Ανακοινώσεις προϊόντων

Mobile Tech Earthquake: iPhone 17 ‘Air’ Leaks, Huawei’s Tri-Fold Shocker & More (Sept 8–9, 2025)

Σεισμός στην Κινητή Τεχνολογία: Διαρροές για το iPhone 17 ‘Air’, Τριπλό Αναδιπλούμενο της Huawei & Άλλα (8–9 Σεπτεμβρίου 2025)

Βασικά Στοιχεία (8–9 Σεπτεμβρίου 2025) Apple: Τελευταίες διαρροές, ενθουσιασμός την ημέρα της κυκλοφορίας & αναλύσεις ειδικών Η ετήσια φθινοπωρινή εκδήλωση παρουσίασης της Apple έχει οριστεί για την Τρίτη, 9 Σεπτεμβρίου, και η προσμονή βρίσκεται στο αποκορύφωμά της. Διαρροές κατά τις 48 ώρες
11 Σεπτεμβρίου, 2025

Technology News

  • Forget IonQ? Two AI Stocks to Watch Now in the AI Boom
    October 26, 2025, 10:04 PM EDT. IonQ's quantum approach looks riskier than established AI players. Quantum may transform industries like pharmaceuticals, materials, AI, and cybersecurity, but many estimates place real-world benefits years away. For most investors, concentrating on artificial intelligence opportunities offers faster growth. The piece highlights two AI-adjacent buys: Taiwan Semiconductor (TSMC), the manufacturing backbone behind most advanced chips for AI data centers; and Broadcom (AVGO), a leading designer of ASICs used in AI and cloud systems. TSMC's leadership and AI demand support a reasonable valuation, while Broadcom's AI chips and cloud infrastructure exposure positions it for ongoing demand. IonQ remains a speculative bet due to its quantum hardware versus near-term AI catalysts. Consider prioritizing established AI exposure over niche quantum plays.
  • Quantum Computing Stocks to Watch: D-Wave, IonQ, QUBT and More
    October 26, 2025, 9:58 PM EDT. Quantum computing stocks, including D-Wave Quantum (QBTS), IonQ (IONQ), and Quantum Computing Inc. (QUBT), are highlighted by MarketBeat's stock screener as the sector to watch. These shares span hardware makers, software developers, cloud quantum services, component suppliers, and diversified tech firms with quantum R&D. For investors, quantum stocks tend to be speculative, long-horizon plays driven by milestones, partnerships, funding, and the uncertain path to commercialization. The list also features ETFs and companies with substantial quantum exposure. Recent momentum in trading volume underscores interest, but outcomes depend on roadmaps, cloud access models, and commercialization timelines. Perform due diligence on revenue models, partnerships, and competitive dynamics before weighting these names.
  • AI Gun-Detection False Alarm at Maryland School: Chips Mistaken for Weapon Triggers Police Response
    October 26, 2025, 9:54 PM EDT. A 16-year-old student at Kenwood High School in Essex, Maryland was surrounded by police after an AI gun-detection system flagged an empty chip bag as a firearm. Body camera footage shows officers ordering him to the ground before realizing the alarm was a false positive: the item was simply a bag of chips. Officials say the alert was canceled, but responders had already mobilized, prompting questions about accountability and safety in school security. The incident underscores the challenges of AI surveillance and the importance of human verification in real-time security. Omnilert says their system combines AI with human review before escalation, but the episode has left students and officials seeking clarity on procedures.
  • Edge's Copilot Mode turns browsing into a proactive AI assistant
    October 26, 2025, 9:50 PM EDT. Edge's Copilot Mode turns browsing into a proactive AI assistant. The new Edge search bar doubles as a smart prompt field, switching between web search, site opening, and chat with Copilot based on intent. In testing, Copilot can act on what's on screen, compare tabs, remember past research, and even streamline shopping toward checkout. A dropdown offers reasoning modes-Quick Response, Study and Learn, Smart (GPT-5), Search, and Think Deeper-so you can get fast replies or deeper analysis. The goal is to rival standalone AI browsers by speeding up product comparisons and research, including loading your cart and completing purchases on supported sites.
  • Australia sues Microsoft over misleading Copilot offer in Microsoft 365
    October 26, 2025, 9:34 PM EDT. Australia's competition watchdog ACCC has filed suit in the Federal Court against Microsoft Australia and its parent, alleging misleading statements about Copilot in Microsoft 365. The ACCC says about 2.7 million subscribers on auto-renewal were steered toward Copilot-integrated plans, with a hidden third option only revealed during cancellation: sticking with the original 'Classic' plans at the same price. The commission says Microsoft deliberately omitted Classic plan references to push customers to pricier Copilot subscriptions. Annual costs for Copilot plans were 29-45% higher than non-Copilot tiers. The ACCC seeks penalties, injunctions, consumer redress, and costs. Microsoft has not commented. The case highlights ongoing policy scrutiny of AI services and their pricing practices in digital subscriptions.