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A.I. Companies Don’t Know What to Do With Alex Bores

Assemblyman Alex Bores represents a district on Manhattan’s East Side that lies in the 12th Congressional District, where he is running to succeed Representative Jerrold Nadler.

New York Times 4d ago

Boox’s quirky page-turning remote won me over

Tappy is a tiny wireless remote that doesn’t look like one. Following the launch of the surprisingly popular Kobo Remote, Boox has released its own device to ease the burden of reaching for an e-reader’s touchscreen that’s an arm’s length away. The Tappy isn’t Boox’s first page-turning remote, but its design takes a much different approach to the company’s slim but boring B.T. Remoter.

The Verge 5h ago

How Indian immigrants have fueled billion-dollar startups in America over the years

American startups founded by immigrants are creating an average of 833 jobs per company and are collectively worth nearly $5 trillion, according to a new report by the National Foundation for American Policy (NFAP). Indian immigrants, the report says, have emerged as the largest contributor to this success story, founding or co-founding more billion-dollar startups in the United States than immigrants from any other country. “The research indicates that more open immigration policies will...

Times of India 6d ago

The Apple Car Is Finally Here

Title: The Apple Car Is Finally Here Transportation has never been a Ferrari’s real purpose. Sure, you can drive one—although not literally you, because you probably can’t afford one. For the few who can, it is an automobile to be seen idling at a stoplight before prancing away, or parked at a luxury-hotel valet stand, inspiring desire and jealousy. For normal people, a Ferrari is a symbol: of power, control, precision, and wealth—but also of the longing for those virtues, and of the idea that they are virtues in the first place. The Ferrari is the quintessential bedroom-poster car, captured in a glossy photo pinned on a wall in a teenage boy’s bedroom like a photo of a scantily clad woman: an unachievable object of desire.If a Ferrari is an object of spectacle, an Apple device is an object of function. The Apple product, whether it’s a laptop, music player, smartphone, tablet, speaker, or watch, is designed to dissolve into its context and melt into ordinary life. Frictionless, intuitive, and transparent—in its ideal form, an Apple product ceases to feel like an object at all, and instead facilitates an activity. An iPhone or MacBook

The Atlantic 12d ago

2.4 million US homes or 10,000 private jets: Things Elon Musk can buy with his money

The upcoming initial public offering (IPO) for SpaceX could officially make Elon Musk as the world’s very first trillionaire. According to a recent analysis by The Wall Street Journal, the 54-year-old tech mogul's fortune has reached $970 billion, driven primarily by his massive stock holdings. With so much wealth to his name, there’s so much he can do.

Times of India 7d ago

Silicon Valley’s new buyout playbook is hitting Wall Street

Venture capital is buying its way into the artificial intelligence transformation that enterprise software hasn't delivered. Instead of selling AI tools to companies, venture firms are buying legacy companies outright and rebuilding them around AI from the inside. The bet puts VCs on offense and leaves traditional private equity, which spent the last cycle buying enterprise software at peak prices, on defense.

CNBC 2d ago

I'm building a parallel internet, and it's called The Thinnernet

Since 2020, I've taken on a Steve Jobs alter-ego (on a very, very part time basis, and often for humor purposes). The first essay I wrote wasn't even related to hardware, or solar powered-conscious operating systems that began around the same time. It was actually about one of my former jobs, regarding Knowledge Bases.

Hacker News 2d ago

Humanoid robots work nonstop in package test

Figure AI says three of its humanoid robots crossed more than 24 hours of continuous autonomous operation after a test that was supposed to last only eight hours kept running.The California-based robotics startup says its Helix-02 artificial intelligence-powered robots sorted small packages around the clock without human control. The robots became part of a livestream that viewers followed closely. They even picked up names along the way: Bob, Frank and Gary.Once people started calling them...

Fox News Tech 17d ago