Προσφορές

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

Τεράστιες Πρώιμες Προσφορές Black Friday σε Κινητά: Δωρεάν iPhone 17, 300$ Έκπτωση στο Pixel 10 Fold, 54% Έκπτωση στο Galaxy Z Flip 6 & Άλλα

Οι Πρώιμες Προσφορές της Black Friday Ξεκινούν τις Ευκαιρίες για Κινητά Η Black Friday μπορεί να απέχει ακόμα μερικές εβδομάδες, αλλά οι προσφορές σε smartphone έχουν ήδη ξεκινήσει δυναμικά. Οι λιανοπωλητές και οι πάροχοι παρουσιάζουν πρώιμες προσφορές Black Friday σε δημοφιλή κινητά,
5 Νοεμβρίου, 2025

Technology News

  • Google Maps adds Gemini AI assistant for smarter driving and on-the-go questions
    November 5, 2025, 9:26 AM EST. Google Maps will soon host its Gemini AI assistant, enabling drivers to ask complex questions while commuting. Users can say 'Hey Google' or tap the Gemini icon to get route-related answers, like budget-friendly vegan restaurants along a path or parking options, and even have a calendar event created. The Lens built with Gemini lets users snap a photo of a place and ask why it's popular or what it's like inside. The feature will roll out later this month as Google competes with OpenAI, Meta, and Apple in the AI race. Google emphasizes its data advantage and real-world maps to deliver more conversational, visual, and predictive insights for over 2 billion monthly Maps users.
  • Rocket Lab launches QPS-SAR-14 'Yachihoko-I' Earth-imaging satellite from New Zealand
    November 5, 2025, 9:24 AM EST. Rocket Lab is launching its sixth mission for the Japanese Earth-imaging company iQPS, sending the QPS-SAR-14 satellite, nicknamed Yachihoko-I, aboard an Electron rocket from New Zealand. Liftoff is set for 2:45 p.m. EST (1945 GMT; 8:45 a.m. NZ local time), with a webcast starting about 30 minutes beforehand. If all goes to plan, the Electron's kick stage will deploy Yachihoko-I into a ~575 km circular orbit roughly 50 minutes after liftoff. The mission supports a growing QPS-SAR constellation providing near-real-time SAR imagery every 10 minutes. This will mark Rocket Lab's 16th launch of 2025 and the 74th overall; Yachihoko-I is the 13th iQPS satellite to reach orbit.
  • Xpeng AI Day 2025: VLA 2.0 powers robotaxis, humanoid robots, and flying cars
    November 5, 2025, 9:16 AM EST. Xpeng kicked off AI Day 2025 in Guangzhou to present its pivot from a traditional automaker to an AI company focused on AI-defined applications powered by the new VLA 2.0 vision-centered model. The system abandons the language bottleneck with a Vision-Implicit Token-Action path, enabling faster, more intuitive response to real-world cues. Running on its Turing AI chips, the stack achieves 2,250 TOPS for consumer ADAS and the new Ultra driver-assist level, with a brand-new Robo tier announced for robotaxis. Xpeng plans three robotaxi variants (5-, 6-, and 7-seat) with four Turing AI chips delivering 3,000 TOPS and redundancy. Trial ops start in 2026, with initial deployment alongside partner Amap. The event also underscored Xpeng's pursuit of Physical AI-merging AI into robots, drones, and future flying cars.
  • AI Is Breaking the Browser's Back: Copyright Blocks and the Future of AI Browsers
    November 5, 2025, 9:10 AM EST. AI-powered browsers were supposed to make questions about any page effortless, but copyright friction is blocking basic access. OpenAI's ChatGPT Atlas can't access New York Times articles, and explanations are scarce for subscribers. The conflict between copyright claims and AI tools leaves users guessing, and simple workarounds-like copying text into chats-feel like band-aids. The piece also flags Dia from The Browser Company, which still uses ChatGPT APIs yet encounters similar limits. As publishers push back, the question looms: will APIs and browsing become less usable for AI assistants?
  • Tellus Museum's 'Replaced by the Smartphone' Exhibit Traces Tech Evolution in Cartersville
    November 5, 2025, 9:08 AM EST. At the Tellus Science Museum in Cartersville, a new gallery titled 'Replaced by the Smartphone' spotlights items that have faded into obsolescence as one hand-held device consolidates countless functions. The exhibit features payphones, video cameras, an iPod, hotel keys, old credit-card machines and other everyday objects. Curator Amy Gramsey notes the educational value of watching grandparents recall rotary phones and vacuum-tube TVs while kids wonder, 'What is that?' Visitors can trace how phones, cameras, music players and more were folded into a single smartphone. By juxtaposing familiar relics with a modern device, the display offers a practical history lesson on tech evolution.