Smartphone Sales Uptick in 2024; Biden Proposes Export Controls on GPUs; Apple Watch SE Gets Refresh; Government Turns Down Tesla Big Rig Charge Station Money Request

The year 2024 showed a sales uptick in smartphones after a tough 2023. Smartphone sales overall grew by 4% year over year. Androidauthority.com reports that Chinese maker Xiaomi had the top growth, increasing market share by 1%. Both Apple and Samsung saw their 2024 market share drop by 1%. Xiaomi does not have a footprint in the US, either, which makes the increase more notable. Samsung and Apple still lead the smartphone market globally…Samsung with 19% market share, and Apple with 18%. Apple sales in China were apparently hurt by the lack of AI features in that country on the iPhone 16 Pro models. Counterpoint Research sees Generative AI capabilities being on some 90% of smartphones that sell for over $250 by the year 2028.

The Biden administration has revealed what it is calling its ‘AI diffusion rule,’ which is intended to restrict the export of GPUs that are most coveted for AI applications. Although it does not mention the nation by name, it’s widely viewed as a means to prevent China from outpacing the US in AI development. According to engadget.com, there are 3 licensing tiers. The first is unrestricted, and that’s for the US domestic market and 18 strategic allies. The second tier will have caps on computing power, and that will be for most countries. The third tier includes China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea. The government will effectively bar sales of the most powerful GPUs in those nations. The Semiconductor Industry Association objects to the rule making, as does AI chip industry leader NVIDIA. It’s not clear that the incoming Trump administration will let the rule survive. 

Apple will launch an updated SE Watch later this year with an updated look. Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman says that it is likely that the design may be more in line with  the 2021 Watch Series 7…but it is possible it will be completely different…Apple is apparently considering a plastic case for the Watch SE…which could be available in a rainbow of bright colors. Think of the old iMac computers. The Watch 11 and Ultra 3 models will keep the present look but will get some upgrades. The Ultra 3 will probably get satellite connectivity and both the 11 and the Ultra 3 will likely get high blood pressure detection..not exact numbers, but just a warning to the wearer. The blood pressure feature was supposed to be out for the Watch 10, but was delayed. 

The Department of Transportation has turned down a request by Tesla for $100 million in funding for big rig EV charging. Techcrunch.com reports that $636 million in funding will be split by 49 applicants for EV charging infrastructure. Tesla has only produced a small number of electric big rigs in Texas, and is building out their facility in Nevada to make the electric trucks…which they first showed 8 years ago in 2017. The company wants to build 9 semi-truck charging stations between its former headquarters in the Bay Area and its present one near the southern border of Texas. There will probably be a third round of funding released from the bipartisan infrastructure law, which originally allocated $2.5 billion in funds for charging infrastructure. Presumably, the incoming Trump administration will want to dole out more money to Tesla.

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now. 


iPhone 17 Look Ahead; Amazon Expands Ad Business; Google Launches Beta ‘Daily Listen’ Lab; Delta Partners With YouTube on In-flight Entertainment

The next iteration of iPhones, the 17 series, is just months away. On this date that Steve Jobs revealed the original iPhone back in 2007, here’s a look at what we might see in the iPhone 17s this September. Macrumors.com is hearing we may lose the titanium frame for an aluminum one, or at least a combination of aluminum and titanium. Besides that, the backs of the phones will have a part aluminum, part glass design. The camera bump  will remain a rectangular bump, but will be bigger and also be aluminum. Some rumors have the lenses being horizontal or vertical, but them are likely to stay in a triangle arrangement. Of course, the 17 models will get the latest A19 chip with a speed bump, and at least one model will get Apple’s in-house designed Wi-Fi chip. We may see a 24 MP front cam, and a 48MP telephoto, which would be quite a jump from the paltry 12MP the present phones have. It now appears all 4 models will get the 12 gigs of ram, which will improve performance…as well as make Apple Intelligence run. 

Amazon is expanding its Ad business…this time, letting other sites use its ad tech for their own stores. According to cnbc.com, the new functionality is called Amazon Retail Ad Service. It allows companies to show “contextually relevant ads in the right place and at the right time” in search results, product pages and other areas of their site. It’s initially available for U.S. retailers, which will pay fees based on usage levels. Prices have not been disclosed.

In an experiment that sounds positively Orwellian to me, Google has started a new experiment in Search Labs called ‘Daily Listen.’ 9to5google.com says that via Discover and Search, Google is aware of what you are interested in, and it takes that into account while it creates a 5 minute episode that provides an overview of stories and topics you follow. The audio is AI. You can give the Daily Listen a thumbs up or down, and controls include play/pause, 10 second rewind, next story, and mute…if you would rather read. Android and iOS users in the US can enable Daily Listen in Search Labs from the top-left corner of the Google app. Welcome to the Ministry of Truth…

Delta Airlines has partnered with YouTube on a new in-flight Delta Sync entertainment ‘experience.’ Macrumors.com reports that Sky Miles members who log into their accounts will be able to watch their favorite creators, podcasts, and musical artists ad-free on board most Delta flights. The YouTube videos will be available on the Delta Sync setback units. The airline also announced that it is bowing new seatback hardware starting in 2026 that features a 4K HDR QLED display with a theatre-like viewing experience, Bluetooth capabilities for connecting earbuds, a recommendation engine tailored to customer preferences, and options for features like a Do Not Disturb mode for communicating with Delta employees.

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.


TSMC Now Making Apple Watch Chips in the US; DOJ Sues 6 Biggest US Landlords-Algorithmic Pricing; Nvidia- Chips Improving Faster Than Moore’s Law; Tesla US Sales Dropped 5% Last Year

As reported here and elsewhere, under the Biden Administration CHIPS Act, a number of chip plants have been built or are being built in the US. Now, bgr.com reports that the TSMC Arizona plant has started making another chip for Apple. Last year, they started making A16 Bionic chips, and now they are producing the S9 chips for the Apple Watch Series 9 and Apple Watch Ultra 2. Right now they are producing about 10,000 a month in the Arizona plant, but expect to up production to 24,000 a month by the next quarter. The 2 chips being made at the TSMC Arizona plant are 4 nanometer, but they plan to bring 3 nanometer tech to the facility, which would enable them to build the A17 Pro, the A18 family, the M3 and M4…and eventually Apple’s M5 chip. The Chips Act has provided subsidies, as right now, it is costing about 50% more to make them here than in Taiwan until they can produce enough volume to be competitive. As Joe Biden might say, this is a big effing deal.

The Department of Justice has sued 6 of the biggest US landlords over ‘algorithmic pricing schemes that harmed renters.’ According to arstechnica.com, one landlord, Cortland Management, has agreed to a settlement “that requires it to cooperate with the government, stop using its competitors’ sensitive data to set rents and stop using the same algorithm as its competitors without a corporate monitor.” The other defendants are Greystar, LivCor, Camden, Cushman, and Willow Bridge. The DOJ had previously sued RealPage, a software maker accused of helping landlords collectively set prices by giving them access to competitors’ nonpublic pricing and occupancy information. The original version of the lawsuit described actions by landlords but did not name any as defendants. “The amended complaint alleges that the six landlords actively participated in a scheme to set their rents using each other’s competitively sensitive information through common pricing algorithms,” the DOJ said. The phrase ‘price fixing’ came up in discussions between the landlords, according to the government’s amended complaint. It will be interesting to see if the change of administration causes the DOJ to back off. Even at that, the suit has been joined by the attorneys general of California, Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oregon, Tennessee, and Washington. 

Unless you are in the tech business or are a real tech nerd, you may not be all that familiar with Moore’s Law. Moore’s Law was coined by the co-founder of Intel Gordon Moore in 1965, and it basically says that the number of transistors on computer chips would roughly double every year, essentially doubling the performance of those chips. This prediction mostly panned out, and created rapid advances in capability and plummeting costs for decades. Now, TechCrunch.com says that Nividia CEO Jensen Huang claims that the performance of his company’s AI chips is growing faster than the historical rates set by Moore’s Law. He told a group at CES “We can build the architecture, the chip, the system, the libraries, and the algorithms all at the same time. If you do that, then you can move faster than Moore’s Law, because you can innovate across the entire stack.” Huang claims that Nvidia’s AI chips are 1,000 times better than what their chips were 10 years ago…a much faster pace than that laid down in Moore’s Law. He says there is no sign of it slowing down soon, either. 

While AI chips are getting faster at warp speed, that’s not the case with Tesla vehicle sales. Elecctrek.co reports that analyst TroyTeslike on X has been one of the most reliable at predicting Tesla quarterly delivery results. Tesla is easily the most opaque automaker when it comes to this metric. Teslike has crunched numbers and says Tesla’s US sales are down by 5% in 2024 compared to the previous year. They are also down about 10% in Europe, but up 8% in China. The drop in the US is tough, since Tesla worked at goosing sales with discounts and incentives…including price cuts and subsidized financing. Although adding the Cybertruck to the line picked up 30,000 more deliveries, the car maker was still down more than 34,000 units in 2024. Electrek.co noted ‘that it might be time for Tesla to start to consider that Elon Musk’s antics are badly hurting sales in the US.’

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now. 


Reserve a Samsung Galaxy S25 & Get $50 Credit; Swave Set to Introduce True 3D Glasses; Facebook Ditches Fact-Checking; UK Confirms Plan to Criminalize Explicit Deepfakes

The next Samsung Galaxy Unpacked is coming up January 22nd, in San Jose, and we’ll see the new S25 series of smartphones at that time. Although there is lots revealed already, we are now hearing that the S25 Ultra may get the rest of the series’ rounded corner design. If you are super-stoked, and know you are ready to upgrade, androidpolice.com reports that Samsung is once again offering reservations in advance for the S25 phones. You can get $50 in Samsung credits once again for reserving and then going through with your preorder. Of course, we’ll cover the details of the freshened line on the 22nd. 

A startup called Swave, which has been spun off from Belgium’s Imec…one of the world’s foremost research facilities on nanoelectornics, is aiming to release the world’s first true 3D glasses. While there are AR and VR headsets like the Microsoft HoloLens and Apple Vision Pro, you really are only getting a 3D effect on a transparent screen. According to thenextweb.com, the Swave smark glasses have a special display that uses phase-change materials to steer light and ‘sculpt’ 3D images that you can see from all angles. The glasses are claimed to have the world’s smallest pixels, to create high-quality images without straining the eyes. That by itself would be quite a lap forward. The founders’ ultimate goal is to create applications that can pass the visual Turing test, where virtual reality is indistinguishable from real-world images. Swave is also working on Heads Up Displays for vehicles that would create holograms without the need for glasses at all. No timeline has been given as yet. 

In a move unlikely to bolster confidence in what you see on the platform, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has announced that content moderation and other restrictions on speech would be lifted across Facebook, Instagram and other platforms as Donald Trump returns to the White House. Stand by for more ‘alternative facts’ on Facebook. Rawstory.com notes that Zuck said in a video “More specifically, we’re going to get rid of fact-checkers and replace them with Community Notes similar to X, starting in the U.S.” Meta claims there has been too much political bias in the third party fact-checker system. 

The UK is moving to criminalize the creation of sexually explicit deepfake images and videos. TechCrunch.com reports that sharing such deepfakes is already illegal under the Online Safety Act that went live last year. Now, the Brits move on to creation of the sleazy things. Prime Minister Starmer was actually the subject of a deepfake video smear, but that one involved a shady investment scheme. Here in the US, California is going after deepfakes with a new law…although Elon musk’s X is suing to try to keep the law from going into effect. In the UK, Parliamentary Under-Secretary Alex Davies-Jones said in a statement. “This demeaning and disgusting form of chauvinism must not become normalized, and as part of our Plan for Change we are bearing down on violence against women – whatever form it takes.”

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now. 


New Smart Glasses at CES-Project Screen Not on Lenses; Open AI Moving to ‘Superintellegence’; Samsung Galaxy S25 Leak; United-Tests Starlink on Flights Starting in Feb.

Most smart glasses or goggles display on the lenses. Now, a startup at CES is showing something a bit different. Halliday is planning to start shipping their new smart glasses by the end of the first quarter of 2025. These glasses actually project a 3.5 inch ‘screen into the wearer’s upper right field of view.’ Bgr.com reports that there is a tiny projector in the frame. This allows viewing the screen with minimal interference and without needing specific lenses. The system works for people with or without prescription lenses, and is allegedly visible even in bright sunlight. The glasses feature Halliday’s built in AI. You control them with voice commands or buttons built into the frame. They also plan to ship a ring-like track pad you can wear on your finger to control them. They will launch on Kickstarter, and the glasses will retail for $489.

Open AI CEO Sam Altman has posted to his personal blog that he believes OpenAI “know[s] how to build [artificial general intelligence]” as it has traditionally understood it — and is beginning to turn its aim to “superintelligence.” According to techcrunch.com, Altman continued with “We love our current products, but we are here for the glorious future,” Altman wrote in the post, which was published late Sunday evening. “Superintelligent tools could massively accelerate scientific discovery and innovation well beyond what we are capable of doing on our own, and in turn massively increase abundance and prosperity.” That all sounds amazing, but a lot of us would love to see actual artificial intelligence, not the artificial stupidity we get in answers a lot of the time from these products. You have to give it to Sam, though…he doesn’t lack for confidence in himself or in OpenAI’s ChatGPT.

Samsung has never been known for its tight grip on information when it comes to products in the works, and now we have a couple more leaks describing the upcoming Galaxy S25…which should bow later this month. Androidpolice.com says that like the Google Pixel 9 Pro, the Galaxy S25 series will include a free Gemini Advanced subscription. The handsets will also have new blue colors and some MagSafe-type case options. The colors are reportedly ‘Icy Blue’ for the Galaxy S25 Plus and ‘Titanium Blue’ for the S25 Ultra. The latter is a lighter shade of blue. As for the wireless charging, the case images show a MagSafe-line ring, but word is the Galaxy S25 won’t natively support Qi2 charging, but will rely on external accessories to do so. This is also true with other Android lines…they rely on cases for the charging abilities. 

United is going to start testing out Starlink satellite connectivity on flights next month. Engadget.com notes that UA announced a partnership with SpaceX back in September. If the testing goes as expected, United plans to have the first commercial flight with Starlink to be in place by later this spring. It will start out on an Embraer E-175. The rest of the airlines ‘two-cabin regional fleet’ should have Starlink installed through 2025, with the first mainline Starlink-enabled plane in the air before the end of 2025. Starlink will be free to all members of United’s Mileage Plus program. 

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now. 


Chinese Government Hackers Hit US Treasury Office; Meta-Plans to Flood Social Media with AI Generated Users and Content; Tesla Deliveries Drop-First in a Decade; Samsung A16 Launches in US for $199

Over the holiday, we found out that Chinese government hackers targeted the very sensitive sanctions office for the US Treasury. Techcrunch.com reports that the hackers were able to access employee workstations and unclassified documents. The situation, which happened in December, was called ‘a major cybersecurity incident’ by the Treasury. A third party software provider called Beyond Trust, that provides identity management tools, tipped off Treasury about the attacks. The US Treasury Department has had no further comment so far. 

From the ‘whoever thought this was a good idea’ department…Meta plans to flood Facebook and other social media platforms with AI powered user profiles. According to Siliconangle.com, Connor Hayes, VP of product of Generative AI said in an interview with Financial Times “We expect these AIs to actually, over time, exist on our platforms, kind of in the same way that accounts do. They’ll have bios and profile pictures and they’ll be able to generate and share content powered by AI on the platform. That’s where we see all of this going.” Hey, they want to see some return on the billions they are pumping into AI…so brace yourself.

Tesla had its first drop in yearly deliveries in a decade. Yahoo.com says that the EV maker got 495,570 vehicles to customers in the last quarter, missing estimates of 503,269 which meant a 1.1% drop year over year. This all according to 15 analysts polled by LSEG. The stock is down over 100 from a high of 486 December 17th to 379.70 as of this report on January 2nd. 

One thing Samsung does well that Apple can’t or won’t master is maintaining a line of cheap Android phones in addition to their more state-of-the art and therefore pricy phones. 9to5google.com reports that Samsung has started 2025 with the US launch of its budget Galaxy A16 phone…for $199! The phone is no dog…it has a 6.7 inch screen and runs an Exynos 1330 system. The A16 also rocks a big 5,000 mAh battery. Where it does lack is in memory…only 4 gigs. It does have a 50MP rear cam and a 5 MP ultra wide, as well as a 2 MP macro cam. The Selfie cam is 13 MP, so you aren’t going to get top notch photos with this…but hey, $199! It comes with 6 major Android updates too. You can get it in black or blue starting January 9th from Samsung.com and many retailers and carriers.

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.