Gaming

RedMagic 11 Pro: The Gaming Phone That Puts Water in Its Veins (First Liquid-Cooled Smartphone Stuns Tech World)
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RedMagic 11 Pro: El teléfono para juegos que lleva agua en sus venas (El primer smartphone con refrigeración líquida sorprende al mundo tecnológico)

Introducción El Nubia RedMagic 11 Pro está acaparando titulares como un smartphone que literalmente tiene refrigeración líquida corriendo por sus venas. Los gamers móviles y entusiastas de la tecnología nunca han visto algo igual: este nuevo buque insignia para juegos realmente bombea
noviembre 6, 2025

Technology News

  • Best Buy Drops Early Black Friday Deals: Tablets from $49, Laptops from $119, 75-Inch 4K TVs from $359
    November 7, 2025, 1:56 AM EST. Best Buy has launched early Black Friday deals on tablets, laptops, and TVs. Tablets start at $49 and laptops from $119. A standout is the HP OmniBook X Flip Copilot+ PC for $579 with a 2K screen, Core Ultra 5 Series 2 CPU, 16GB RAM, and 512GB SSD. Large 75-inch 4K TVs are from $359, and OLED TVs begin at $699. The coverage positions Best Buy as a top source for laptop and tablet savings, with quick links to more deals and promo codes in the guide.
  • When 'Online' Meant 'Offline': A 1980s Tech History Flip
    November 7, 2025, 1:54 AM EST. Tech history reveals a quirky truth: the word online once meant offline-'immediately available on a computer' and accessible locally. Windows 3.0's WinHelp and early networking framed online as 'ready now.' In contrast, today's internet era redefines online as connected, while terms like up and down described remote machine availability. The idea stretches from ARPANET days to BBSes and Usenet, long before the World Wide Web. This linguistic flip shows how fast tech and slang co-evolve-and why a memory from pre-web computing still sounds brain-twisting to a generation raised online.
  • What's Going On With AI and Jobs: Layoffs, Policy, and the AI Economy
    November 7, 2025, 1:52 AM EST. This piece surveys the latest data on AI and work, arguing that fears about automation aren't just hype. A Challenger, Gray & Christmas report shows US employers cutting 175% more jobs in October than a year ago, with 2025 now the worst firing year since 2020. Giants like Amazon and Salesforce point to AI as a driver of layoffs, echoed by Duolingo and Klarna's cuts. The author situates these trends in a wider debate about how AI reshapes skills, work, and policy, noting antitrust and tech-politics conversations (Lina Khan's transition team) and the New Luddism discourse at NYC events. The piece emphasizes that addressing AI's employment impact will require policy, labor strategy, and investment in skills, not just headlines about automation.
  • TSMC Price Hikes for 2026 Hit Next-Gen Smartphone Chips (Apple, Samsung)
    November 7, 2025, 1:50 AM EST. TSMC is reportedly planning price hikes for 2026, which could raise the cost of most smartphone chips. The moves have been shared with major clients including Apple and are likely to hit Samsung as well, with hikes projected around 8-10% for advanced nodes under 5nm. The impact would touch leading chips like the A16-A19 and M3-M5 in Apple devices, and high-end Android flagships such as the Galaxy S26. Earlier rumors cited double-digit increases for chips built on the N3E/N3P processes, fueling concerns that flagship pricing could widen further. Some reports even speculated a sharp rise for an A20-class 2nm chip, though later chatter suggested a cap near 20%. Overall, premium models could see larger price gaps versus more affordable flagships.
  • Apple TV's new logo hints at a theatrical comeback: could Apple restart its movie-distribution ambitions
    November 7, 2025, 1:48 AM EST. Apple TV's refreshed branding and the three-version intro are fueling chatter that Apple may revive a theatrical releases strategy. The WSJ reported talks of a dedicated film-distribution unit, and industry voices like Cinemark's CEO have suggested more Apple Originals in cinemas. A move would let Apple control releases and profits more directly, contrasting with past partnerships (e.g., F1's cinema deal with Warner Bros. Discovery). After lukewarm box offices for some Apple originals, a stronger theatrical focus could align with Bloomberg's earlier plan to invest billions in films. The new logo and cinematic intro feel like a deliberate signal of a broader shift from streaming-only to windowed cinema releases.