Aktuality

Google’s Surprise Late‑October Pixel Update Shocks Users – What’s Going On?

Nečekaná aktualizace Pixelu od Googlu na konci října šokovala uživatele – co se děje?

Google vydává další říjnovou aktualizaci pro Pixel Google šokoval majitele Pixelů tím, že vydal dodatečnou softwarovou aktualizaci koncem října 2025, tedy mimo běžný měsíční harmonogram. Obvykle dostávají telefony Pixel bezpečnostní záplatu Androidu a opravy chyb v prvním týdnu každého měsíce. Ve skutečnosti
1 listopadu, 2025

Technology News

  • Speculation and optimism drive a $3tn global datacentre boom in the AI era
    November 2, 2025, 7:42 AM EST. Global investment in AI is fuelling a projected $3tn spend on datacentres, the backbone of tools like OpenAI's ChatGPT and Google's Veo 3. Nvidia recently joined the $5tn valuation club, with Microsoft and Apple pushing toward $4tn. A potential $1tn flotation for OpenAI looms, while Alphabet reports $100bn quarterly revenue driven by AI infrastructure. In Newport, Wales, a Microsoft datacentre project underscores a shift from traditional industries to the economy of the future. Over the next two years, Amazon, Meta, Google and Microsoft may spend more than $750bn on AI-related capex, including datacentres and chips. Critics warn of a bubble and sustainability questions amid rapid, capital-heavy growth.
  • Tesla Model 3 Standard vs Premium: 8 Key Trade-Offs You Lose
    November 2, 2025, 7:40 AM EST. Tesla's new Model 3 Standard cuts price but trims features. In the US at $36,990 and Europe at €39,990, it undercuts the Premium rear-drive, which starts higher with more power and options. The acceleration gap shows in 0-60 mph times (5.8s vs 4.9s) and the option for all-wheel drive. Battery size differs: 69 kWh vs 78 kWh, yielding 321 miles vs 363 miles. Charging speeds follow (225 kW vs 250 kW), with only small real-world gains. Visuals and comfort take a hit: steel wheels, a passive suspension vs adaptive shocks, and a downgraded interior (manual seats, mixed materials, no back ventilation, no auto-dimming mirrors). Fewer conveniences also appear, such as no central armrest. The trade-offs matter for range, performance and daily comfort.
  • 1969 ARPANET debut: the 'LOGIN' glitch that birthed the internet
    November 2, 2025, 7:24 AM EST. In 1969, ARPANET saw the first computer-to-computer message between UCLA and SRI, but a crash and a typo created a legendary hiccup. Charley Kline typed five characters: 'LOGIN,' yet Bill Duvall received only 'LO' before the system failed. The culprit was an overflow: the IMPs and their buffers couldn't handle 5,000 chars/sec, far above the ~10 chars/sec design. After widening the buffer and rebuilding, the four-node network-UCLA, SRI, UCSB, and the University of Utah-transmitted data successfully. This seeded decades of innovations: Email, TCP/IP, DNS, NSFNET, and the World Wide Web. By 2025, the internet is essential to business and life, all rooted in a stuttering 'LO.'
  • Tesla Robotaxi Crashes in Austin: NHTSA Reports Fourth Incident, Redactions Under Scrutiny
    November 2, 2025, 7:08 AM EST. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration data shows a fourth Robotaxi collision in September in Austin, with Tesla again redacting most details. The crash occurred in a parking lot after hitting a fixed object; no injuries, but property damage was recorded. Tesla's system relies on a front-seat safety monitor and a hidden network of teleoperators who can remotely intervene, sparking questions about how many incidents might have occurred without human oversight. CEO Elon Musk has promised to remove safety monitors by year's end. Tesla has logged about 250,000 miles since late June, equating to roughly one crash every 62,500 miles, versus Waymo's ~98,600 miles. Critics point to ongoing redaction of crash narratives for Autopilot and FSD, and regulators have opened a probe into Tesla's crash-reporting practices.
  • UK Deals: Free Galaxy Buds3 FE with Galaxy S25 FE and Discounts on S25/S25 Edge
    November 2, 2025, 7:00 AM EST. UK deals spotlight Samsung's Galaxy S25 lineup with multiple discounts: the Galaxy S25 (12GB/128GB) at £649 plus £50 off at checkout and an extra £100 off for Prime Student members; the Galaxy S25 Edge (12GB/256GB) at £899 with a £100 Prime Student discount; and the Galaxy S25 FE at £649 with a bundled £187 worth of accessories, including the Galaxy Buds3 FE. Also on sale are budget options like the Poco F7 (£314 for 12/512GB) and Poco F7 Pro (£359 for 12/256GB). Apple models see pricing cuts on the iPhone 16 (256GB) at £749 and iPhone 16e (256GB) at £649. The report notes the Exynos 2400 in the S25 FE and other specs; last year's iPhone 16/16e run on the A18 chipset.