Apple Cuts Deal to Buy $30 Billion in US-Made Broadcom Chips; OpenAI’s GPT-5.6 Gets Public Release; Bezos’ Blue Origin Taps Outside Money; Browser Extension- Hides Knock-Offs on Amazon
Posted: July 8, 2026 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: AI, Artificial Intelligence, chatgpt, finance, technology Leave a commentApple has inked a deal with Broadcom to buy $30 billion worth of wireless chips that are made in the US. Engadget.com reports that Broadcom will design and make custom chips “for a wide range of Apple products.” Apparently, $1.5 billion of the total will go into upgrading a Broadcom facility in Fort Collins, Colorado, which will be used to make ‘advanced radio frequency components.’ The information about the deal from the two companies indicates that there will be some ’15 billion US-made chips’ produced. Broadcom itself doesn’t have extensive manufacturing resources, and outsources production to various suppliers, including TSMC.
OpenAI is finally bowing its ‘strongest model yet’ this week. GPT-5.6 Sol is now coming out after weeks of delays due to government concerns. According to mashable.com, OpenAI has spent weeks working on “strengthened protections for higher-risk activity, sensitive cyber requests, and repeated misuse.” Arch competitor Anthropic also has had to deal with restraints from the US government on its Fable 5 and Mythos 5. I have to think while wearing my attorney hat that if these large language models are so damned dangerous, the products liability exposure ought to be massive. We may see a whole new army of lawyers coming after these firms before long with some enormous class action suits.
When you are one of the richest people on the planet, you can run a space company out of your wallet. Jeff Bezos has been doing that with Blue Origin, but now, he is turning to outside funding. Thenextweb.com notes that Bezos has bankrolled the company for the last 25 years, but now is closing a $10 billion round of funding. The deal values the rocket company at about $130 billion. It is not lost on tech observers that this is happening just as Elon Musk’s SpaceX has completed that biggest IPO ever. While Blue Origin trails SpaceX right now, the blast of cash may help them change that.
They are sometimes clever, and other times blatantly copy name brand goods. You have no doubt run across these sketchy items. Now, bgr.com reports thee is a browser extension that will filter them out. It is just called Knockoff—Amazon Brand Filter, and it eliminates “pseudo-brands”. The extension runs inside either Google Chrome or Firefox. They claim to check bands against a list of some 5,000 approve names. You can also customize it by blocking or trusting any brand on the results page. A handy plug in for Amazon shoppers.
I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.

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