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

קרב במהירות גבוהה בים: שירותי הלוויין הימיים הטובים ביותר של 2025 נחשפים

<details><summary>לחץ כדי לראות השוואה בין שירותי לוויין ימית מרכזיים ב-2025…</summary> ספק / שירות סוג רשת כיסוי מהירויות נתונים למשתמש שהייה (ממוצע) חומרה ועלות שימושים אופייניים SpaceX Starlink Maritime קבוצת לוויינים LEO (פס Ku/Ka) כמעט גלובלי (100+ מדינות; קוטב) ts2.tech ts2.tech ~50–200+ Mbps
ספטמבר 9, 2025

Technology News

  • Notice of Privacy: New Jersey Privacy Law and TribLIVE Feature Restrictions
    October 26, 2025, 5:40 AM EDT. TribLIVE.com informs NJ visitors that a privacy law limits certain features, disabling videos and social components unless users opt in. The notice explains that proceeding will effectively opt you out of the sale of your personal data, while clicking to agree enables the full features and allows use of personal data for advertising. Users can bookmark the page to manage preferences and are urged to update their location to tailor the experience. A state selector prompts non-NJ residents to choose their location for the best experience. The message highlights the balance between privacy protections and site functionality.
  • Pixel Watch 4 review: A well-rounded smartwatch with a surprising charging advantage
    October 26, 2025, 5:38 AM EDT. Pixel Watch 4 is a well-rounded smartwatch that shines in everyday usability and health tracking. Built on Google and Fitbit heritage, it delivers comprehensive health and fitness tracking and useful AI features that feel genuinely helpful. A standout is its super-fast charging, an unexpected asset that reduces downtime. Hardware upgrades include a curved display under domed glass, slimmer bezels, a brighter screen up to 3,000 nits, a dual-frequency GPS, and an improved haptics engine. The watch also benefits from a repairable design, boosting longevity. On the downside, the Gemini wake gesture can be finicky and Gemini requires an internet connection to function. Price sits at $350 at Amazon. Overall, it's a solid Android option for those seeking a reliable, feature-rich wearable with a charging edge.
  • Baltimore teen detained after AI gun-detection system mistakes chips for a gun
    October 26, 2025, 5:36 AM EDT. Baltimore Police released body camera footage of a 16-year-old student at Kenwood High School after an AI gun-detection system from security company Omnilert flagged his snack bag as a weapon. Officers detained Taki Allen briefly; he was searched and released when no weapon was found. The system scans school surveillance for signs of weapons and alerts law enforcement in real time, a move Omnilert described as a false positive and said the system functioned as intended by prioritizing safety with rapid human verification. Baltimore County Public Schools sent a parent letter and offered counseling. Allen said he didn't feel safe and noted a lack of follow-up. The incident is part of ongoing debate about AI threat-detection accuracy and real-world impacts on students.
  • Pixel Watch 4 Review: Beautiful Round Design, Real-Time Metrics, and Tracking Trade-offs
    October 26, 2025, 5:34 AM EDT. Pixel Watch 4 is stylish and feature-rich, but its tracking requires choosing between modes. Enable passive tracking and you won't see workout data on the watch unless it's captured; you can start manually, but you won't get a mid-workout nudge. If you want reminders, toggle Start workout reminders in the Fitbit/Exercise app-doing so disables passive recording. I prefer letting Google's algorithms infer activity and surface data later, even if it means a delay. Cyclists may like the new real-time bike streaming: start a ride, tap the phone notification, and view heart rate, speed, and distance on your phone. The AI coach isn't live yet and will roll out later this month. Core health tools-SpO2, skin temperature, ECG, and fall detection-remain, though a tester's fall wasn't detected immediately before movement threshold was reached, triggering alarms and emergency calls after 60 seconds.
  • Security vulnerabilities in agentic AI browsers (Comet, Atlas) amid prompt-injection risks
    October 26, 2025, 5:32 AM EDT. The rise of agentic AI browsers like Perplexity's Comet and OpenAI's Atlas brings convenience but also new security vulnerabilities. Brave researchers have identified prompt injection flaws that could let malicious sites hijack the browser's AI assistant and force unauthorized actions with the user's privileges. The team highlighted indirect prompt injection via nearly invisible inputs hidden in images or page content, injected prompts processed by the browser into the LLM. They demonstrated attacks on Comet (e.g., screenshots plus questions) and noted similar issues in rival browsers such as Felou. OpenAI's Atlas, and other players, have reality of these risks; researchers caution that these vulnerabilities may be systemic rather than isolated. Developers and users should expect ongoing advisories and mitigations as the field matures.