חדשות gadgets

Xiaomi Unleashes Redmi K90 Pro Max: 7,560mAh Battery, Bose Audio – and a Memory Chip Crisis

שיאומי משיקה את Redmi K90 Pro Max: סוללת 7,560mAh, אודיו של Bose – ומשבר שבבי זיכרון

השקה ותמחור מותג Redmi של Xiaomi חשף את סדרת K90 באירוע בשידור חי בסין ב-23 באוקטובר 2025 pandaily.com. דגם ה-Redmi K90 הסטנדרטי (טלפון בינוני בגודל 6.59 אינץ') מתחיל ב-¥2,599 (~$361) עבור 12 GB RAM + 256 GB אחסון pandaily.com – ומחליף את דגם K80
אוקטובר 27, 2025

Technology News

  • Trump Signals Discussing Nvidia Blackwell Chips with Xi Jinping
    October 28, 2025, 11:46 PM EDT. President Trump says he may raise Nvidia's Blackwell AI chips with Chinese President Xi Jinping, calling them the super duper chip. The claim centers on Nvidia's latest AI chip architecture and its role in expanding a competition over China's access to advanced hardware. The remarks come as the U.S. tightens export controls that have limited Nvidia's sales of its most advanced chips to China and even as Beijing bans imports. Nvidia has said it is currently 100% out of China with no market share there, though Beijing could use market access as leverage in trade talks. The comments add fuel to the debate over technology policy, supply chains, and the leverage of big AI firms in geopolitics.
  • DJI Enterprise Teases Zenmuse L3 LiDAR Payload Ahead of November 4 Launch
    October 28, 2025, 11:14 PM EDT. DJI Enterprise has dropped a teaser for a November 4, 2025 launch at 7 AM EST, hinting at a new LiDAR payload-likely the Zenmuse L3. The cryptic tagline "See Through, Far and True," plus pink/purple display visuals in teaser footage and leaked hardware, point to enhanced surveying and mapping capabilities. If true, the Zenmuse L3 could boost detection range, penetration, and accuracy for professional drone operators. The potential upgrade would impact land surveyors, forestry managers, and infrastructure inspectors who rely on drone-mounted LiDAR. As with prior DJI releases, official specs remain scarce, but images suggest a focus on precision, range, and streamlined workflow for enterprise users.
  • Quantum Computing Puts Asia's Financial Systems at Risk
    October 28, 2025, 10:58 PM EDT. Asia's financial infrastructure faces a potential disruption from quantum computing, with analysts warning that many institutions are ill prepared. While economies such as China, Japan, South Korea, and Singapore are developing strategies to guard critical systems, a large portion of the region's banks and payment networks remain vulnerable as digital wallets and real-time payments expand. Quantum computing can crack public-key cryptography and the digital signatures that underpin secure transactions, threatening stored data, digital identities, and interbank settlements. Anndy Lian cautions that Asia's financial sector faces an existential risk if quantum-safe infrastructure is not built quickly, particularly in ASEAN. Once powerful quantum machines arrive within five to ten years, attackers could compromise confidential records and payment rails even before upgrades are complete.
  • Foxconn to Deploy Humanoid Robots at Houston AI Server Plant for Nvidia
    October 28, 2025, 10:32 PM EDT. Foxconn (Hon Hai Precision Industry) said it will deploy humanoid robots at its Houston AI-server plant to produce servers for Nvidia, using the NVIDIA Isaac GR00T N model on production lines. The move, first reported earlier this year, targets the first quarter of 2026 as Foxconn and Nvidia push a world-leading AI smart factory benchmark. Foxconn also plans to scale AI server output across Texas, Wisconsin, and California to meet rising demand. Chairman Young Liu says the initiative strengthens Foxconn's position in delivering advanced AI data center solutions for leading customers in the AI race. The announcement follows Nvidia's developer conference in Washington, D.C., underscoring closer collaboration between hardware makers and the chip-AI ecosystem.
  • Elon Musk launches AI-powered Grokipedia to counter Wikipedia
    October 28, 2025, 10:30 PM EDT. Elon Musk has unveiled Grokipedia, an AI-powered online encyclopedia designed to counter Wikipedia. NBC News' Gadi Schwartz and New York Times tech reporter Kate Conger explain how the site works and how it differs from the traditional encyclopedia, signaling Musk's push into AI-driven information platforms and fueling debate about reliability and governance in online knowledge.