Marine

High-Speed Battle at Sea: 2025’s Best Maritime Satellite Services Revealed

Hochgeschwindigkeitsduell auf See: Die besten maritimen Satellitendienste 2025 enthüllt

<details><summary>Klicken Sie hier, um einen Vergleich der wichtigsten maritimen Satellitendienste im Jahr 2025 zu sehen…</summary> Anbieter / Dienst Netzwerktyp Abdeckung Nutzerdatenraten Latenz (durchschn.) Hardware & Kosten Typische Anwendungsfälle SpaceX Starlink Maritime LEO-Konstellation (Ku/Ka-Band) ~Global (100+ Länder; Polar) ts2.tech ts2.tech ~50–200+ Mbit/s Down, 10–30 Mbit/s
September 3, 2025

Technology News

  • UK MPs urge binding regulation of the most powerful AI systems
    December 8, 2025, 12:54 AM EST. More than 100 UK parliamentarians are urging binding rules for the most powerful AI systems as ministers face mounting pressure from industry lobbying. A cross-party coalition including former AI minister Des Browne and peers from Westminster and the devolved legislatures argues that frontier AI could threaten national and global security unless safeguards are put in place. The push is led by Control AI, backed by figures such as Jaan Tallinn, and calls on Prime Minister Starmer to align with international cooperation standards. Supporters note Britain's 2023 AI safety summit and the AI Safety Institute (now AI Security Institute), urging international cooperation and an explicit prohibition on runaway superintelligence until risks can be contained.
  • Johny Srouji: Apple's Silicon Architect and the Potential Exit That Could Shake the Company
    December 8, 2025, 12:50 AM EST. Johny Srouji, Apple's renowned silicon architect, is reportedly weighing his future, a move that could unsettle the tech giant. Since joining in 2008, Srouji has steered Apple's shift from external processors to in-house silicon development, delivering the M-series chips that power modern Macs and differentiating Apple devices. Bloomberg notes he's considering stepping down and might join another company, prompting Tim Cook to push to retain him-potentially elevating him to Chief Technology Officer to oversee hardware engineering and silicon. If he departs, internal candidates like Zongjian Chen and Sribalan Santhanam would become the focal points, though none match his sustained influence. The scenario also underscores broader concerns about talent retention, AI progress, and leadership stability at Apple.
  • Linux GPIB drivers graduate from staging to mainline in Linux 6.19
    December 8, 2025, 12:32 AM EST. The GPIB (General Purpose Interface Bus) drivers have moved from the kernel's staging area into the mainline kernel with Linux 6.19. After a year of cleanup, this 8 MB/s parallel bus now has stable support for vintage lab instruments, ending years of out-of-tree maintenance. The change marks a milestone for hardware enthusiasts and for Raspberry Pi users, since the VC04/VCHIQ code can now be upstreamed as part of the kernel. As Greg Kroah-Hartman noted, the bulk of the release is cleanups, with the standout items being the graduation of gpib and vc04. The staging area remains a proving ground, but these subsystems are now part of the official kernel tree.
  • Is the AI Boom a Bubble? 2 Key Watchpoints for Investors
    December 8, 2025, 12:28 AM EST. Amid a frothy AI market, investors should focus on profitable leaders with durable market positions. The article flags two indicators: profitability and how the bubble could unfold. First, monitor profitability or a credible path to it, even in AI-heavy firms where losses are common. Notable examples like Nvidia, Taiwan Semiconductor, and Alphabet show strong earnings and strategic AI leadership. Nvidia commands a dominant data-center GPU share, TSM leads advanced processors, and Alphabet integrates AI across Search, ads, and services, underscoring that not all AI stocks are fleeting. Second, even a vocal acknowledgment of a bubble (OpenAI's Sam Altman) suggests caution, but there may be a gradual deflation rather than a sudden crash. Investors should weigh earnings momentum, moat, and the pace of AI adoption rather than betting solely on hype.
  • Tesla Optimus tumbles in Miami demo, highlights teleoperation and headset-mimicry
    December 8, 2025, 12:26 AM EST. New footage from Tesla's Miami 'Autonomy Visualized' event shows the Optimus humanoid robot taking a backward fall after its hands shoot up as if removing a VR headset. The clip fuels long-running questions about how much of Tesla's demonstrations rely on remote teleoperation rather than true autonomy. Critics note that previous events, including the "We, Robot" demos, suggested a gap between software and hardware, with operators guiding the robot from behind the scenes. Tesla fans debate whether the fall reveals limitations in perception, balance, or control. While Elon Musk has framed Optimus as a trillion-dollar product powered by AI and generalized intelligence, the incident underscores ongoing concerns about teleoperation and the gap to fully autonomous humanoids.