디스플레이

Samsung Display Begins Mass Production of OLEDoS (Micro‑OLED) Panels for Galaxy XR—What It Means for Visual Quality, Price, and Global Rollout

삼성디스플레이, 갤럭시 XR용 OLEDoS(마이크로 OLED) 패널 양산 시작—화질, 가격, 글로벌 출시의 의미는?

뉴스: 삼성디스플레이가 생산에 돌입 삼성디스플레이는 OLEDoS(OLED-on-Silicon) 마이크로 OLED 패널의 양산을 시작했으며, 이는 삼성의 갤럭시 XR 혼합현실 헤드셋에 탑재될 예정입니다. 이 소식은 한국의 ETNews가 11월 9일 처음 보도했고, 오늘 여러 매체에서 다뤘으며, 초기 갤럭시 XR 물량의 유일한 공급원이었던 소니 외에 공급을 확대하는 것입니다.
11월 12, 2025

Technology News

  • Enshittification: The Stages When Internet Platforms Decline
    November 12, 2025, 2:06 PM EST. Cory Doctorow's term enshittification describes a familiar pattern in which platforms migrate from user-friendly to profit-driven. According to his analysis, these are middlemen services that monetize connections between users and advertisers or sellers. In Stage 1, platforms attract users with low prices and great features, fueled by abundant capital and network effects; they promise privacy and value. Early moves may include predatory pricing and rapid growth to lock in users, making switching costs high. Over time, platforms squeeze more value from users and creators, degrade quality, and prioritize advertiser revenue or third-party control. The article uses Facebook, Google, Uber, and Amazon as examples and warns that this drift harms users, workers, and competition, explaining why the internet feels 'less free' and more beholden to platforms.
  • China's Digital Governance as a Global Stabilizer: Bridging the Digital Divide and AI Governance
    November 12, 2025, 2:02 PM EST. On the 10th anniversary of China's call for a community with a shared future in cyberspace, digital technologies have reshaped the world economy. In a Q&A at the 2025 World Internet Conference, Liang Guoyong, a senior economist at UNCTAD, argues that China's internet governance and its accelerating digital economy serve as a stabilizer amid deglobalization. He highlights China's leadership in AI capacity building for developing nations and notes a governance gap in emerging technologies that requires stronger global cooperation on AI governance. Liang warns of persistent imbalances between the Global North and South and uneven digital infrastructure and skills, stressing that advancing digital economy development and a shared cyberspace framework are essential to narrow the divide and sustain global growth.
  • Xiaomi CEO's Teardown of Tesla Model Ys: How YU7 Aims to Rival the Model Y
    November 12, 2025, 2:00 PM EST. Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun revealed he bought three Tesla Model Ys this year and performed a meticulous teardown to dissect every component, guiding Xiaomi's rival YU7 SUV. The team presented side-by-side comparisons and quickly generated over 240,000 preorders within 24 hours of the YU7's launch. Lei praised the Model Y as outstanding but argued the YU7 matches or exceeds it on interior space and battery performance at a more attractive price. The move underscores fierce competition in China, where Tesla's sales dipped 4% in August amid pressure from local rivals like Xiaomi, Xpeng, and Nio. Tear-downs are common in auto tech, a trend also seen in Ford's Mach-E evaluation.
  • Apple Adds PSVR2 Sense Controllers to Vision Pro, Sells Them Directly
    November 12, 2025, 1:56 PM EST. Apple stretches Vision Pro gaming with visionOS 26 by adding official PSVR2 Sense Controllers support. The headset previously relied on hand gestures, which aren't precise enough for gameplay, so Apple collaborated with Sony to enable compatibility with PlayStation's VR2 controllers. Now Apple is directly selling the PSVR2 Sense Controllers through its online store, with a pair and charging dock priced at $249.95; retail availability begins November 17. Sony doesn't offer the controllers separately, making the Vision Pro a simpler path to a complete controller setup. The PSVR2 controllers wrap around each hand, include motion sensors, buttons, analog sticks, and haptic feedback plus finger touch detection, potentially encouraging more VR gaming development for Vision Pro.
  • Jim Cramer on NVIDIA's Forward-Earnings Reputation and AI Stock Upside
    November 12, 2025, 1:54 PM EST. Jim Cramer weighs in on NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA), praising the leadership while noting that even he once bet against growth. The piece frames the ongoing clash with shorts betting against the AI and data-center mega-trend, with NVDA as its most visible winner alongside Palantir. NVDA is described as designing computing infrastructure for gaming, enterprise, and automotive markets. While acknowledging NVDA's potential, the article argues that other AI stocks may offer greater upside with less downside risk. It also plugs a free report on the best short-term AI stock and notes the reprint from Insider Monkey. Disclosure: None.