who come with an AI story, but you can feel very quickly, I guess you saw that many times, Nuno, where just a story layered on top with little credibility. It’s not better. It’s not enough to just have a story. Your business needs to be radically built differently or radically proposing some brand-new use cases that were impossible to solve 5 years ago. Nuno Goncalves Pedro To stack up on that, absolutely in agreement. If you’re just adding to the story, and it’s an afterthought, and you’re just trying to make the story somehow gel, once you go into one or two layers of due diligence, your investors will very quickly realise that you’re not really AI-first or dramatically AI-enabled or whatever. It’s just you’re sort of stacking something on top of another thesis. It needs to make sense from the product onwards. It’s not just, let’s just put it together with chewing gum, and magically, people will give you money. It was true also if we remember the good old crypto blockchain days, where everyone’s investing in crypto. A lot of stories that didn’t make much sense. In that sense, it’s not very different. I would go one step further. I think in the world of the VC winter that we’re a little bit in, where it’s more and more difficult if you’re a smaller fund to raise your fund at this moment in time, there’s a lot of sources of distinctiveness still talked about, like proprietary networks, access to deal flow, fast track record, all that stuff that really, really matters. But our bet continues at Chamaeleon continues being that you need to be AI-first as a VC fund yourself. You need to have core advantages in using not only readily-available AI tools or third-party available AI tools, data sources, technology stacks, but actually building your own stack over time, which is what we did with Mantis at Chamaeleon. Again, just to reinforce that, I think we’re at the beginning of that stage. We, Chamaeleon, are ahead of the game, but we think that the rest of the market will have to move towards that as well. Still, to be honest, very surprising to me to see that many significant large players are doing very little still around some of these spaces. They have data scientists. They’re running some tools. They’re running some analysis and all that stuff, but it’s still, again, back to the point I was making for startups, all glued up with chewing gum. It doesn’t all come together nicely, which it does need to from a platform standpoint. Bertrand Schmitt It’s quite surprising. I agree with you that some VC funds might think that they can do business as usual in that brand-new world. It’s difficult to believe. Nuno Goncalves Pedro Maybe moving a little bit toward the capital formation piece. We already discussed the M&A space really accelerating. We’ve also discussed the IPO market and some predictions on that. Secondaries, there’s obviously a lot of liquidity coming from secondaries from mid to late stage. I think it will continue throughout the rest of 2026. A lot of activity in buying, selling in secondaries as some asset managers are becoming more distressed, as some very high net worth individuals and family offices are becoming more distressed as well, at the same time, where there’s a lot of opportunities to potentially arbitrage around some investments. I believe a lot of money will be made and lost this year by decisions made this year, just to be very, very clear in terms of equity, purchases, et cetera. Exciting year ahead of us. Definitely a very, very interesting market ahead of us. Secondaries, M&A, growth, and late-stage investing, also, early-stage investing will continue just for those that were wondering. Last but not least, the public markets, the IPO market as well. Bertrand Schmitt One of the big questions for the IPO market would be, will SpaceX go public? Would it be good for the startup ecosystem? Because suddenly that they go public, it would be to raise money. If they raise money, will there be any money left for anybody else? That would be an interesting test of the market. For sure, it would be proof that market are risk on financing a new IPO like this one. Or as you said, maybe there is no IPO, and it’s a merger with Tesla. Time will tell. Nuno Goncalves Pedro Regulatory & Geopolitical Headwinds… and the Wars Moving maybe to our topic of regulation and geopolitical headwinds, as we’re seeing … definitely not tailwinds. The Google antitrust verdict and, obviously, the remedies are expected to come forward now, and a lot of people are saying, “There are some risks of structural separation.” What do you think? Is it cool, but nothing will happen in the end dramatically? Alphabet or Google? I’m not sure, actually. It’s Google LLC. I think that’s the case. It’s The United States versus Google LLC. Bertrand Schmitt I’m not sure. Personally, I’m not a big fan. I think there needs to be a better way to manage some anticompetitive behavior. I’m not a big fan. There was this temptation to do that for Microsoft 25 years ago. Look at what happened. No one needed to buy Microsoft to leave space for others. I see the same with Google, and I guess they are happy to not be the number 1 in AI today, but to have an open AI in front of them. Even if they are doing a great job, by the way, to move forward and go faster and faster. Personally, quite impressed now with some of what they have released. Gemini 3 is doing great from my perspective. I’m not a big fan of this. I think to be clear, it’s important that bigger companies don’t behave anticompetitively, but at the same time, we need to find the right approach where it’s not about breaking these companies, and it’s also not about forbidding them to do acquisitions. Because then you end up with what NVIDIA just did with a $20 billion acquihire IP licensing type of acquisition, because they didn’t want to have the uncertainties. They didn’t want to wait 1–2 years in order to acquire the people and the technology, so they organised it in a different way. But I don’t like that. I think they should be able to acquire companies without facing so much uncertainty. To be clear, it’s not new. Uncertainty when you are Google, NVIDIA, or others, it happens. It has happened for a decade plus, 2 decades. I think there needs to be, for sure, some safety valves. At the same time, we want an efficient capital market. An efficient capital market need companies that can acquire other companies. If you don’t do that efficiently, it will be worse for the entrepreneurs, it will be worse for the investors, it will be worse for everybody. I think we have not reached a good equilibrium from my perspective. We need more efficient acquisition process. And at the same time, we need to also enforce faster anticompetitive behavior. Because what you talk about concerning Google, this is a case that was what? That is 10 years old. You see what I mean? This is way too long. If you’re a startup, you are dead by then. It’s like the story of Netscape facing Microsoft. They were dead long after the fact. I think we need a different approach. I’m not sure the best answer. I’m not sure we’ll get a better approach. There are probably too many vested interest. My hope is that it will get better with this current administration because, certainly, the past administration was very anti acquisition and efficient markets. Nuno Goncalves Pedro We’ve talked about the European Union AI Act a bunch of times, so I don’t want to spend too many cycles on that. The only effect that I would say is we are seeing in very slow motion the splitting of the Internet. I once had Tim Berners-Lee, by the way, shouting at me that we were going to break the Internet when we were applying for the .mobi top-level domain. I was part of that consortium that eventually did get the .mobi top-level domain, and I had him shouting at us. But, apparently, this is going to split the Internet, Tim. So in case you’re listening. Because it will create all these different rules. If your data is relating to consumers there, then it’s treated in a different way, and The US is… Well, obviously, we have the case of California with its own rules and laws. I don’t know. I feel we’re having a moment of siloing that goes beyond economic and geopolitical siloing. It will also apply to the digital world, and we’ll start having different landscapes around it. We’ll see how this affects global expansion of services, for example, around AI, particularly for consumer, but I don’t foresee anything dramatically positive. Recently, we had the whole deal around TikTok finally having a solution for their US problem where there’s now a US conglomerate magically that owns it. The conglomerate doesn’t magically own it, they just straight up own it for the US. But it was driven by many of these concerns around data ownership. Where’s the data? Where is it based? I think a lot of other concerns that have to do with the geopolitics of China, obviously, being the basis of ByteDance, the owner of TikTok, that still is a significant owner, by the way, in TikTok in US. Then also the interest in the economics of making money out of something as powerful as TikTok, to be honest, in The US. Just to be clear, I don’t think this was all about the best interests of consumers. It was also about money. Just follow the money. Bertrand Schmitt There are for sure, some powerful interest at play. But let’s be clear. I think one is data, as you rightfully said, but the other one is algorithm. It’s not as if China is authorising any competitor on its territory. They have blocked access to most of the Internet platforms from the US, either finding new rules or just trade blocking them. So I don’t think it’s fair competition. You don’t want some of that data in China about the US or European consumer. Three, it’s about the algorithm. If suddenly, you are a foreign power, and you can as we know in China, you better follow what’s required of you from the Chinese Communist Party. You cannot take a chance with influencing other stuff like elections in other countries. It’s fair from the US perspective. One could even argue it’s fair from a Chinese perspective to want that. I think the only one in the middle who doesn’t really know what they want is Europe because on one side, they want to benefit from American platforms, on the other end, they want to have some controls. On the other end, they don’t create the environment for startups to flourish. So in that weird situation where they have to accept some control by the big US providers and either provider of underlying infrastructure or provider of consumer business facing services. Then they try to regulate them. But I think they are misunderstanding the power relationship, and I think some of this regulation would get some blowback, at least by the current administration. Just, I believe, this morning, there was some news around X being under a criminal investigation in France. This is not going to end well for the French startup and VC ecosystem. This is not going to end well for France and Europe when you depend so much from your American friends. Nuno Goncalves Pedro Regulation will be weaponised. Regulation constraints around exports, all of this will be weaponised geopolitically, and the bigger guys will normally win. I think that’s normally what we’ve seen. Just on TikTok just to… And you guys, if you’re listening to us, just see if you see a pattern here, but obviously, 19.9% still owned by ByteDance of the TikTok entity in the US. It was initially said that 80% of the TikTok entity is owned by non-Chinese investors. Initially, people were saying US investors, and then they changed it to non-Chinese because MGX, I think, has 15% of it. MGX is based in the UAE, connected obviously to Mubadala, the Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund. Silver Lake is in there, I think, with 15% as well. Oracle as well with 15%. Those three are the big bucket owners together, 45%. Silver Lake having collaborated with MGX before, and I’m sure a lot of connectivity there. Then you still see a pattern in this in terms of shareholders. If you don’t, then just Google it. Dell Family Office, Vastmir Strategic Investments, which is owned by billionaire Jeff Yass, Alpha Wave Partners, obviously involved with a bunch of things like SpaceX and Klarna, Virgoli, Revolution, which is Steve Case’s, a former founder of AOL, is also in there. Meritway, which is managed by partners, I think, of Dragonair. Vinova from General Atlantic, an affiliate of General Atlantic. Also, NJJ Capital, which I believe is Xavier Nil, the French billionaire that founded Iliad. Mostly American, I think, if the math is correct. 80% non-Chinese, which was what mattered, I think, in many cases. But do see if you saw a pattern in most of those investors. I won’t say anything more than that. Maybe moving to other topics, maybe just to finalise on regulation and geopolitics. In geopolitics, we should talk about wars if we predict anything. Not that we are nasty and one want to be negative, but what the hell is going on? Will we have ending to the wars we already have ongoing or not? But before that, the struggles on the App Stores, I think, will continue both for Apple and for Google Play Store. The writing’s on the wall, the EU keeps pushing it dramatically and Apple keeps just doing stuff. I’m on the board of an App Store company. Apple just creates all these things that basically make you not really… It doesn’t work. You can’t provision then an App Store on Apple devices. On iPhones, et cetera. We’ll see how that will continue going, but I feel the writing’s on the wall. Both Apple and Google will have to open up a bit more of their platforms. I’m not sure it will have a huge impact in the medium to long term, but definitely we need to see more openness in access to apps as given by the two big platform owners, Apple and Google, out there. Bertrand Schmitt Let’s be clear. Google is way more open than Apple. We both have Android devices. You can install alternative app stores. It’s a different ballgame by very far. Nuno Goncalves Pedro Google does other nasty stuff. It’s public. You can check which board I’m a part of. You can see what that company has done towards Google over time. But to your point, yes. It is true that Google has been more open than Apple, but Google has done their own things. Just to be very clear, so I’ll just leave that caveat bracketed there for people to think about it and maybe read a little bit about it as well. Bertrand Schmitt I can say that, me, from my perspective, that path of total control that Apple has been going through on all their devices, that includes macOS, pushed me to, over the past 2, 3 years, to completely live and abandon the Apple ecosystem. I just couldn’t accept that level of control, that golden handcuff approach of the Apple ecosystem, each their own obviously, they are golden, their handcuffs, but they are still handcuffs. Personally, that pushed me way more to Linux, Android, Windows, back to Windows after all these years. I just couldn’t stand it anymore. I want to pick my devices. I want to pick what I install on them, and I don’t want to be controlled like this by just one entity for all my tech devices. For me, at some point, it was just not acceptable anymore. It’s still very warm, very golden handcuffs, but for me, they were just handcuffs at this stage. Yes, what they are doing with the App Store is very typical of that mindset. I think it’s quite sad because I think it started with good intention in some ways. “We need a new computing paradigm, we need to make things smoother and safer,” but it has really become a way to control your clients. For me, it has reached a point where it’s just way too much. Nuno Goncalves Pedro There’s obviously the great power comes great responsibility that uncle Ben told Spider-Man or Peter Parker. But there’s also with great power comes shitload of money, and control. So it’s like, “Yeah. Should we open the server? Do we want to delay opening it up?” “Yeah.” Anyway, it is what it is. Maybe let’s end on the more difficult note of the episode, which is going to be around wars. What’s our prediction? Will we have an end to the Gaza situation with Israel? Will we have an end to Ukraine and, obviously, Russia? What will happen in Iran? Those are the three big, big conflicts right now. Then, obviously, if we want to add just bonus points, what’s going to happen to Greenland, and what’s going to happen to Taiwan, and what’s going to happen to Venezuela? Let’s throw the whole basket in there. We’ve never had like… Let’s talk about all these territories and all these countries. At some point in time, I’m saying this in a light manner, but it’s obviously more tragic than it should be light, and people are dying, and there’s a lot of implications of all of that that is happening right now. Do you have any predictions, Bertrand, for this year? Bertrand Schmitt No. It’s tough to predict on an individual basis. I think on a more bigger picture basis is on one side, obviously, the rise of China on one side. You have also the rise of other countries like India, while very indirectly connected to some of these conflicts are still part of the game, buying oil from Russia, for instance. At the same time, I think overall, the US is more clear about with the sheriff in town. I think it’s good because in some ways, you cannot pay for the goods, you cannot have such a massive advantage versus nearly every other country on earth and just not be clear about who is the boss in some ways. As a result, what are the rules of the game and how it should be played? The US is not alone, obviously, you have China, you have Russia, you have India, you have Europe. You have different other countries. But at some point, it’s not good when countries are not rational and are not clear. I think I prefer the current situation where things are more clear and where you have to assume responsibilities about what you are doing. It’s time to be rational again about how the world behave. Yes, the concept of power and balance of power. I think there has been that dream, maybe mostly coming from Europe, about the end of history. I think that’s simply not the case. It’s not the end of history. It’s still about the balance of power. It has always been about the balance of power. If you are dumb enough to think it was not about that anymore, I just have a bridge to nowhere to sell you. I don’t have specific prediction, but I think it’s clear there is a new sheriff in town. There is a new doctrine about the Western Hemisphere that has been in some ways resurrected on the [inaudible 00:51:35] train, and I think we’ll see more of it. I think at this point, the biggest question is for the Europeans. What do they want to do? Because right now, their position of being a dwarf militarily while being a pretty big giant economically, I don’t think it works. Nuno Goncalves Pedro I agreed on everything that you said. I do have predictions. I’ll stick a flag on the ground just with my predictions. Bertrand Schmitt Good luck. Nuno Goncalves Pedro They are mostly positive. I do think we’ll see an end or, for the most, end to the two big conflicts, the one in Gaza and the one in Ukraine. I think Ukraine will end up in readjustment of territory and splitting between Russia and the Ukraine, but the end of hostilities, I think that we will see an end to the conflict in Gaza also with a readjustment on what that will mean for the Palestinian territories and the Palestinians in general. That I’m not sure, but I feel that there will be an end to those two big conflicts. Iran, I have no clue. I will not put a stick on the ground that I have no clue. There are so many things that could go wrong there. I’ve been reading some really interesting thoughts about even some aggressive thoughts that this might be the time to really change regimes in Iran and for the US to have a bit more of an aggressive stance. I really don’t have a perspective. Obviously, there’s a lot at stake there. Then, if we talk about the other parts, Greenland, I will not opine too much on. Maybe we’re done for now. Maybe there’ll be some other concessions to the US that weren’t already there in the ’50s. Taiwan, I won’t bet either. I’m sad to say I think it might happen at some point in time, but I’m not sure when and what would drive it. Last but not the least, Venezuela is my only really negative prediction. I feel it will continue to be a significant dictatorship as it was before managed enough by other people with the difference now that it has a tax to be paid to the US in the form of oil of some sort, etcetera, and maybe gas, maybe other things as well that it didn’t have before. That’s probably my most negative prediction for the coming year on the geopolitical side. Bertrand Schmitt Without going into detail, I would mostly agree with what you shared. At least that makes sense. But as we know, it’s not always what makes sense, but what might happen. I can tell you 100% I would not have guessed this operation against Maduro. This was so well done, well executed, and shocking at the same time that it’s… I think it shows that it’s hard to guess some of this stuff because there are certainly some new ways to wage limited war, for instance. So it’s certainly interesting, and we certainly need to get used to pretty bombastic statements. But for Venezuela, I don’t think it can be worse than what it was before. I’m probably more optimistic that gradually it can get better. Nuno Goncalves Pedro Just to put perspective on why we’re not making predictions on some of these elements, I think this is a funny story, but I was in Madeira. Actually, first time I was in Madeira, although I’m originally from Portugal. I’ve never been to the islands. Obviously, as you guys know, or some of you might know, there’s a lot of connection between Madeira and Venezuela. There’s a lot of immigration from Madeira Islands to Venezuela. One of my Uber or Bolt drivers there in Madeira was Venezuelan. Was born in Venezuela, but Portuguese descent, et cetera. He was telling me this was still last year. Late last year. Because I told him I lived in US, et cetera, and he was like, “Oh, hopefully, Trump will get Maduro out of there.” In my mind, I was like, “Dude.” No disrespect to the gentleman, but it’s like, “Okay. Mike, your perspective on geopolitics is maybe a little bit exaggerated.” And a couple of days later, we know what happened. When geopolitical decisions are better predicted by some probably very astute Uber drivers, you’re like, “Maybe I shouldn’t make a bet. I have no clue what’s going to happen, no clue what’s going to happen in Greenland, et cetera.” Anyway, a couple of predictions on that element. Bertrand Schmitt That’s why it’s so right. You have to be careful with the prediction, but it doesn’t remove the fact that I think nations and companies that have to play a global game have to understand in some ways what is the game, what are the powers in place, what could happen potentially, but also be realistic. Not be about wish and dreams, but more about, what’s the power relationship? Who has the money? Who has the means? Who has the capacity to do this or that? Because if you start that way, at least the scope of what’s possible, what’s reasonable is more and more clear more quickly. Some stuff like happened with Maduro, I would never have predicted, but for sure, if there’s one country that can do this sort of stuff, it’s the US. I’m not sure anyone has a technology and the means in terms of support infrastructure to do something like this. It’s tough to predict what will happen a year from now for any specific country, but I think that even trying to get a better understanding about the forces in play and their capacity and understanding and accepting that at some point, it’s all about real politic and relationship of power, the more your eyes would be wide open about what’s possible versus simple, wishful thinking. Nuno Goncalves Pedro Fintech, Crypto and Frontier Tech Moving maybe to our last section around fintech, crypto, and frontier tech. For me, just two very quick predictions, views of the world. I think on the frontier tech side, I won’t make a prediction. I will just tell you all to go and listen to our episodes, the one on infrastructure, which is immediately prior to this one, and the episodes that we’ve had around a couple of other topics including AI, what’s the future of your children, because I think they illustrate a lot of the points that we’re seeing and manifesting themselves over the next year and over the next 2 or 3 years as well beyond that. I feel those tomes are complete in and out of themselves, so you can just go and listen to them. Then my second comment is on crypto. I feel crypto has become of the essence, particularly under the current administration in the US, very favored. Obviously, we are now in a world where crypto is just part of the economic system, and I think we’ll see more and more of that emerging, and in some ways, crypto is becoming mainstream. Question is what blockchains will be the blockchains of the future? Obviously, there’s a bunch of bets put out there. We, ourselves, as Chamaeleon, have one investment in one of the significant bets in the space. But besides that, who’s going to win or not, we feel that we’re past the crypto winter. It’s now mainstream days, and we’ll see a lot more activity in there. Bertrand Schmitt I must say with crypto, I’m a bit confused. As you say, we are past the crypto winter. There is much less uncertainty in regul

radYU
Chipset #55

radYU

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2026 45:56


Chipset'te, Yaşar Üniversitesi Bilgisayar Mühendisliği Bölümü mezunları Fatih Canbekli ve Melisa Ronay Seven, hayatımızın vazgeçilmezi teknolojiye dair son gelişmeleri eğlenceli yorumlarıyla bizlere aktarmaya devam ediyor.

chipset bilgisayar m
Engadget
Broadcom announced an AI chipset that translates audio in real time, Meta is killing off the external Facebook Like button, and Ford's F-150 Lightning may be sunset

Engadget

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2025 6:48


-Broadcom and a company called CAMB.AI are teaming up to bring on-device audio translation to a chipset. This would allow devices that use the SoC to complete translation, dubbing and audio description tasks without having to dip into the cloud. -Next year will see the end arrive for two of Facebook's external social plugins. The platform's Like button and Share button for third-party websites will be discontinued on February 10, 2026. -Ford may be on the verge of sunsetting the F-150 Lightning truck. The model is an electric pick-up truck, and the best-selling one in the US, but the publication cited Ford execs who said the company would consider halting production completely on the F-150 Lightning. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The Retro Hour (Retro Gaming Podcast)
505: “I Presented the Amiga Chipset to Atari… and Everyone Freaked Out!” - Atari's Matt Householder - The Retro Hour Podcast EP505

The Retro Hour (Retro Gaming Podcast)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2025 116:47


From hating Pong to working for Atari, this week we chat with Matt Householder.  From his early days at Gaming Devices Inc. and designing the arcade classic Krull, through to joining Atari right after the video game crash and witnessing the dramatic Amiga chipset saga from the inside. Matt reveals what it was really like working under Jack Tramiel, converting GEM for the Atari ST in record time, and why developers had to sell snacks from their desks just to survive. He then takes us into the golden years at Epyx, creating World Games and the smash hit California Games, before moving on to 3DO, where a secret project he managed ended up helping fund Diablo. Contents: 00:00 - The Week's Retro News Stories  54:26 - Matt Householder Interview  Please visit our amazing sponsors and help to support the show: Doncaster Gaming Market: https://www.doncastergamingmarket.com/ Bitmap Books - https://www.bitmapbooks.com Check out PCBWay at https://pcbway.com for all your PCB needs Take your business to the next level today and enjoy 3 months of Shopify for £1/month: https://shopify.co.uk/retrohour We need your help to ensure the future of the podcast, if you'd like to help us with running costs, equipment and hosting, please consider supporting us on Patreon: https://theretrohour.com/support/ https://www.patreon.com/retrohour Join our Discord channel: https://discord.gg/GQw8qp8 Website: http://theretrohour.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theretrohour/ X: https://twitter.com/retrohouruk Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/retrohouruk/ Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/theretrohour.com Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/theretrohour Show notes Solid Aluminium Xbox Prototype Actually Works: https://youtu.be/0OMP8JvGWNY Lost Destruction Derby 2 Saturn Prototype Unearthed: https://tinyurl.com/5c75zhxa James Pond Makes a Comeback on Modern Consoles: https://tinyurl.com/2s4j38wd Castlevania Amiga Remake Gets CD32 Upgrade: https://tinyurl.com/47624rsa Castlevania Comes to the Atari 2600 (!): https://tinyurl.com/2k5ub8f5 Sonic Finally Lands on the GX4000: https://tinyurl.com/bdm5svj2 Worms Turns 30 – Team17's Classic Celebrated: https://tinyurl.com/mrvtutnc

Fülke: a HVG Online közéleti podcastja
Ételfüggő vagyok, ha alig várom, hogy este befaljak egy zacskó chipset? I Kösz, jól

Fülke: a HVG Online közéleti podcastja

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2025 95:18


Miben más az ételfüggőség, mint egy alkohol- vagy drogfüggőség? Hogy hat a stressz és a trauma az étkezési szokásainkra? Tényleg létezik cukorfüggőség, vagy ez csak egy modern mítosz? Hogyan vegyük észre a tüneteket és kihez forduljunk, ha változtatnánk? Többek között ezekre a kérdésekre kereste a válasz Bánhalmi Kata vendégeivel, Rákóczi Gabriella anyagcserekutató és dietetikussal, valamint Oczella Péter pszichiáterrel. Az egészséges életmód és a pénztárcabarát árak támogatója a PENNY. Iratkozz fel a Kösz, jól csatornájára! Spotify: tiny.cc/KoszJolSpotify Apple Podcasts: tiny.cc/KoszJolApple Hallgasd meg a HVG többi podcastját! Spotify: tiny.cc/HVGpodcastokSpotify Apple Podcasts: tiny.cc/HVGpodcastokApple 00:00 Intro 01:06 Válhatunk valóban ételfüggővé? 05:46 Jutalmazás, marketing és mértéktelen fogyasztás 11:50 Ki érintett az ételfüggőség által? 23:03 Mik azok a lelki okok, amik ételfüggőséghez vezethetnek? 28:27 Megoldási lehetőségek a diéta mellett 35:33 Az inzulin- és a cukorszint hogyan hat a sóvárgásra? 39:13 A kortizol-függőség valóban vezethet ételfüggéshez is, megoldja ezt a kortizol-detox? 48:51 Aki nem szeret mások előtt enni, az szorong? 53:58 Az ételfüggés lehet akadálya az életmódváltásnak? 59:31 A megfelelő diéta tud segíteni egy autoimmun betegség kezelésében? 1:04:12 Mit jelent a ketózis és a ketogén diéta? 1:16:58 Hogy lehet megkülönböztetni az éhséget az ételfüggőségtől? 1:18:00 Mennyi idő alatt lehet tompítani ezeket a tüneteket, mik az első lépések? 1:27:53 Hogy működhet az egy hetes cukorelvonás? 1:30:59 Mi miatt érdemes odafigyelni a táplálkozásunkra?

Brad & Will Made a Tech Pod.
260: CPUs Have Been Juicing for Too Long

Brad & Will Made a Tech Pod.

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2024 87:57


It's been a wild few months in CPUs, with next-generation releases from both AMD and Intel in their respective Zen 5 and Arrow Lake categories. Now that most all the big parts are out, we break down what's what, including why everyone is finally going disaggregated (and what that means), what's going on with OS updates to make your processor run faster, which one to get if you just want to play games, what the new CU-DIMM standard means for RAM, and more. Support the Pod! Contribute to the Tech Pod Patreon and get access to our booming Discord, a monthly bonus episode, your name in the credits, and other great benefits! You can support the show at: https://patreon.com/techpod

China Chat: Der China-Gadgets Podcast
Xiaomi 15 Ultra: Wie man Samsung ENDLICH hinter sich lässt

China Chat: Der China-Gadgets Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2024 56:17


Zum nächsten Xiaomi Top-Modell ist einiges bekannt geworden, wir schauen uns die bisherigen Leaks an. Das neue Huawei Flip-Smartphone hat bei uns Vorfreude geweckt, die nun aber nicht ganz anhalten konnte. Nach zahlreichen Leaks hat Google jetzt den TV Streamer 4K veröffentlicht, der dann doch ein paar Fragen offen lässt. Angebot der Woche: congstar Prepaid Jahrespaket: 120GB 5G/LTE Allnet für einmalig 90€ ► https://www.communicationads.net/tc.php?t=12912C31345040T Xiaomi 15 Ultra to Debut with New 7X Periscope Camera and Snapdragon 8 Gen 4 Chipset ► https://gsmchina.com/xiaomi-15-ultra-7x-periscope-camera-and-snapdragon-8-gen-4-9045/ Snapdragon 8 Gen 4: Neue Super-CPU mit Nuvia-Cores im Benchmark ► https://winfuture.de/news,144362.html? Xiaomi 15 Ultra Will Feature Whopping 6000mAh+ Battery ► https://gsmchina.com/xiaomi-15-ultra-battery-specs-leak-8991/ Xiaomi 15 Ultra will have dual-layer OLED display and 24GB RAM, claims tipster ► https://www.gizmochina.com/2024/07/28/xiaomi-15-ultra-dual-layer-oled-24gb-ram-battery-leak/ Xiaomi 15 Ultrasonic Fingerprint Scanner ► https://x.com/That_Kartikey/status/1798085474260787444 Xiaomi HyperOS 2.0 Effizienter? ► https://x.com/That_Kartikey/status/1797242265909248310 Huawei nova Flip debuts with 6.94" LTPO OLED, 4,400 mAh battery ► https://www.gsmarena.com/huawei_nova_flip_debuts_with_694inch_ltpo_oled_4400_mah_battery_and_66w_charging-news-63995.php Huawei MateBook GT 14: So trickst man sich eine Grafikkarte ► https://www.china-gadgets.de/huawei-matebook-gt-14/ The Google TV Streamer is a 4K streaming box that doubles as a smart home hub ► https://www.androidfaithful.com/google-tv-streamer/ Apple Watch SE: Plastik und in bunt? ► https://www.heise.de/news/Apple-Watch-SE-Plastik-und-in-bunt-9824374.html Exclusive: Google Pixel 9 has a new weather app, here's what it looks like ► https://www.androidauthority.com/google-pixel-9-weather-app-3467819/ Paris 2024: Olympic Fans Experience the Thrill of the Sailing Competition With Galaxy S24 Ultra ► https://news.samsung.com/global/paris-2024-olympic-fans-experience-the-thrill-of-the-sailing-competition-with-galaxy-s24-ultra Geoff Lowe Olympia ► https://www.instagram.com/geofflowe/profilecard/?igsh=bGo2b2Z6cmE0Njh2 Fallout ► https://www.amazon.de/gp/video/detail/amzn1.dv.gti.8276269a-402e-4ece-a2b0-4eb5e2504a05?tag=cgtg-21

The Hardware Unboxed Podcast
No Zen 5 Pricing (!?), Weird Performance Claims, Dodgy B840 Chipset

The Hardware Unboxed Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2024 82:16


Episode 38: A lengthy discussion about all the latest Zen 5 information, including the lack of pricing, some weird performance claims, and new potentially misleading chipsets. Also we tackle some CPU rumors and chat about Star Wars.CHAPTERS00:00 - Intro00:40 - Our Good Choice Not to Attend the Zen 5 Tech Day14:25 - No Zen 5 Pricing!?26:03 - The B840 Chipset Looks a Bit Dodgy36:59 - Bizarre Zen 5 Performance Claims42:58 - Some CPU Rumors59:13 - Updates From Our Boring LivesSUBSCRIBE TO THE PODCASTAudio: https://shows.acast.com/the-hardware-unboxed-podcastVideo: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqT8Vb3jweH6_tj2SarErfwSUPPORT US DIRECTLYPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/hardwareunboxedFloatplane: https://www.floatplane.com/channel/HardwareUnboxedLINKSYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@Hardwareunboxed/Twitter: https://twitter.com/HardwareUnboxed Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Spatial Realities (zuvor: Metaverse Podcast)
E078 - Der Talk - Samsung Headset Leak, Deutschlandstart Apple Vision Pro, Meta Ocean, Bitkom Metaverse Umfrage, 5 Jahre Games & XR Mitteldeutschland e.V., viel XR auf der Gamescom 2024!

Spatial Realities (zuvor: Metaverse Podcast)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2024 95:06


Wir werden Samsungs Headset noch dieses Jahr zu sehen bekommen! Das sagt zumindest die aktuelle Gerüchteküche über das neue XR-Headset in Kooperation mit Googles Android XR und Qualcomm's Chips. Thomas R fühlt sich da an die gute alte Zeit der ersten Android-Phones erinnert, als es endlich eine Alternative zum teuren iPhone gab. Etwas irritierend ist bislang, das wir noch keinerlei Infos zum Headset haben, außer Mutmaßungen zum Chipset und den Displays. Es gibt noch keine Leaks, noch nicht mal absichtliche. Darum hält sich der Hype auch noch in Grenzen. Wir sind gespannt! Solange können jene mal die Apple Vision Pro austesten, die bisher noch nicht auf einem der Meetups waren, auf denen die Early Adopter die Brillen aus den USA vorgezeigt haben. Denn ab sofort ist die Brille nicht nur im Apple Store auszuprobieren, sondern auch käuflich zu erwerben. Dazu passt die Meldung aus den USA, dass sich das Headset dort wohl überhaupt nicht verkaufen soll. Eine leichtere und billigere Variante wird von Apple wohl schon entwickelt. Weitere News: Metas Ocean, Quest 2 ist ausverkauft, kein Meta Gaming Showcase vor der Connect, Die Bitkom Studie zum Metaverse, Games & XR Mitteldeutschland e.V. ist 5 Jahre alt geworden, XR Förderprogramme in der Übersicht, Gamescom, Gamescom Gamescom!

MacVoices Audio
MacVoices #24178: MVL - Apple's Direction For the Vision Pro

MacVoices Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2024 23:37


The MacVoices Live! panel of Chuck Joiner, David Ginsburg, Brian Flanigan-Arthurs, Marty Jencius, Jim Rea, Web Bixby, Jeff Gamet, Eric Bolden, and Mark Fuccio look at the veracity and logic of reports that Apple's plans for the evolution of the Vision Pro have changed. Factors discussed included the source of the rumors, Apple's strategic planning, technical insights into chip sets and processing power, and more.  Show Notes: Chapters: 00:00 Introduction to MacVoices 03:02 Introductions and Aquatic Expertise 11:20 Debunking Speculation on Apple's Plans 14:16 Analyzing Apple's Cost Strategies 17:03 Debate on Vision Pro Integration with iPhone 20:39 Defining the Vision Pro Platform Links: Report: Apple halts work on Vision Pro, aims to release cheaper Vision headset next year  https://9to5mac.com/2024/06/18/apple-vision-cheaper-halts-work-pro-model-headset/ Guests: Web Bixby has been in the insurance business for 40 years and has been an Apple user for longer than that.You can catch up with him on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn. Eric Bolden is into macOS, plants, sci-fi, food, and is a rural internet supporter. You can connect with him on Twitter, by email at embolden@mac.com, on Mastodon at @eabolden@techhub.social, on his blog, Trending At Work, and as co-host on The Vision ProFiles podcast. Brian Flanigan-Arthurs is an educator with a passion for providing results-driven, innovative learning strategies for all students, but particularly those who are at-risk. He is also a tech enthusiast who has a particular affinity for Apple since he first used the Apple IIGS as a student. You can contact Brian on twitter as @brian8944. He also recently opened a Mastodon account at @brian8944@mastodon.cloud. Mark Fuccio is actively involved in high tech startup companies, both as a principle at piqsure.com, or as a marketing advisor through his consulting practice Tactics Sells High Tech, Inc. Mark was a proud investor in Microsoft from the mid-1990's selling in mid 2000, and hopes one day that MSFT will be again an attractive investment. You can contact Mark through Twitter, LinkedIn, or on Mastodon. Jeff Gamet is a technology blogger, podcaster, author, and public speaker. Previously, he was The Mac Observer's Managing Editor, and the TextExpander Evangelist for Smile. He has presented at Macworld Expo, RSA Conference, several WordCamp events, along with many other conferences. You can find him on several podcasts such as The Mac Show, The Big Show, MacVoices, Mac OS Ken, This Week in iOS, and more. Jeff is easy to find on social media as @jgamet on Twitter and Instagram, jeffgamet on LinkedIn., @jgamet@mastodon.social on Mastodon, and on his YouTube Channel at YouTube.com/jgamet. David Ginsburg is the host of the weekly podcast In Touch With iOS where he discusses all things iOS, iPhone, iPad, Apple TV, Apple Watch, and related technologies. He is an IT professional supporting Mac, iOS and Windows users. Visit his YouTube channel at https://youtube.com/daveg65 and find and follow him on Twitter @daveg65 and on Mastodon at @daveg65@mastodon.cloud. Dr. Marty Jencius has been an Associate Professor of Counseling at Kent State University since 2000. He has over 120 publications in books, chapters, journal articles, and others, along with 200 podcasts related to counseling, counselor education, and faculty life. His technology interest led him to develop the counseling profession ‘firsts,' including listservs, a web-based peer-reviewed journal, The Journal of Technology in Counseling, teaching and conferencing in virtual worlds as the founder of Counselor Education in Second Life, and podcast founder/producer of CounselorAudioSource.net and ThePodTalk.net. Currently, he produces a podcast about counseling and life questions, the Circular Firing Squad, and digital video interviews with legacies capturing the history of the counseling field. This is also co-host of The Vision ProFiles podcast. Generally, Marty is chasing the newest tech trends, which explains his interest in A.I. for teaching, research, and productivity. Marty is an active presenter and past president of the NorthEast Ohio Apple Corp (NEOAC). Jim Rea built his own computer from scratch in 1975, started programming in 1977, and has been an independent Mac developer continuously since 1984. He is the founder of ProVUE Development, and the author of Panorama X, ProVUE's ultra fast RAM based database software for the macOS platform. He's been a speaker at MacTech, MacWorld Expo and other industry conferences. Follow Jim at provue.com and via @provuejim@techhub.social on Mastodon. Support:      Become a MacVoices Patron on Patreon      http://patreon.com/macvoices      Enjoy this episode? Make a one-time donation with PayPal Connect:      Web:      http://macvoices.com      Twitter:      http://www.twitter.com/chuckjoiner      http://www.twitter.com/macvoices      Mastodon:      https://mastodon.cloud/@chuckjoiner      Facebook:      http://www.facebook.com/chuck.joiner      MacVoices Page on Facebook:      http://www.facebook.com/macvoices/      MacVoices Group on Facebook:      http://www.facebook.com/groups/macvoice      LinkedIn:      https://www.linkedin.com/in/chuckjoiner/      Instagram:      https://www.instagram.com/chuckjoiner/ Subscribe:      Audio in iTunes      Video in iTunes      Subscribe manually via iTunes or any podcatcher:      Audio: http://www.macvoices.com/rss/macvoicesrss      Video: http://www.macvoices.com/rss/macvoicesvideorss

Filipe Deschamps News
Mecanismo para brigar com o Google / GPT Store da OpenAI / Novo chipset da Qualcomm

Filipe Deschamps News

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2024 4:32


Notícias que chamaram a nossa atenção nesta sexta-feira dia 05 de janeiro de 2024! Reprodução em áudio do e-mail recebido diariamente pela Newsletters (newsletter@filipedeschamps.com) Newsletter gratuita sobre Tecnologia e Programação: https://filipedeschamps.com.br/newsletter #news #noticias #fdnews #robsonamendonca

Tech&Co
IA : OpenAI envisage de développer ses puces - 09/10

Tech&Co

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2023 24:23


Lundi 9 octobre, Frédéric Simottel a reçu Lucas Perraudin, fondateur de Mula Digital ; Hugo Borensztein, cofondateur et président d'Omi et Damien Douani, responsable de l'innovation de l'école Narrativ. Ils se sont penché sur OpenAi qui veut se projeter dans le développement de ses propres chipset ; la proposition du Japon de travailler ensemble avec l'UE ainsi que sur la menaces de Google visant à bloquer les médias d'infos canadiens, dans l'émission Tech & Co, la quotidienne, sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au jeudi et réécoutez la en podcast.

Tech&Co
Chipset et 5G : la guerre continue – 30/08

Tech&Co

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2023 23:36


Mercredi 30 août, Frédéric Simottel a reçu Luc Julia, directeur scientifique de Renault Group et co-créateur de Siri ; Yves Maître, operating partner Jolt capital et consultant, ancien CEO de HTC, et Michel Levy Provençal, entrepreneur et fondateur de TEDxParis. Ils ont parlé de la guerre commerciale qui continue à propos de chipset et de 5G, dans l'émission Tech & Co, la quotidienne, sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au jeudi et réécoutez la en podcast.

Adafruit Industries
The Great Search: Bluetooth LE Modules with nRF5 Chipset

Adafruit Industries

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2023 10:39


This week we've been doing some more toy hacking on a 2017 edition Teddy Ruxpin (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teddy_Ruxpin) - this toy has a SONIX SN7001 plus an nRF51 module (https://media.defcon.org/DEF%20CON%2026/DEF%20CON%2026%20presentations/DEFCON-26-Amir-Etemadieh-Zenofex-Dissecting-Teddy-Ruxpin-Reverse-Engineering-the-Smart%20Bear.pdf) for the Bluetooth LE connectivity to an app. Why not an all-in-one BLE chipset? Well perhaps now-a-days you'd be able to run the whole thing off of an nRF52 or nRF53 but at the time the SONIX chip was probably a well-trod core for many toys, with ready-to-go SDK and a Cortex M4 for audio / graphics handling, and the nRF51 was one of the only reliable BLE chips available. You may also want to add BLE to an existing design, DigiKey has lots of BLE modules that you can use either for standalone or as a 'BLE friend forever' - a.k.a. BFF! Let's check out what's available for your modulating needs. See on DigiKey at https://www.digikey.com/short/bbw04mfh

Bit-Rauschen: Der Prozessor-Podcast von c’t
Die Technik aktueller PC-Mainboards | Bit-Rauschen 2023/9

Bit-Rauschen: Der Prozessor-Podcast von c’t

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2023 57:40


Das Mainboard beeinflusst außer der CPU-Performance auch, wie leise und sparsam der PC läuft. Darüber sprechen wir im Podcast Bit-Rauschen, Folge 2023/9.

PC Perspective Podcast
Podcast #717 - Ryzen 7 7800X3D is THE ONE, A620 Chipset, Cyberpunk Overdrive = New Crysis, Phanteks Shift XT + MORE!

PC Perspective Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2023 79:12


Boeing didn't release a 717. Ok, yes they did. I just looked it up. BUT WE DID, TOO. Sure, podcasts aren't airplanes. However, they can still take you on a wild ride through various topics (with frequent digressions). You will be enthralled. How could you not? Just look at those topics in the list thingy below.Timestamps:00:00 Intro01:50 Burger of the Week03:29 AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D is THE ONE14:28 AMD launching A620 chipset (plus PCIe Gen5 discussion)23:02 Podcast sponsor - Bloomberg Careers24:16 The ASUS ROG Ally is no joke26.56 Falcon Northwest's massive DRX desktop replacement laptop28:58 AMD makes another attempt at simplifying mobile branding32:07 Computing and Graphics leadership change at AMD33:01 e-file malware - just in time for tax season!37:06 Cyberpunk 2077 Overdrive is the new Crysis?40:11 Jeremy Malventano's SK hynix Platinum P41 review54:44 Kent's epic Phanteks EVOLV Shift XT review1:18:32 Picks of the Week1:28:23 Outro ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

Audio News
NUEVO CHIPSET PARA RYZEN SERIE 7000

Audio News

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2023 3:15


AMD anunció este 31 de marzo, el lanzamiento de su nuevo chipset A620, con el que los usuarios conseguirán aprovechar la potencia de los Procesadores Ryzen Serie 7000 dentro de la plataforma Socket AM5 y admite procesadores con un TDP de 65W, lo que significa contar con modelos con un consumo máximo de energía de 88 W (PPT).

The Shared Security Show
Samsung Chipset Zero-Day Vulnerabilities, AI-Assisted Social Engineering, ATM Fraud with a Twist

The Shared Security Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2023 21:09


In this episode we discuss Google's discovery of 18 zero-day vulnerabilities in Samsung's Exynos chipsets. We examine an AI-assisted social engineering campaign that combines emerging technologies with classic techniques. Finally, we look at a new method of ATM fraud where thieves use glue to disable card readers and trick customers into using the tap function […] The post Samsung Chipset Zero-Day Vulnerabilities, AI-Assisted Social Engineering, ATM Fraud with a Twist appeared first on Shared Security Podcast.

Paul's Security Weekly TV
PassTheHash from Outlook, RCE in Modem Chipset, OpenSSH Sandboxes, Curl's Anniversary - ASW #233

Paul's Security Weekly TV

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2023 40:11


Outlook can leak NTLM hashes, potential RCE in a chipset for Wi-Fi calling in phones (and autos!?), the design of OpenSSH's sandboxes, more on the direction of OWASP, celebrating 25 years of Curl.   Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/asw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/asw233

Application Security Weekly (Video)
PassTheHash from Outlook, RCE in Modem Chipset, OpenSSH Sandboxes, Curl's Anniversary - ASW #233

Application Security Weekly (Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2023 40:11


Outlook can leak NTLM hashes, potential RCE in a chipset for Wi-Fi calling in phones (and autos!?), the design of OpenSSH's sandboxes, more on the direction of OWASP, celebrating 25 years of Curl.   Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/asw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/asw233

Phones Show Chat
Phones Show Chat episode 739 ("Mike Warner, Chipset Masterclass",12/03/2023)

Phones Show Chat

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2023 88:30


Phones Show Chat 739 - Show Notes Steve Litchfield and Ted Salmon with Mike Warner MeWe Groups Join Links PSC - PSC Photos - PSC Classifieds - Steve - Ted Feedback and Contributions Easy Voice Recorder and WAV Recordings Google's Magic Eraser is now available in Google Photos Google VPN now available for Google One Subscribers Broadly Seven Years Later Fairphone 2 Receives its Last Software Update Device Week Google Pixel 6a Android 14 Developer Preview Android Flash Tool Everything new in Android 14 Developer Preview 2 Xiaomi 13 Honor showcases industry first silicon-carbon battery with longer runtimes Prototype Xiaomi 13 unit offers 6,000 mAh battery with breakthrough solid-state battery technology Geekbench: Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 is far superior to Apple iPhone chips Samsung Galaxy Z Fold4 XtremeSkins Sony Xperia 1 Mk.IV vs Apple iPhone 14 Pro Max - AoD Microsoft Surface Duo 2 vs Sony Xperia 1 Mk.IV Comparison February 2023 Photo of the Month Winner from PSC Photos Fire and Light by Pip Tomlinson using an Apple iPhone 13 Pro Max: Thanks Links Amazon Steve - Amazon Ted - PayPal Me Ted - PayPal Steve Links of Interest PodHubUK - Steve on Twitter - Ted on Twitter - Ted on Mastodon - Steve on Mastodon - MeWe PSC Group - PSC Photos - PSC Videos - PSC Classifieds - WhateverWorks - Camera Creations - TechAddictsUK - The TechBox - Chewing Gum for the Ears - Projector Room - Coffee Time - Ted's Salmagundi - Steve's Rants'n'Raves - Steve's YouTube Shorts

Hot News
This Is The Feature We Need

Hot News

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2023 11:53


► Check out today's hottest tech deals here: https://www.ufd.deals/ https://howl.me/ci6peZNR8IR https://geni.us/MzMNz7 https://geni.us/pbksL 0:00 - Intro 01:01 - Microsoft Breaking Intel GPUs: https://bit.ly/3ln5x7a 02:05 - Chipset on a Stick: https://bit.ly/3DRFY4n 02:43 - UFD Deals: https://www.ufd.deals/ https://howl.me/ci6peZNR8IR https://geni.us/MzMNz7 https://geni.us/pbksL 04:03 - Stadia Wasn't Important: https://bit.ly/3YH0CfR https://bit.ly/40GDbVE 05:36 - The Best Password in No Password from 1Password: https://bit.ly/3Ieis48 06:36 - Twitter's New API Rules: https://engt.co/3JZwyI3 07:35 - Comcast 10G Roll Out: https://bit.ly/3XizUZU 08:44 - Corsair iCUE Murals: https://bit.ly/3YlEEiu 09:18 - RTX Video Super Resolution: https://bit.ly/3IeZevz ► Follow me on Twitch - http://www.twitch.tv/ufdisciple ► Join Our Discord: https://discord.gg/GduJmEM ► Support Us on Floatplane: https://www.floatplane.com/channel/ufdtech ► Support Us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/UFDTech ► Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/ufdisciple ► Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/ufdtech ► Instagram - http://www.instagram.com/ufd_tech ► Reddit - https://www.reddit.com/r/UFDTech/ Presenter: Brett Sticklemonster Videographer: Brett Sticklemonster Editor: Catlin Stevenson Thumbnail Designer: Reece Hill

El Tecnófilo #PodCast
#VamosaEstrenar ASUS ROG Crosshair X670E Hero

El Tecnófilo #PodCast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2022 23:38


#asus #rog #x670 #amd Tenemos en nuestro taller la primera motherboard con chipset X670 en la era de AMD Serie 7000. Esta Crosshair X670E tiene todo lo que este chipset tiene disponible. ¿Tanto será necesario?ENCUENTRA EN NUESTRA TIENDA PERSONALIZADA EN AMAZON LAS MOTHERBOARDS PERFECTAS PARA LOS NUEVOS PROCESADORES AMD RYZEN 7000ASUS ROG Crosshair X670E Hero (WiFi 6E) Socket AM5 (LGA 1718) Ryzen 7000 Gaming Motherboard(18+2 Power Stages, PCIe® 5.0, DDR5,5xM.2 Slots,Front-Panel USB 3.2 Gen 2x2, USB4®, Wi-Fi 6E) https://amzn.to/3UDhpy9ASUS ROG Crosshair X670E Extreme(WiFi 6E) Socket AM5(LGA 1718) Ryzen 7000 EATX Gaming Motherboard(20+2 Power Stages, PCIe® 5.0, DDR5, 5xM.2 Slots,USB 3.2 Gen 2x2 Front-Panel,USB4™ Ports,Anime Matrix) https://amzn.to/3Gg9Qd5ASUS ROG Strix X670E-E Gaming WiFi 6E Socket AM5(LGA 1718) Ryzen 7000 ATX Gaming Motherboard(18+2 Power Stages,PCIe® 5.0, DDR,4xM.2 Slots,USB 3.2 Gen 2x2, WiFi 6E,PCIe Slot Q-Release, M.2 Q-Latch) https://amzn.to/3DQ5yWPASUS ROG Strix X670E-F Gaming WIFI6E Socket AM5 (LGA 1718) Ryzen 7000 Gaming Motherboard(PCIe 5.0, DDR5,16 + 2 Power Stages,Four M.2 Slots with heatsinks,USB 3.2 Gen 2x2,AI Cooling II, and Aura Sync) https://amzn.to/3UFRkPeASUS TUF Gaming X670E-PLUS WiFi 6E Socket AM5 (LGA 1718) Ryzen 7000 ATX Gaming Motherboard(16 Power Stages, PCIe® 5.0, DDR5 Memory, Four M.2 Slots,2.5 Gb LAN,USB 4, Aura RGB Lighting) https://amzn.to/3FX4gMkASUS ROG Strix X670E-A Gaming WiFi 6E Socket AM5 (LGA 1718) Ryzen 7000 Gaming Motherboard(16+2 Power Stages,PCIe® 5.0, DDR5,4xM.2 Slots,USB 3.2 Gen 2x2, WiFi 6E, AI Cooling II) https://amzn.to/3hoTkgeASUS Prime X670-P Socket AM5 (LGA 1718) Ryzen 7000 ATX Motherboard(DDR5, 3xM.2 Slots, USB 3.2 Gen 2x2 Type-C®, USB4® Header, and 2.5Gb Ethernet) https://amzn.to/3NMlSfP

TWiT Bits (MP3)
WW Clip: AMD's New Mobile Chipset Naming System

TWiT Bits (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2022 11:46


On Windows Weekly, Paul Thurrott explains the new naming system that AMD is applying to their mobile processors beginning in 2023. Unfortunately, it's still not simple enough for the average consumer. Full episode at twit.tv/ww793 Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Mary Jo Foley You can find more about TWiT and subscribe to our podcasts at https://podcasts.twit.tv/

TWiT Bits (Video HD)
WW Clip: AMD's New Mobile Chipset Naming System

TWiT Bits (Video HD)

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2022 11:50


On Windows Weekly, Paul Thurrott explains the new naming system that AMD is applying to their mobile processors beginning in 2023. Unfortunately, it's still not simple enough for the average consumer. Full episode at twit.tv/ww793 Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Mary Jo Foley You can find more about TWiT and subscribe to our podcasts at https://podcasts.twit.tv/

TWiT Bits (Video HI)
WW Clip: AMD's New Mobile Chipset Naming System

TWiT Bits (Video HI)

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2022 11:50


On Windows Weekly, Paul Thurrott explains the new naming system that AMD is applying to their mobile processors beginning in 2023. Unfortunately, it's still not simple enough for the average consumer. Full episode at twit.tv/ww793 Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Mary Jo Foley You can find more about TWiT and subscribe to our podcasts at https://podcasts.twit.tv/

The Robot Report Podcast
AI: chipset bans and keeping humans in the loop

The Robot Report Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2022 66:25


Michael Kohen, founder and CEO of Spark AI, joins the show. Michael discusses situations in which AI and machine learning still come up short for robotics systems and how his company's human-in-the-loop system helps solve edge cases in real-time. He shares specific real-world examples, including details about Spark AI's partnership with John Deere and its autonomous tractors. The podcast also discusses the top stories of the week, including the US government imposing restrictions on AMD and NVIDIA selling certain AI chipsets to China. We breakdown what this could mean for robotics.

TWiT Bits (MP3)
WW Clip: Arm is Suing Qualcomm Over Nuvia Licenses

TWiT Bits (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2022 3:03


On Windows Weekly, Mary Jo Foley, Leo Laporte, and Paul Thurrott talk about the recent news that British chipmaker Arm is suing Qualcomm as a result of the chip technology licenses attached to Nuvia. Full episode at twit.tv/ww792 Hosts: Leo Laporte, Mary Jo Foley, and Paul Thurrott You can find more about TWiT and subscribe to our podcasts at https://podcasts.twit.tv/

law british microsoft windows breaking news chips lawsuit arm suing qualcomm cpu softbank licenses twit leo laporte mary jo foley chipset paul thurrott nuvia windows weekly thurrott on windows weekly paul thurrott you
TWiT Bits (Video HD)
WW Clip: Arm is Suing Qualcomm Over Nuvia Licenses

TWiT Bits (Video HD)

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2022 3:04


On Windows Weekly, Mary Jo Foley, Leo Laporte, and Paul Thurrott talk about the recent news that British chipmaker Arm is suing Qualcomm as a result of the chip technology licenses attached to Nuvia. Full episode at twit.tv/ww792 Hosts: Leo Laporte, Mary Jo Foley, and Paul Thurrott You can find more about TWiT and subscribe to our podcasts at https://podcasts.twit.tv/

law british microsoft windows breaking news chips lawsuit arm suing qualcomm cpu softbank licenses twit leo laporte mary jo foley chipset paul thurrott nuvia windows weekly thurrott on windows weekly paul thurrott you
TWiT Bits (Video HI)
WW Clip: Arm is Suing Qualcomm Over Nuvia Licenses

TWiT Bits (Video HI)

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2022 3:04


On Windows Weekly, Mary Jo Foley, Leo Laporte, and Paul Thurrott talk about the recent news that British chipmaker Arm is suing Qualcomm as a result of the chip technology licenses attached to Nuvia. Full episode at twit.tv/ww792 Hosts: Leo Laporte, Mary Jo Foley, and Paul Thurrott You can find more about TWiT and subscribe to our podcasts at https://podcasts.twit.tv/

law british microsoft windows breaking news chips lawsuit arm suing qualcomm cpu softbank licenses twit leo laporte mary jo foley chipset paul thurrott nuvia windows weekly thurrott on windows weekly paul thurrott you
AndCast
AndCast #625 / Sicherheit ist relativ

AndCast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2022


Download: MP3-Datei  ThemenSicherheitsupdate OnePlus Nord 2 für Juni 2022 angekommenBye Bye Hangouts. Jetzt Daten retten. Ab Nov 2022 ist alles wegROG 6 Gamer Phone sieht gut aus und hat nette "Spielereien"Amazfit T-Rex 2Offiziell: Samsung stellt Note-Reihe endgültig einEU-Roaming weiter bis 2032 ohne ZusatzkostenBeste Nintendo-Games. Mehr Umsatz im Play Store!Redmi K50i: Interessantes Mid-Range GerätNothing phone(1) Preise sind enttäuschend. Chipset nur mittelmäßigXiaomi 12S Ultra: Super Leistung und in China sogar guter Preis App der WocheLEGO® Bauanleitungen Intro and Outro from zero-project. Title: Infinity. Track licensed under Creative Commons License 3.0 BY-SA.

Rene Ritchie
Apple M2 Chipset — Deeply Explained

Rene Ritchie

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2022 20:28 Very Popular


Androidworld Hangout (Android-podcast)
Tech In Five 11-04: OPPO maakt eigen chipset, zelf je Google Pixel repareren en met vakantie naar de ruimte

Androidworld Hangout (Android-podcast)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2022 4:44


Tech In Five brengt je elke werkdag het technieuws in vijf minuten. OPPO gaat eigen chipsets maken Niet-thuisbriefje van PostNl verdwijnt Toeristen naar ISS ruimtestation Elon Musk niet in board Twitter Zelf je Pixel repareren Google gaat stalken via trackers straks tegen

El Tecnófilo #PodCast
#VamosArmarPC Intel Corei9 12900K

El Tecnófilo #PodCast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2021 18:16


#intel #alderlake #corei912900KMás vale tarde que nunca, dice el popular adagio. Tenemos en nuestro taller los procesadores más importantes de la última década de Intel. Ya sabemos que son poderosos y que destrozaron Zen3 de AMD. Pero les tenemos más detalles.**ENCUENTRA LOS NUEVOS PROCESADORES DE INTEL ALDER LAKE 12thGEN Y LAS MOTHERBOARDS Z600 EN NUESTRA TIENDA PERSONALIZADA EN AMAZON** Intel Core i9-12900K Desktop Processor 16 (8P+8E) Cores up to 5.2 GHz Unlocked LGA1700 600 Series Chipset 125W https://amzn.to/3c9oaDzIntel Core i9-12900KF Desktop Processor 16 (8P+8E) Cores up to 5.2 GHz Unlocked LGA1700 600 Series Chipset 125W https://amzn.to/3ojtsCgIntel Core i7-12700KF Desktop Processor 12 (8P+4E) Cores up to 5.0 GHz Unlocked LGA1700 600 Series Chipset 125W https://amzn.to/2YAysJQIntel Core i7-12700K Desktop Processor 12 (8P+4E) Cores up to 5.0 GHz Unlocked LGA1700 600 Series Chipset 125W https://amzn.to/3cj16mhIntel Core i5-11600K Desktop Processor 6 Cores up to 4.9 GHz Unlocked LGA1200 (Intel 500 Series & Select 400 Series Chipset) 125W https://amzn.to/3quAkzE ASUS ROG Strix Z690-F Gaming WiFi 6E LGA1700(Intel 12th Gen) ATX Gaming Motherboard(PCIe 5.0,DDR5,16+1 Power Stages,2.5Gb LAN,BT v5.2,Thunderbolt 4,4xM.2,Front Panel USB 3.2 Gen 2x2 Type-C Connector) https://amzn.to/3wJO22vASUS TUF Gaming Z690-Plus WiFi D4 LGA1700(Intel 12th Gen) ATX gaming motherboard(PCIe 5.0, DDR4,4xM.2/NVMe SSD,14+2 power stages,WiFi 6,2.5Gb LAN,front USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C,Thunderbolt 4,ARGB headers) https://amzn.to/3n8xduMGIGABYTE Z690 AORUS Elite AX DDR4 (LGA 1700/ Intel Z690/ ATX/ DDR4/ Quad M.2/ PCIe 5.0/ USB 3.2 Gen2X2 Type-C/WiFi 6/2.5GbE LAN/Gaming Motherboard) https://amzn.to/3c9lyFLGIGABYTE Z690 Gaming X DDR4 (LGA 1700/ Intel Z690/ ATX/ DDR4/ Quad M.2/ PCIe 5.0/ USB 3.2 Gen2X2 Type-C/ 2.5GbE LAN/Gaming Motherboard) https://amzn.to/3C579VN

El Tecnófilo #PodCast
Vamos a Estrenar el Chipset Z600 de Intel

El Tecnófilo #PodCast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2021 7:00


#asus #rog #intelSi tenemos nueva arquitectura de procesadores tenemos nuevo socket, al menos así es en el mundo Intel; y si hay nuevo socket hay nuevo chipset. La serie de chipset Z600 llega para darle sentido a la arquitectura híbrida de los procesadores Alder Lake y no sólo hablo de DDR5; hay mucho más.**ENCUENTRA LAS NUEVAS MOTHERBOARDS CON CHIPSET Z600 PARA PROCESADORES ALDER LAKE DE INTEL EN NUESTRA TIENDA PERSONALIZADA EN AMAZON**ASUS ROG Strix Z690-F Gaming WiFi 6E LGA1700(Intel 12th Gen) ATX Gaming Motherboard(PCIe 5.0,DDR5,16+1 Power Stages,2.5Gb LAN,BT v5.2,Thunderbolt 4,4xM.2,Front Panel USB 3.2 Gen 2x2 Type-C Connector) https://amzn.to/3wJO22vASUS TUF Gaming Z690-Plus WiFi D4 LGA1700(Intel 12th Gen) ATX gaming motherboard(PCIe 5.0, DDR4,4xM.2/NVMe SSD,14+2 power stages,WiFi 6,2.5Gb LAN,front USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C,Thunderbolt 4,ARGB headers) https://amzn.to/3n8xduMGIGABYTE Z690 AORUS Elite AX DDR4 (LGA 1700/ Intel Z690/ ATX/ DDR4/ Quad M.2/ PCIe 5.0/ USB 3.2 Gen2X2 Type-C/WiFi 6/2.5GbE LAN/Gaming Motherboard) https://amzn.to/3c9lyFLGIGABYTE Z690 Gaming X DDR4 (LGA 1700/ Intel Z690/ ATX/ DDR4/ Quad M.2/ PCIe 5.0/ USB 3.2 Gen2X2 Type-C/ 2.5GbE LAN/Gaming Motherboard) https://amzn.to/3C579VN**PROCESADORES INTEL ALDER LAKE 12TH GENERATION** Intel Core i9-12900K Desktop Processor 16 (8P+8E) Cores up to 5.2 GHz Unlocked LGA1700 600 Series Chipset 125W https://amzn.to/3c9oaDzIntel Core i9-12900KF Desktop Processor 16 (8P+8E) Cores up to 5.2 GHz Unlocked LGA1700 600 Series Chipset 125W https://amzn.to/3ojtsCgIntel Core i7-12700KF Desktop Processor 12 (8P+4E) Cores up to 5.0 GHz Unlocked LGA1700 600 Series Chipset 125W https://amzn.to/2YAysJQIntel Core i7-12700K Desktop Processor 12 (8P+4E) Cores up to 5.0 GHz Unlocked LGA1700 600 Series Chipset 125W https://amzn.to/3cj16mhIntel Core i5-11600K Desktop Processor 6 Cores up to 4.9 GHz Unlocked LGA1200 (Intel 500 Series & Select 400 Series Chipset) 125W https://amzn.to/3quAkzE

Radiogeek
#Radiogeek - Motorola lanzo Moto G200 con el chipset Snapdragon 888+ - Nro 2019

Radiogeek

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2021 26:02


Los temas del día: Spotify ya tiene letras de las canciones que se sincronizan con la música https://newsroom.spotify.com/2021-11-18/you-can-now-find-the-lyrics-to-your-favorite-songs-in-spotify-heres-how/ Google vuelve a publicar la cuota de mercado de cada versión de Android Apple quiere lanzar un automóvil totalmente autónomo para 2025 https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-11-18/apple-accelerates-work-on-car-aims-for-fully-autonomous-vehicle MediaTek quiere hacer un chip para Windows en PC ARM Motorola lanzo Moto G200 con el chipset Snapdragon 888+ Huawei Watch GT Runner Se filtraron los detalles del Samsung Galaxy Z Fold4 y Z Flip4 https://www.gsmarena.com/samsung_galaxy_z_fold4_and_z_flip4_details_leak-news-51907.php APOYANOS DESDE PAYPAL https://www.paypal.me/arielmcorg APOYANOS DESDE PATREON https://www.patreon.com/radiogeek APOYANOS DESDE CAFECITO https://cafecito.app/radiogeek Podes seguirme desde Twitter @arielmcorg (www.twitter.com/arielmcorg) También desde Instagram @arielmcorg (www.instagram.com/arielmcorg) Sumate al canal de Telegram #Radiogeekpodcast (http://telegram.me/Radiogeekpodcast)

XR-OM
QUALCOMM XR2 CHIPSET- FURURE OF AR/VR/MR - HIREN BHINDE: DIR PROD MGMT - QUALCOMM

XR-OM

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2021 43:52


#qualcomm #extendedreality #xr2 #oculusquest #oculusquest2 #xr #augmentedreality #virtualreality #mixedreality Qualcomm Snapdragon XR2 is the world's first XR platform to unite 5G and AI. Built to enable unrivaled extended reality experiences, the Snapdragon XR2 5G Platform enables users to explore every angle of their virtual world in 360° spherical view that captures the scene in vivid detail. And with rich 3D audio, users can experience high-fidelity sound in all directions. Hiren Bhinde is the director of product management at Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. where he leads the expansion of Qualcomm's virtual reality and augmented reality programs. In his more than 13 years at Qualcomm, Hiren was a critical member of the Qualcomm Android team collaborating with Google launching the first Android and Nexus devices, helped commercialize hundreds of unique Android devices in China, India and Southeast Asia, and developed on-device video playback and streaming tools. Hiren is driven by the fact that the technology he helps to create will be in the hands of hundreds of millions of people across the world, shaping their lives in how they work, play and communicate. Hiren holds a Master of Science in computer science from State University of New York and a Master of Business Administration from U.C. Berkley https://www.qualcomm.com https://www.linkedin.com/in/hirenbhinde https://twitter.com/hirenbhinde

TD Ameritrade Network
Inventory Shortages Continue To Affect The Automotive Stocks: F, GM, TSLA

TD Ameritrade Network

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2021 7:46


Chipset and inventory shortages continue to affect the automotive industry says, Jessica Caldwell, Executive Director of Insights at Edmunds. She and Garrett Nelson, Senior Equity Analyst at CFRA Research, assess the automaker stocks. They talk about what pricing trends to monitor in auto sales and which automakers could outperform this year, as well as the outlook for electric vehicle sales. They specifically mention Ford (F), General Motors (GM), and Tesla (TSLA). Tune in to find out more.

Alfabicara
BIKIN CHIPSET SENDIRI

Alfabicara

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2021 37:37


Turunnya gairah podcast dan chipset sendiri laptop merah putih

Independent Thinking Podcast
68: Tackling the Chipset Shortage and Other Supply Chain Challenges in Consumer Electronics

Independent Thinking Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2021 30:44


Nationwide Marketing Group Vice President of Consumer Electronics Lee McDonald addresses a wide range of topics on the latest podcast, including the ongoing chipset shortage, tech trends the pandemic pushed and more.

TechBurst Asia Podcast
029: Your 2021 GADGET FIX: The latest trends in SMARTPHONES, WEARABLES & AIRTAGS w/ IDC's Bryan Ma

TechBurst Asia Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2021 56:32


This TechBurst Asia podcast will give you your gadget fix for 2021. We will discuss Smartphones - which ones are doing well (Apple, Samsung, Xiaomi), which ones are struggling (Huawei, LG), and what features you can expect in the coming years.  We will look at the smart wearables market to see if Smartwatches have finally lived up to the hype, and to find out if anyone can catch the Apple Watch. And finally, we’ll get the lowdown on the latest announcements from Apple about its latest iPad innovations, the launch of AirTags, and the new colourful iMacs. To help us with this analysis, we are joined by one of the world’s leading device analysts, IDC Asia Pacific’s Bryan Ma.  SHOW NOTES: 02:00 Who is winning the smartphone race? 04:00 LG exits the smartphone market - what mistakes did they make? 06:30 Why do so many smartphone vendors fail (Nokia, BlackBerry, LG) 08:50 How the China / US trade war has led to Huawei’s chipset crisis 14:30 What are the latest features (cameras, foldables, rollables)  that are driving the market? 18:00 What impact is 5G having on the smartphone market? 20:40 What the hell is a rollable phone? And do we need it? 22:00 When will Apple come out with a foldable phone? 23:00 Apple is releasing an iPhone software update with a new privacy feature that requires apps like Facebook to ask for the user’s approval to track them. Facebook hates this, I love it, what does Bryan think? 27:20 Can 5G’s speeds and low latency save AR/VR? 31:00 The latest on wearables - the big three vendors (Xiaomi, Apple, Huawei) are running away with it. Can Google save Fitbit? Should Samsung give up on the smartwatch market? And can anyone catch the Apple Watch? 39:00 Apple’s new product launches - the slick new iPads, colourful iMacs and surprise launch - Apple goes into tracking with AirTags.  49:00 Bryan’s predictions - what will the world look like in 5 years for smartphones, wearables and AR / VR / Mixed Reality headsets. 

Radiogeek
#Radiogeek - MediaTek sera el primero en lanzar un chipset de 4 nm - Nro 1901

Radiogeek

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2021 25:50


Los temas del día: Reddit y su versión de Clubhouse https://infosertec.com.ar/2021/04/21/reddit-y-su-version-de-clubhouse/ Google Pixel 5a 5G tendrá un Snapdragon 765G https://infosertec.com.ar/2021/04/21/google-pixel-5a-5g-tendra-un-snapdragon-765g/ Es oficial que Samsung Galaxy S20 FE 4G tendrá chipset Snapdragon 865 https://infosertec.com.ar/2021/04/21/es-oficial-que-samsung-galaxy-s20-fe-4g-tendra-chipset-snapdragon-865/ Un vistazo a los próximos Samsung Galaxy Book que se lanzaran el 28 de abril https://infosertec.com.ar/2021/04/21/un-vistazo-a-los-proximos-samsung-galaxy-book-que-se-lanzaran-el-28-de-abril/ Instagram finalmente nos ayudará a esquivar los DM abusivos escondiéndolos en una carpeta oculta https://www.genbeta.com/redes-sociales-y-comunidades/instagram-finalmente-nos-ayudara-a-esquivar-dm-abusivos-escondiendolos-carpeta-oculta? Motorola Moto G20 Google soluciono el problema de WebView de Android https://androidcommunity.com/webview-safe-mode-to-prevent-android-apps-from-crashing-20210420/ MediaTek sera el primero en lanzar un chipset de 4 nm http://mobile.yesky.com/328/725707328.shtml Microsoft está trabajando en una nueva tienda para Windows 10 https://www.windowscentral.com/windows-10-big-changes-coming-app-store? APOYANOS DESDE PAYPAL https://www.paypal.me/arielmcorg APOYANOS DESDE PATREON https://www.patreon.com/radiogeek Podes seguirme desde Twitter @arielmcorg (www.twitter.com/arielmcorg) También desde Instagram @arielmcorg (www.instagram.com/arielmcorg) Sumate al canal de Telegram #Radiogeekpodcast (http://telegram.me/Radiogeekpodcast)

Rene Ritchie
Apple Chipset Shortages — M2, A15, and Beyond!

Rene Ritchie

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2021 7:27


Improve your thinking and learning at http://brilliant.org/reneritchie​ — sign up for FREE and the first 200 get 20% off Premium!There’s a chip shortage. No, not potato chip or corn chip. That might… honestly be worse. But silicon chips. There’s just nowhere nearly enough supply to meet all the demand. Can’t get ‘em for cars. Can’t get ‘em for consoles. Maybe, soon, not even for phones. But what about the next Mac, the next iPhone, the next iPad? A14X, A15, M1X, M2? What about Apple chipsets? Let’s call up industry analyst Ben Bajarin and find out!

Radio IT
LOGICOM/INTEL - Ecco la nuova generazione di processori

Radio IT

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2021 12:18


In questo nuovo episodio di Radio Logicom parliamo di un'importante novità del mondo Intel. A metà di marzo 2021, infatti, Intel ha presentato l'11ma generazione di processori Core per computer desktop, che Paolo Canepa, Partner Sales Account Manager del settore Enterprise di Intel, ha presentato nel dettaglio in questa intervista. Almeno tre le novità più rilevanti nell’ambito di questa famiglia di 19 processori: nuovi livelli di performance, nuove esperienze di visualizzazione e possibilità avanzate di tuning. I miglioramenti più rilevanti - fino al 50% in più rispetto alla decima generazione - si registrano a livello di grafica, che permette prestazioni eccezionali a gamers e autori di contenuti video per il web. Per abilitare tutte le caratteristiche innovative dei nuovi processori, naturalmente, è previsto anche un nuovo tipo di Chipset. Di queste e altre novità Intel parliamo con Paolo nell'episodio che stai per ascoltare. Buon Ascolto!Altri contenuti su www.radioit.it

LOGICOM
Intel presenta la nuova generazione di processori

LOGICOM

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2021 12:17


In questo nuovo episodio di Radio Logicom parliamo di un'importante novità del mondo Intel. A metà di marzo 2021, infatti, Intel ha presentato l'11ma generazione di processori Core per computer desktop, che Paolo Canepa, Partner Sales Account Manager del settore Enterprise di Intel, ha presentato nel dettaglio in questa intervista. Almeno tre le novità più rilevanti nell’ambito di questa famiglia di 19 processori: nuovi livelli di performance, nuove esperienze di visualizzazione e possibilità avanzate di tuning. I miglioramenti più rilevanti - fino al 50% in più rispetto alla decima generazione - si registrano a livello di grafica, che permette prestazioni eccezionali a gamers e autori di contenuti video per il web. Per abilitare tutte le caratteristiche innovative dei nuovi processori, naturalmente, è previsto anche un nuovo tipo di Chipset. Di queste e altre novità Intel parliamo con Paolo nell'episodio che stai per ascoltare. Buon Ascolto!Altri contenuti su www.radioit.it

Happy Tech Blog
Happy Tech Update - อัพเดทข่าวสาร วงการ Tech 28/3/2021

Happy Tech Blog

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2021 13:12


Update ข่าวคราววงการ Tech ในวันนี้มีอะไรบ้าง?

Happy Tech Blog
Happy Tech Update - อัพเดทข่าวสาร วงการ Tech 25/3/2021

Happy Tech Blog

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2021 17:16


Update ข่าวคราววงการ Tech ในวันนี้มีอะไรบ้าง?

Legacy Respawn
Legacy Respawn (Episode 16) New Nintendo Switch Receiving Nvidia Chipset?/ Sony Shutting Down Select Digital Stores

Legacy Respawn

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2021 92:44


Welcome to Legacy Respawn! We have such a variety this week with news coming in from all corners involving Microsoft, Sony and Nintendo! Is the Rock in Fortnite? What's with Mario dying on March 31st? Dying Light 2 developers reveal a 2021 release date after some backlash. Sony VR back in the news with a new patent . Plus Much More! Enjoy Twitter.com/legacyrespawn Help support the show by joining us on Patreon : Patreon.com/legacyrespawn --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

El Tecnófilo #PodCast
¿Qué son y como funcionan el procesador y la motherboard?

El Tecnófilo #PodCast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2021 4:06


#vamosarmarpc #novatos #miprimerpcCon este video iniciamos una serie que llevará como hashtag #miprimerpc y fue creada para explicar los fundamentos más básicos de los componentes para pc y como ensamblar uno. Estos videos son para un público novato y primerizo que quiere aprender a seleccionar los componentes que más se ajusten a sus necesidades y como armar su #primerpc. En esta ocasión estaremos analizando el procesador y la motherboard.

Nerd Otaku Gaming Podcast
Covids Effects on Gaming in 2021

Nerd Otaku Gaming Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2021 86:28


Heya we are back! Robin gets to break down the effects that Covid have had on gaming recently. We also get to talk about the recent casting news in all the gaming adaptations, that new Pokemon, Video Game Delays, Chipset scarcity and so much more!