Anmeldelser Nyhende: 17 september 2025 - 26 september 2025

Technology News

  • Tesla Robotaxi Crashes in Austin: NHTSA Reports Fourth Incident, Redactions Under Scrutiny
    November 2, 2025, 7:08 AM EST. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration data shows a fourth Robotaxi collision in September in Austin, with Tesla again redacting most details. The crash occurred in a parking lot after hitting a fixed object; no injuries, but property damage was recorded. Tesla's system relies on a front-seat safety monitor and a hidden network of teleoperators who can remotely intervene, sparking questions about how many incidents might have occurred without human oversight. CEO Elon Musk has promised to remove safety monitors by year's end. Tesla has logged about 250,000 miles since late June, equating to roughly one crash every 62,500 miles, versus Waymo's ~98,600 miles. Critics point to ongoing redaction of crash narratives for Autopilot and FSD, and regulators have opened a probe into Tesla's crash-reporting practices.
  • UK Deals: Free Galaxy Buds3 FE with Galaxy S25 FE and Discounts on S25/S25 Edge
    November 2, 2025, 7:00 AM EST. UK deals spotlight Samsung's Galaxy S25 lineup with multiple discounts: the Galaxy S25 (12GB/128GB) at £649 plus £50 off at checkout and an extra £100 off for Prime Student members; the Galaxy S25 Edge (12GB/256GB) at £899 with a £100 Prime Student discount; and the Galaxy S25 FE at £649 with a bundled £187 worth of accessories, including the Galaxy Buds3 FE. Also on sale are budget options like the Poco F7 (£314 for 12/512GB) and Poco F7 Pro (£359 for 12/256GB). Apple models see pricing cuts on the iPhone 16 (256GB) at £749 and iPhone 16e (256GB) at £649. The report notes the Exynos 2400 in the S25 FE and other specs; last year's iPhone 16/16e run on the A18 chipset.
  • Inside the race to train AI robots to act human in the real world
    November 2, 2025, 6:58 AM EST. From Chennai to Silicon Valley, a growing workforce is teaching AI how humans move in the real world. At Objectways in Karur, 28-year-old Naveen Kumar and colleagues perform precise towel-folding tasks, wearing a GoPro to capture point-of-view footage that shows exactly how a human handles objects. The videos are carefully annotated-bounding boxes, motion direction, and gripping details-and then used to train AI models to operate physical tasks. This data-gathering feeds foundation models for robotics and supports startups that rely on human demonstration data. Encord contracts with Objectways to curate such datasets, while robotics firms and major players like Tesla and Nvidia push to translate these demonstrations into autonomous, real-world behavior. The result is a surge in robotics and AI able to function beyond screens-for homes, factories and offices.
  • Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang warns against underestimating Huawei amid US-China tech tensions
    November 2, 2025, 6:56 AM EST. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang warned that Huawei's strength in 5G and AI systems means it is foolish to underestimate China's tech prowess. Amid ongoing US-China tensions, Huang said Nvidia is "miles ahead" in chips but cautioned against complacency, praising Huawei's ability to build "amazing chips" and the CloudMatrix AI supercomputing system. He argued that Huawei dominates global telecom standards and smartphones, and stressed that competition should be respected. Huang noted China already makes plenty of AI chips and suggested national security concerns are mitigated if China does not rely on American chips like H20. He projected China's market opportunity at roughly $50 billion this year and potentially hundreds of billions by decade's end, adding Nvidia's race to invent the future remains relentless.
  • Is It Time to Go Internet Sober? A College Gamer's Battle with Online Addiction
    November 2, 2025, 6:54 AM EST. Grant Johnson arrived in college at 18 facing a lack of motivation, debt, and a sense of purpose. He admits he spent up to 12 hours a day online, split between video games (like League of Legends) and streaming or videos on Netflix and YouTube. With two computer monitors, he struggled to answer what he wanted from life, feeling he was merely wasting time. This piece explores how excessive digital consumption can derail academics and personal growth, and why some young adults consider adopting an internet sobriety to regain focus, discipline, and direction.