Angebote

Massive Early Black Friday Phone Deals: Free iPhone 17, $300 Off Pixel 10 Fold, 54% Off Galaxy Z Flip 6 & More

Massive frühe Black Friday Handy-Angebote: Kostenloses iPhone 17, 300 $ Rabatt auf Pixel 10 Fold, 54 % Rabatt auf Galaxy Z Flip 6 & mehr

Frühe Black Friday-Angebote läuten Handy-Schnäppchen ein Black Friday ist zwar noch Wochen entfernt, aber die Smartphone-Angebote haben bereits in vollem Umfang begonnen. Einzelhändler und Mobilfunkanbieter starten frühe Black Friday-Aktionen für beliebte Handys, von denen einige die erwarteten Rabatte des eigentlichen Tages erreichen
November 5, 2025

Technology News

  • Apple reportedly developing budget MacBook under $1,000 with iPhone chip for 2026 launch
    November 5, 2025, 3:18 AM EST. Bloomberg's Mark Gurman reports Apple is developing a budget MacBook for casual users, students, and small businesses. The model is said to run on a less powerful iPhone processor and use a smaller LCD, with a price described as well under $1,000 and a launch planned for the first half of 2026. Apple would aim to take share from Chromebooks and low-cost Windows PCs by focusing on web browsing, documents and light media editing. The device is often compared to the M4 MacBook Air at $999, and rumors have tied it to an A18 Pro chip in some reports. If accurate, it signals a broader push to reach budget buyers while expanding Apple's lineup into the value segment.
  • iOS 26.2 Adds Enhanced Safety Alerts for Earthquakes and Imminent Threats
    November 5, 2025, 3:16 AM EST. Apple's iOS 26.2 developer beta 1 introduces a new Enhanced Safety Alerts section under Settings > Notifications. In supported regions, users can toggle earthquake alerts and imminent threat alerts, plus a privacy option that shares your approximate location with Apple to improve timeliness and reliability. The Enhanced Safety Alerts adds to the existing Government Alerts, which already covers AMBER Alerts, Public Safety Alerts, Test Alerts, and the Emergency Alerts section with granular controls for location precision and sound. The beta also includes a new alert tone to distinguish these messages. This marks a move toward more granular, customizable safety notifications for iPhone users, though availability is limited to beta testers and regions that support the feature.
  • Penn State study finds everyday prompts can trigger AI bias in popular models
    November 5, 2025, 3:14 AM EST. New research from Penn State's Center for Socially Responsible AI shows that bias in AI can be triggered by everyday users, not just technical experts. Led by Amulya Yadav, the team analyzed 75 prompts from participants in the Bias-a-Thon, comparing intuitive prompts to traditional technical queries and finding that casual prompts often provoke biased outputs in models such as ChatGPT and Gemini. The study argues that fairness depends on who uses AI and how prompts shape responses, highlighting biases rooted in training data, language use, and societal stereotypes. Researchers conducted Zoom interviews to refine a working definition of bias and discuss implications for safety and representation.
  • Amazon Sends Perplexity a Cease and Desist Over Its AI Agents Shopping for You
    November 5, 2025, 3:12 AM EST. Amazon has filed a cease-and-desist against Perplexity, accusing its Comet browser and AI shopping agents of using shady tactics to bypass protections. Perplexity says Amazon is a bully bent on blocking shoppers from using its tech. The dispute highlights friction between e-commerce giants and AI tools that navigate product search and recommendations, raising questions about access, browser features, and how AI agents should interact with retailer ecosystems.
  • Microsoft launches MAI-Image-1: In-house AI image generator goes live in Copilot
    November 5, 2025, 3:10 AM EST. Microsoft is rolling MAI-Image-1, its first fully in-house image generator, into Copilot and Bing Image Creator. The model, a major improvement over the previous system, requires no waitlists and works directly in Copilot. MAI-Image-1 targets photorealism, fixes tricky details like hands, and supports text prompts and image editing with refining tools similar to DALL-E. Early testers call it a huge improvement, praising lighting, realism, and fast iteration. By bringing image creation in-house, Microsoft reduces reliance on third-party models and can tailor Copilot more tightly. The move signals Copilot's evolution toward a complete creative platform, heightening competition with Meta, Google, Grok, and OpenAI, with MAI-Image-1 live in major markets.