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  • The Xiaomi 15 is the camera phone Samsung wishes it made
    www.creativebloq.com
    The premium-quality Chinese upstart is here to stay, and we should be paying attention.
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  • Tonal 2 Review: Smarter Strength Training
    www.wired.com
    If you're all-in on digital weight training, you'll want to splurge on this fancy slab for sweating.
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  • Tushy Aura Electric Bidet Review: Budget Bidet Maker Goes Luxe
    www.wired.com
    The best-known budget bidet maker successfully counters high-end electric bidets (with a few minor quirks).
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  • Apples $500B US jobs investment? Same old, same old.
    www.computerworld.com
    It sounds so good, doesnt it? After Apple CEO Tim Cook met with US President Donald J. Trump, Cook announced: We are bullish on the future of American innovation, and were proud tobuild on our long-standing US investments with this $500 billion commitmentto our countrys future. Well keep working with people and companies across this country to help write an extraordinary new chapter in the history of American innovation.Trump smooched back on Truth Social: APPLE HAS JUST ANNOUNCEDA RECORD 500 BILLION DOLLAR INVESTMENTIN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. THE REASON, FAITH IN WHAT WE ARE DOING, WITHOUT WITCH, THEY WOULDNT BE INVESTING TEN CENTS. THANK YOU TIM COOK AND APPLE!!!(All the caps and typos are original, by the way.)So, whats not to like about Apples plans to hire 20,000 employees over the next four years? Well, a lot. You see, weve heard this same song and dance before.This isnt the first time Apple has made such promises. In 2018, during the first Trump administration,Apple pledged to create 20,000 new jobs as part of a $350 billion investmentin the US economy. Then in 2021, with Joseph R. Biden Jr. in the White House, Apple once more promised 20,000 new jobs as part of a $430 billion investment. Do you begin to detect a pattern here?This is now the third time, Apple has promised 20,000 more jobs.A big part of the 2021 promise was that Apple would build a new campus and engineering hub in North Carolinas Research Triangle Park. Didnt happen.Apple never even broke dirt for the project and now says it will be at least four more years before it starts building a new campus.That will be just in time forKing Donald the Firsts crowning (or a new President, if we get our act together). Be that as it may, I expect Apple to keep promising more investments and, yes, more jobs. After all, it draws positive headlines.The reality is that since Apple first promised 40,000 new jobs, it has added about 30,000 or so. This came after a slight Apple employment dip in 2023.Now, new jobs are always welcome especially, since these days,the unemployment rate has been edging upward. And thats before Elon Musks Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) started taking a chainsaw to government employment. You can expectunemployment to return to the highs it saw when Trump was last President, shortly.If youre in the tech industry, things have been even worse. According to Crunchbases tally, at least95,000 workersat U.S.-based tech companies were laid off in mass job cuts in 2024and the cuts have continued into 2025.So, while Im cynical about Apples claims, I will give the execs at Apples headquarters at Apple Park credit for actually boosting employment.After all, as Paul Farnsworth, President of the top tech job siteDice, told me: Apple has spent years hiring engineers and researchers tasked with helping the company develop an AI strategy that aligns with its broader corporate goals.Andrea Derler, principal of research and value atVisier, the enterprise human-resources company, added in an e-mail: This initiative reflects Apples clear growth strategy and provides a glimpse into the future in which human skills such as creativity, curiosity, courage, compassion and communication will be key amidst the AI revolution. Defer continued: Skills churn is very high in the IT field. The lag between newly emerging tech skills gaps and existing talent cant only be solved with hiring external talent because its expensive. This is where upskilling and reskilling existing talent becomes critical to solving the AI talent gap.ButwillApple be hiring or training new AI-savvy staffers?Although Apple seemed to hold back on AI investment while its rivals rushed ahead with big, splashy investments in data centers and AI teams, Tim Cooks recent announcement of a $500 billion commitment to manufacturing AI servers and other initiatives hints at accelerating AI expenditure, which will inevitably include personnel hiring, Farnsworth said.Im not convinced. Sure, Apple will invest in AI. But Cook and company dont seem to want to join Meta, Microsoft, and OpenAI inthe race to be the first to create truly useful generative AI. Instead,recent Apple leaks about its AI plansmake it sound like what Apple wants to do is improve its iPhone and other end-user clients such as Siri with AI. Whether Apple or someone else ends up making the large language model (LLM) that powers its clients doesnt seem that important to Apple.So, I dont see the $500 billion/20,000 jobs announcement as big news. Its just business as usual for Apple. If you look closer, youll also see that some of these new AI investments arent really Apples at all.Take, for example, the companys latest investment plans for a Houston server production factory to be operated by Apple and partners. Thatpartner is almost certainly Hon Hai Precision Industry, aka Foxconn, for an already announcedAI server research and development center in Houston.Foxconn, where have we heard that name before? Oh, right! Back in 2018,Trump and Foxconn announced a $10-billion dealwith 13,000 jobs for a new factory complex in Wisconsin.Guess what happened? Next to nothing. Today, the Eighth Wonder of the World is a local joke with no more than 1,000 employees. It appears, you canrent what is at the heart of the sitefor a banquet if you want.So, yeah, Apple is hiring more people. Thats great. Keep up the good work. But, please, this is not Big News. Nor is it a sign that Apple is going all-in on AI. Its not. Its just another day of Apple trying to make a buck.Psssst, wanna buy aniPhone?
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  • Download the UEM vendor comparison chart, 2025 edition
    us.resources.computerworld.com
    Unified endpoint management (UEM) is a strategic IT approach that consolidates how enterprises secure and manage an array of deployed devices including phones, tablets, PCs, and even IoT devices.As hybrid work models have become the norm, mobility management has come to mean management of not just mobile devices, but all devices used by mobile employees wherever they are. UEM tools incorporate existing enterprise mobility management (EMM) technologies, such as mobile device management (MDM) and mobile application management (MAM), with tools used to manage desktop PCs and laptops.Like the EMM suites they evolved from, UEM platforms help companies secure their mobile infrastructure, as well as control device policies and manage mobile apps, content, networks, and services. UEM tools merge those capabilities with functionality typically found in client management tools (CMTs) used to manage desktop PCs and laptops on a corporate network.With the ability to create policies that can be deployed to many devices and operating systems, UEM products reduce both manual work and risk for IT. They also deliver insights into how devices and apps are used by employees, which can be used to improve cross-functional workflows. Most recently, some UEM platforms have begun incorporating generative AI features.Download our chart to see which features and functions eight major UEM platforms offer across nine categories, from device and application management to security, analytics, and automation. Computerworld thanks Phil Hochmuth, program vice president for endpoint device management and enterprise mobility at IDC, for his guidance on the features and vendors included in the chart.This chart was originally published in May 2013 and most recently updated in March 2025.
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  • The Download: DeepSeek for fortune telling, and the second private moon landing
    www.technologyreview.com
    This is todays edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of whats going on in the world of technology.How DeepSeek became a fortune teller for Chinas youthAs DeepSeek has emerged as a homegrown challenger to OpenAI, young people across the country have started using AI to revive fortune-telling practices that have deep roots in Chinese culture.Across Chinese social media, users are sharing AI-generated readings, experimenting with fortune-telling prompt engineering, and revisiting ancient spiritual textsall with the help of DeepSeek.The surge in AI fortune-telling comes during a time of pervasive anxiety and pessimism in Chinese society. And as spiritual practices remain hidden underground thanks to the countrys regime, computers and phone screens are helping younger people to gain a sense of control over their lives. Read the full story.Caiwen ChenAre you interested in learning more about DeepSeek? Read our stories:+ How DeepSeek overcame US sanctions and managed to turn restrictions into innovation. Read the full story.+ How DeepSeek ripped up the AI playbookand why everyones going to follow its lead. The Chinese firm has pulled back the curtain to expose how the top labs may be building their next-generation models. Now things get interesting.+ DeepSeek might not be such good news for energy after all. New figures show that if the models energy-intensive chain of thought reasoning gets added to everything, the promise of efficiency gets murky. Read the full story.+ Three things to know as the dust settles from DeepSeekand four other Chinese AI startups to keep an eye on.The must-readsIve combed the internet to find you todays most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.1 A private lander has touched down on the moonUS startup Firefly is the second private company to land on lunar soil. (The Guardian)+ The mission is part of NASAs plans to lower costs via private enterprises. (NYT $)+ Nokia is putting the first cellular network on the moon. (MIT Technology Review)2 Donald Trump may create Americas first strategic crypto reserveCrypto champions believe it could finally lend the industry a sense of legitimacy. (CoinDesk)+ But some Republican lawmakers worry it could put taxpayer funds at risk. (FT $)+ Other crypto investors are pushing for the reserve to hold only bitcoin. (CNBC)+ Meanwhile, Elon Musk is throwing his weight behind Dogecoin. (Ars Technica)3 AI firms are racing to create cheaper modelsAnd theyre pinning their hopes on a process called distillation to do just that. (FT $)+ How DeepSeek ripped up the AI playbookand why everyones going to follow its lead. (MIT Technology Review)4 Amazon has lost its bid to escape regulatory oversightIts been denied permission to skip permitting rules for a proposed data center. (WP $)5 The US federal layoffs are bad news for aquatic ecosystemsFiring wildlife workers could lead to an outbreak of parasitic lampreys, which wreak havoc on freshwater fish. (Ars Technica)+ Its just one of the many cuts that could make life in the US worse. (The Atlantic $)6 Smart cameras can detect wildfires before they spreadTheyre also adept at spotting blazes overnight. (WSJ $)+ How AI can help spot wildfires. (MIT Technology Review)7 Beware the creep of AI chatbots aimed at kidsThey cant be relied upon to always dispense correct information. (Insider $)+ Some parents are teaching children how to use models safely. (The Guardian)+ You need to talk to your kid about AI. Here are 6 things you should say. (MIT Technology Review)8 RIP SkypeMicrosoft is shutting it down in favor of Teams. (CNN)+ Youve got until May to decide what to do with your data. (The Register)9 This artificial tongue could allow you to taste flavors in VRYum, tasty hydrogels. (New Scientist $)+ The device helped volunteers taste coffee, fried eggs, and fish soup. (NYT $)10 How social media drove a Japanese matcha shortage The tasty green drink is a TikTok sensation. (Bloomberg $)Quote of the dayThis is the real, actual revenge of the nerds.Hasan Piker, an online political commentator, reflects on how DOGE feels like the culmination of Elon Musks eternally-online existence, the New York Times reports.The big storyThese artificial snowdrifts protect seal pups from climate changeApril 2024For millennia, during Finlands blistering winters, wind drove snow into meters-high snowbanks along Lake Saimaas shoreline, offering prime real estate from which seals carved cave-like dens to shelter from the elements and raise newborns.But in recent decades, these snowdrifts have failed to form in sufficient numbers, as climate change has brought warming temperatures and rain in place of snow, decimating the seal population.For the last 11 years, humans have stepped in to construct what nature can no longer reliably provide. Human-made snowdrifts, built using handheld snowplows, now house 90% of seal pups. They are the latest in a raft of measures that have brought Saimaas seals back from the brink of extinction. Read the full story.Matthew PonsfordWe can still have nice thingsA place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or skeet em at me.)+ This behind the scenes look at how they created the podracing scenes in Star Wars: The Phantom Menace is remarkably cool.+ Has Shrek had botox? Much to think about.+ The largest live game of Dungeons and Dragons ever played looks incredible ($)+ Five years ago in the UK, we collectively lost our minds.
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  • Apple robots are coming - what the rumor mill thinks is coming, and when
    appleinsider.com
    Apple is widely believed to be working on two different robotics projects, both related to the Apple Home of the future. Here's what to expect from both projects.Apple is said to be working on multiple robots, one of which resembles an iPad attached to a robotic arm.A few months after the untimely demise of the Apple Car project, claims of a new robotics development within Apple appeared in April 2024. The iPhone maker had reportedly decided to shift focus, with increased efforts and research into products that would offer integration with smart home devices.Part of that vision reportedly involves robots a mobile humanoid unit, and a largely stationary anthropomorphic robot. The goal of these two apparent robotics projects is different. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
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  • The Brutalist wins three Oscars including best actor
    archinect.com
    The Brutalist was among the biggest winners at the 2025 Academy Awards in Los Angeles on Sunday. The film, which revolves around fictional architect Lszl Tth, won three awards after being nominated in ten categories.Adrien Brody, who played Tth in the film, took home the coveted best actor award. Back in December, Archinect published a review of the film, which included a conversation with Brody in which the actor reflected on his own personal resonance with the character.A familial connection to the immigrant and refugee experience drew Brody to the role, Archinects review read, detailing our conversation with Brody, as he empathized with Tths struggles and aspirations. He also reflected on the idea of legacy, connecting with Tth as an artist striving for permanence in his worka theme that resonates with Brodys own life, not only as an acclaimed actor in film and theater but also as apainterseeking to leave a meaningful, lasting impact.Elsewhere, The Brutalist w...
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  • Form, Function and Federalism: The Next Big Fight Over Civic Architecture
    architizer.com
    Architects: Want to have your project featured? Showcase your work by uploading projects to Architizerand sign up for ourinspirational newsletters.In the late 1700s, the Treasury Department of a newborn United States was tasked with managing all construction appointments made to answer the urgent need for government buildings to support a freshly minted republic. Crucially, local officials were responsible for overseeing the design and physical development of these institutions. Regional and vernacular architecture was a natural outcome.Nevertheless, statements needed to be made, and this meant in many cases ancient historical aesthetics were reappropriated in a bid to display the strength of sovereignty, wealth and power, in Washington D.C., and many state capitals. Then, in 1803, one Benjamin Henry Latrobe now considered the Father of American Architecture, became Surveyor of Public Buildings, first focusing on extending the Capitol building by adding a south wing, before other notable landmarks, like the Presidents House and Navy Yard, fell under his command.Resigning in 1817, three years before he died in New Orleans, where he had earlier master-planned the citys first customs house, by the end of his career Latrobe had created some of the Capitols most iconic spaces. The Old Senate Chamber, Old Supreme Court, National Statuary Hall (then Hall of the House), and Court Chamber were all defined by his predisposition of neoclassical. The rooms, and his other projects, set into stone literally a tone that has remained the archetype of U.S. federal buildings.More than 100 years later, New York architects Walter Wilder and Harry White developed the federal estate in Olympia, Washington State capital. Among other institutions, the Washington State Legislative Building is a particularly compelling reference point that shows how grand antiquity was still called upon for government locations a century on even in places geographically removed from Americas most dominant economic and political centers.Washington State Legislative Building by Walter Wilder and Harry White; rehabilitated and renovated in 2004 by Einhorn Yaffee Prescott, Olympia, WashingtonThe zeitgeist may be even more pronounced to those outside the country itself. Regular appearances in TV and movie exports mean people across the world have seen the aesthetic, even if those inside the States today may rarely interact with, or pass by, federal buildings of the imposing Greco-Roman-esque school of colonnades and domes. Modernism, as ever, has a lot to answer for.The single most significant movement in culture, art and architecture of the 20th century, at best the language allowed for faster project completion and tended to functionality first. At worst, it transformed settlements into homogenous concrete, glass and steel wastelands where the best way to distinguish a structure involves thinking about what kind of cube, cylinder, or oblong youre looking at.Modernitys home, Chicago, catalyzed the rush for steel-framed edifices. But its arguably in the reconstruction of post-World War II Europe that many of criticisms of modernism ring most true. While the infant U.S. needed administrative buildings after winning independence, following the devastation of historys bloodiest conflict, the Old World and in particular its Eastern nations just needed buildings, period. Hence conformity in everything from social housing to commercial blocks and council offices, from Poland to the UK. A comparison made more profound still when you consider that for 50 years or so one stood behind the Iron Curtain, the other as a free Western democracy.Its true, there were variations and experimentations. Rotterdam, in the Netherlands, was almost entirely leveled by fighting, and now has myriad examples of modern architectural trials. Piet Booms striking Kubuswoningen, or Cube Houses, might be the best known. But another Dutch architectural titan, Aldo van Eyck, argued a shift in aesthetic and rationale in contemporary peace time has been at the expense of millions forced to live in visually uninspiring places. In reality, the truth is somewhere between the two to say all modern architecture is garbage is garbage. Or not. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Not all buildings pre-20th century buildings were good, or fit for inhabitation in the first place.Its with all this in mind, and a great deal more, that 47th U.S. President Donald Trumps January 20th Executive Order for Promoting Beautiful Federal Civic Architecture should raise eyebrows, if not alarm. Already, the American Institute of Architects has vowed to push back on demands for all new government buildings to be designed in line with traditional aesthetics of their setting. That means being visually identifiable as civic buildings and showing respect to classical heritage and the need to beautify public spaces. Who wouldnt want that?Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center by by Pei Cobb Freed & Partners Architects, Washington D.C.Aerial view of the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center by by Pei Cobb Freed & Partners Architects, Washington D.C.Architizers database contains few projects that would adhere to the remit if breaking ground today. The Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, might be one. Sat on Pennsylvania Avenue, in the heart of the capital, its the second largest federal building ever completed after the Pentagon.Although short of opportunities for external landscaping and greening, it is in keeping with more classical structures in the city, and modern finished in 1998. Compare this with the J. Edgar Hoover Building, on the same street, and theres a clear winner in terms of timelessness, longevity and eye candy.There is, of course, a frequent disconnect between wants and needs (or, more so, wants and abilities). And heres where the instructions begin to fall apart. First and foremost, the new administration has positioned itself as committed to cost savings. By reverting to architectural styles of post-independence and 19th Century U.S. central and local government, that wont be easy. Projects didnt just take longer because they relied on rudimentary technologies. They did so because of the materials used and the processes they need to become a building.Slow construction usually means higher prices thats a given. But this is also about impact. There may be pretty much zero interest in things like net zero, biodiversity, and the environment among White House staff and residents today. But this doesnt take away from the fact that if last months order is enforced it could be catastrophic in sustainability terms.Modular, prefabricated, and passive are just a few examples of modern architecture and construction approaches that would be much harder to apply to classical design. Furthermore, heritage design rarely lends itself to the incorporation of high tech, low impact materials with distinctly modern finishes. There would be limitations in what was deemed suitable, often at the expense of efficiency.There are probably bigger fish to fry, though. Trumps first term saw a similar order passed down and then quickly forgotten. The big difference is this time hes given the nod at the beginning of his presidency, rather than the end. But regardless of what it means in practice, truths are hard to ignore supply chains are expected to become strained as tariffs kick in, and immigration clampdowns are likely to decimate the construction sectors workforce.All projects, public and private, will suffer if that happens due to the interconnected nature of industrial sectors. And, although far-fetched, the idea of full government deconstruction is actually being discussed, either as a serious goal at the more extreme end of the right, or a glaring concern for moderates, centrists, and the left. Now lets say for a second that happens, remind us again: who exactly are these federal buildings be built for?Architects: Want to have your project featured? Showcase your work by uploading projects to Architizerand sign up for ourinspirational newsletters.The post Form, Function and Federalism: The Next Big Fight Over Civic Architecture appeared first on Journal.
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