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Technology News

  • Samsung Galaxy Watch Ultra 2025 review: Now available in blue
    October 22, 2025, 7:48 AM EDT. Samsung's Galaxy Watch Ultra 2025 is the brand's rugged flagship, but updates are mainly cosmetic and incremental. It adds a blue titanium chassis and a built-in emergency siren, while keeping the same 1.5-inch AMOLED display and most of last year's software. The key hardware upgrade is 64GB of storage, alongside dual GNSS, 10 ATM water resistance, and a wider operating range (-20°C to 55°C). At launch it's €699, still bulkier than non-Ultra models with a 47mm footprint and a thick 24mm strap. Setup is quick, though Galaxy Wearable handles most settings while Samsung Health covers health data. An energy score, AI-driven tips, and a still-passive distinction mean value depends on price and whether you need the Ultra's rugged features.
  • Tesla Q3 Results Preview: Tom Nash Bets on $900 Stock in 12 Months
    October 22, 2025, 7:46 AM EDT. Tesla Inc. (NASDAQ:TSLA) faces mixed predictions ahead of its Q3 results as analysts weigh growth drivers and margins. The company is expected to beat consensus on revenue and non-GAAP EPS, per Troy Teslike, though gross margins may trail. Morningstar remains cautious on robotaxi timelines, warning the market may be overestimating near-term launches. Long-time bull Tom Nash argues the stock is headed to $900 within 6 to 12 months, driven by AI, FSD, robo taxis, energy, and robotics. Shares dipped slightly before the print as investors await quarterly results, with debate over autonomous tech and margins shaping sentiment.
  • OnePlus 15 price leak hints at UK discount; specs and launch window revealed
    October 22, 2025, 7:44 AM EDT. A Twitter tipster claims the 16GB/512GB OnePlus 15 will cost £949 (~$1,270) in the UK, a potential £50 cut from the OnePlus 13. The 256GB variant's price isn't disclosed, but rumors point to a base model around £849. The leak corroborates key specs: Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, 7,300mAh battery with 120W wired and 50W wireless charging, and a 165Hz OLED display, plus a triple 50MP camera system with a 3.5x periscope lens. Official launch in China is set for October 27, with a global rollout expected around November 13.
  • Qorvo Valuation Revisited After Mizuho Downgrade on Smartphone Chip Demand
    October 22, 2025, 7:36 AM EDT. Qorvo (QRVO) stock has faced a Mizuho downgrade amid expectations of softer smartphone chip demand, with concerns over iPhone shipments and China headwinds. Even after a 34% YTD rise, the 1-year TSR is still negative, highlighting that momentum is improving but longer-term holders remain underwater. Valuation remains contested: shares sit below some price targets, forcing a debate whether Qorvo is truly undervalued or simply priced for the next growth leg. The most widely cited narrative pins fair value just above the last close, underpinned by accelerating 5G/6G adoption, strong design wins in flagship phones, Wi-Fi 7/8 deployments, and higher RF content per device, implying multi-year revenue growth and margin expansion. Risks include reliance on a single customer and potential diversification setbacks. The stock also trades at a lofty P/E (~107x) versus the sector average (~37x).
  • Robinhood Could Join the $1 Trillion Club in 20 Years: A Fintech Path to the Trillion-Dollar Club
    October 22, 2025, 7:34 AM EDT. Robinhood Markets is positioned as a fintech disruptor aiming to join the ranks of $1 trillion tech giants like Nvidia, Meta Platforms, Amazon, and Alphabet. With a current market cap around $117B, it would need a CAGR of roughly 11.6% for two decades to hit $1 trillion. The platform has expanded beyond trading into mobile-first financial services, offering commission-free trading, fractional shares, no minimum balances, and a growing Gold premium service. Demand from younger investors underpins recent momentum: total platform assets reached about $279B, funded customers rose to 26.5M, and Gold subscribers hit 3.5M. If growth accelerates, Robinhood could redefine access to markets, though it faces regulatory and competitive hurdles.