Apple Announces WWDC 2025; Google Bows Next-Gen AI Reasoning Model; Europe Goes for Alternatives to US Cloud Services; Napster…Napster! Sells for $207 Million

Apple has announced WWDC 2025. The dates are June 9 through the 13th at Apple Park in Cupertino. 9to5mac.com notes that the event will be ‘entirely online’ and that it’s free for developers. There will, however, be an in-person special event at Apple Park on June 9. Space for that in-person event is limited, and details on how to apply to attend can be found on the WWDC25 website. As usual, we should see previews of all the next wave of operating system updates: iOS19, MacOS 16, and all the rest. We have already reported that the word is that iOS 19 will be “one of the most dramatic software overhauls” in Apple’s history. The update will reportedly refresh the design of icons, menus, apps, windows, and more. It will also simplify how users navigate and control their devices. 

Google has rolled out Gemini 2.5 and a new family of AI reasoning models that they say pause to ‘think’ before answering a question. The question is, will they answer questions correctly? We’re going to find out. According to techcrunch.com, the new family of reasoning models include Gemini 2.5 Pro, Experimental, a multimodal, reasoning AI model that the company claims is its most intelligent model yet. This model will be available on Tuesday in the company’s developer platform, Google AI Studio, as well as in the Gemini app for subscribers to the company’s $20-a-month AI plan, Gemini Advanced. In the future, Google says all its new AI models will have reasoning capabilities baked in. 

With all the disruption coming from the present Trump administration, European companies and governments are looking for alternatives to the big US cloud Services…like Google Cloud, Microsoft Azure, and Amazon Web Services. Days ago, the Dutch House of Representatives just passed eight motions requiring their government to reduce reliance on US tech companies and move to European alternatives. A few days prior to that, over 100 organizations signed an open letter to European officials calling for the continent to become “more technologically independent” and saying the status quo creates “security and reliability risks.” Another example of this administration costing US companies money because our allies no longer trust us. What will the next 3 years bring? Hard to tell, but buckle up!

Napster…do you even know a single soul who uses Napster…just sold for $207 million. Engadget.com reports that a company called infinite Reality is the buyer. They say it will be used for marketing in the ‘metaverse.’ The company intends to create virtual 3D spaces for music fans to attend concerts and listening parties…and also to build a sales platform for musicians and labels to sell merch. Will it work…maybe, but $207 million for a circa 1999 platform? All I can say is ‘wow.’

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


23andMe Bankruptcy; Apple Watch May Get Cams and AI; Google Gemini Live-Is Live; CA Bill Update-Cheap Broadband for Poor Details

23andMe, the DNA testing firm, has filed for bankruptcy. The company intends to look for a buyer and continue to operate as a debtor in possession through the process. The CEO has resigned to bid for the company independently…engadget.com reports that the Board had previously rejected a bid from her. Rob Bonta, the Attorney General of California, has recommended that users contact the company immediately and demand that their data be deleted, to try to safeguard their private information and avoid misuse. 23andMe had been hacked in 2023, and the hackers got away with info on some 6.9 million customers. They were hit with a class action over it a year later. 

Although some Apple Intelligence features have been delayed until late this year, with analysts dinging Apple over that…now, it looks like Cupertino is doing anything besides sitting still. According to theverge.com, they are working on adding cameras to the Apple Watch in order to enable AI features like Visual Intelligence in the next two years. Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman said in his Power On newsletter that the cams will live ‘inside the display’ on the standard Watch, but the Ultra will have them on the side, next to the digital crown and button. What the cameras will bring is that the Watch will be able to “see the outside world and use AI to deliver relevant information.” We had reported previously that Apple was working on adding cams to the AirPods, so it looks like they are going all-in on Apple Intelligence. The cam-equipped Watches and AirPods could roll out in 2027. Visual Intelligence will bow on the iPhone 16’s.

Google has added features to Gemini which are pretty cool. Androidpolice.com notes that Gemini has added new live video AI features. A person with a Google One subscription can now not only engage in live discussion about a screenshot from your device, but (at least on an Xiaomi phone right now) can share their screen in real time with the AI. You can ask the AI anything about what’s on the screen. Up to now, this only was expected to work with static screen shots. No announcements have been made, so it sounds like maybe there is a rolling worldwide staggered release. 

We reported earlier that California had introduced a bill that would make ISPs provide cheap broadband to low income folks like New York has. Now, arstechnica.com reports that it has been amended with details. The Internet service providers would have to furnish 100Mbps download speeds and 20Mbps upload speeds for $15 a month. The Supreme Court has twice refused to step in and stop this, so expect California to move forward on this. and for other states to follow suit. In New York, AT&T stopped offering home 5G internet due to the law there, but they won’t be able to do that so easily in California. That’s because they offer DSL and other fiber internet in the Golden State, and still are classified as a carrier of last resort for landline service.

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


EU Orders Apple to Open Access to iOS Notifications; Nvidia Bows Two ‘Personal’ AI Supercomputers; Pixel 9a Released-Midrange Phone for $499; Court Rules that AI Can’t be Author for Copyright

The European Union is hitting Apple again with its Digital Markets Act. This time, they are calling for Apple to open up iOS connectivity features. 9to5mac.com reports that that means allowing connected devices, like third-party smartwatches, full access to the iOS notification system, as well as background execution privileges, just like how the Apple Watch works with the iPhone. Headphone makers will be given access to system features that support AirPods, like proximity auto-pairing and automatic audio switching. Other kinds of connected devices must also be able to make equivalent features to system services like AirDrop and AirPlay. Apple has expressed its disappointment with the demands, and will no doubt appeal. 

Nvidia unveiled two ‘personal AI supercomputers’ yesterday ate their conference. According to bgr.com, both are powered by Nvidia’s Grace Blackwell platform. They are called the DGX Spark and DGX Station, and are intended to give AI developers, researchers, and students the ability to prototype, fine-tune, and run large language models on desktops. The Spark is about the size of an Apple M4 Mac Mini. The station is larger and they claim it “brings data-center-level performance to desktops for AI development.” The Spark is available for order now starting at $3999 at Nvidia.com, and should be delivered this summer. You can get an Asus version for a grand less…it’s called the Ascent GX10 supercomputer. The more powerful Station will be out in late 2025, and Nvidia says there will be versions from Asus, Dell, HP, and others. 

Without a lot of fanfare, and amazingly…no real leaks…Google has rolled out the Pixel 9A, a midrange phone that starts at $499…less than the Apple alleged ‘budget’ phone. Theverge.com notes that the 9A has no camera bump, a bigger screen at 6.3 inches, faster Tensor G4 processor, and better water resistance…but that Google held the price point. The Google phone has 2 cams instead of Apple’s one on the back, and did we mention flush…no bump? No firm date yet, but the Pixel 9A should be available in April.

A three judge panel at the District Of Columbia Court of Appeals has ruled unanimously that AI software can’t be granted authorship. Arstechnica.com reports that the court found in favor of the Copyright office…copyright law “requires all work to be authored in the first instance by a human being,” Judge Patricia Millett wrote in her opinion. A computer scientist named Stephen Thaler says he will fight on, going to the Supreme Court. One key issue: the duration of copyright is typically limited to “the author’s lifespan or to a period that approximates how long a human might live,” Justice Millett wrote. “Of course, machines do not have ‘lives,’ nor is the length of their operability generally measured in the same terms as a human life.” The judge did dis the character Data in Star Trek, noting that he may have intelligence comparable to a human, but that his poetry might be worse than that coming from ChatGPT. Of course, the bad poem supposedly written by Data was actually composed by a script writer.

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


Win 11 Updates Inadvertently Delete Copilot; Apple Wanted iPhone 17 Air to be Portless; Google-New AI Can Remove Watermarks; Ultralight EVs Revealed by Startup Longbow

As software gets more and more complex, and companies are turning attention to their AI models, some things can slip through the cracks. That is apparently true with this month’s Windows 11 update. Arstechnica.com reports that the update removes the Copilot app from some Windows 11 PCs…unpinning it from the task bar. Microsoft says it is “working on a resolution to address the issue” but that users who want to get Copilot back can reinstall the app from the Microsoft Store and re-pin it to the taskbar, the same process you use to install Copilot on PCs where it has been removed. 

More keeps slipping out about the upcoming slimmer iPhone model…dubbed the iPhone Air by most. Here’s an interesting item that engadget.com picked up from Mark Gurman. Apple apparently really wanted to dump the USB-C port and make the thin iPhone Apples first totally portless phone. Apparently, they ran into tough sledding with this when EU regulators protested. Apple hasn’t totally given up…they may try to roll out a portliness iPhone later on if the iPhone 17 Air is successful. The Air is reportedly 2 mm thinner than other iPhones. Mark Gurman says it should be priced at about $900…putting it between the entry level iPhone 17 and the pricier Pro models. 

There has been plenty written already…to say nothing of plenty of angst about AI duplicating voices. Now, gizmodo.com notes that Google’s new AI model can remove watermarks from images. The version is Gemini Flash 2.0. It is only in the experimental phase so far, but users have found it easily removes the watermarks from copyrighted images. There are already a number of other AI powered apps that can remove objects and fill gaps in images…even including Apple Intelligence with their ‘Clean Up’ feature. Companies have worked to keep from removing watermarks…nicknamed ‘nerfed,’ which is to say they have significant restrictions in place to avoid legal trouble. OpenAI’s Dall-E image model won’t generate images of copyrighted characters, for example…because a certain House of Mouse is very protective of its characters and they have a robust legal department. Google will no doubt try to rectify the issue before releasing Gemini Flash 2.0 generally, but the horse may be out of the barn on this…much like with voices. 

EV’s may be a big part of the wave of the future in vehicles, but they are for the most part pretty hefty. Now, a startup in Britain has come out of stealth, and introduced plans for two lightweight EV’s. The company is called Longbow, and it is founded by ex-Tesla, Lucid, and Polestar execs…so no strangers to getting an EV line off the ground. Thenextweb.com reports that the cars are being touted as ‘spiritual successors’ to the iconic Lotus and Jaguar E-Type. The first one out of the blocks is called the Speedster, a sports car that will weigh only 1984 lbs and do zero to 62 in 3.5 seconds! It will have a range of 275 miles and starts at $110,404. First customer deliveries are set for 2026. Longbow also plans a Roadster. That vehicle will run $84,425 and will weigh in at 2193 lbs and will do zero to 62 in 3.6 seconds. Note that the average EV today weighs in at some 4400 lbs, so these are just about half that! Longbow plans to use off the shelf parts, even down to the electric motor, so no exotic hand made parts that will cost a fortune to replace. It is good to recall that the original Tesla was a cool little roadster…and these days, almost no one is making anything like that. 

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


Irish Startup Unveils World’s First Silicon-Based Quantum Computer; Apple to Add Live Translation to AirPods; AI Search Engines-Alarming Rate of Wrong Answers; Bluesky Proposes Letting Users Allow AI Training or Not on Posts

We’ve had a couple of big quantum computing stories lately, including the one about Microsoft’s ground-breaking new quantum chip. Now, and Irish startup called Equal1 has showed off the world’s first quantum computer that runs on a hybrid quantum-classical silicon chip. Thenextweb.com reports that the chip is called the Bell-1, after quantum physicist John Stewart Bell. The computer weighs a hefty 441 pounds, but it does plug into a regular electrical outlet. It is designed to simply slot into high-performance data centers right beside standard servers! The machine marries classical transistors for normal computing tasks with quantum transistors for qubits…all on a single silicon-based chip. The computer is much smaller than most quantum computers, due in large part to its closed-cycle cryocooler that keeps the machine at -272 Celsius without massive external refrigeration. It only does 6 qubits…unlike Google’s Willow Chip that can do 105…but it is available to buy right now…on St. Patrick’s Day…no word on how much ‘green’ you will need to bring one home!

In yet another bid to get you to never take your AirPods out except to recharge, Apple is apparently going to add live translation to them in a software update later this year. According to engadget.com, a Bloomberg story says the feature would work similarly to the translation feature on Pixel Buds, but with the Apple translation, you wouldn’t have to ask Siri first as you do with Google Assistant. The AirPods will automatically detect something besides your native language and start converting it to the language you speak and understand. This would be the 2nd big feature drop since last year when Apple added Hearing Health features to AirPods Pro. It is still being rumored that they will add heart rate tracking too…which the Beats Powerbeats Pro 2 buds already have. 

A study by the Columbia Journalism Review’s Tow Center for Digital Journalism has found that AI search engines give incorrect answers a shocking 60% of the time! Arstechnica.com notes that ChatGPT Search incorrectly identified 67% of articles queried. Perplexity was much better giving wrong answers 37% of the time. Grok 3, Elon Musk’s generative AI was wrong an astonishing 94% of the time. The researchers fed direct excepts from actual news articles to the AI models for the test, and ran 1600 queries with 8 different generative search tools. 

An interesting idea dropped by Bluesky CEO Jay Graber at South by Southwest. Techcrunch.com reports that he mentioned that Bluesky is looking at letting users have the option of having their posts and data scraped for generative AI training and public archiving…or they can opt not to do so. This did get a bit of an uproar from users who think one of the best features of Bluesky is not sharing of info, but as Graber pointed out…everything on the website is public…just like a website is public.  Under the proposal, users of the Bluesky app, or other apps that use the underlying AT Protocol, could go into their settings and allow or disallow the usage of their Bluesky data across four categories: generative AI, protocol bridging (i.e., connecting different social ecosystems), bulk datasets, and web archiving (such as the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine).

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


Meta Platforms to Test ‘Community Notes’; Google Gemini Can Personalize Answers Based on Your Search History; Euro Sat Firms Compete to Replace Starlink in Ukraine; EPA Dumping Higher Fuel Economy Regs

Starting in just a few days, on March 18th, Meta platforms Facebook, Instagram, and Threads will begin testing Community Notes. According to engadget.com, notes won’t appear publicly on posts right away. The company wants to make sure the writing and rating system is working as intended before the notes start showing up for everyone. If this Community Notes bit sounds familiar, that’s because it is a pretty clear ripoff from X…which Meta even admits. They are saying it will bring extra context to posts that could use more explanation, clarity or perhaps a correction. In fact, Meta will initially base its ratings system on X’s open-source algorithm. “This will allow us to build on what X has created and improve it for our own platforms over time,” the company said in its announcement. Considering the way Community Notes has sometimes worked on X, I would expect extra chaos…as some contributors post bs alleged ‘clarifications’ that slant things towards their political views. Hey, they are free platforms…remember always that YOU are the product!

Google Gemini will now be able to personalize answers based on your search history. Of all the things Google has going that sets it apart from every other platform, your search history has to top the list. Now, theverge.com reports that ‘the Google’ will be using this muscle to give you highly personalized responses.If you activate the personalization, Gemini will automatically analyze your query to see if referring to your search history can ‘enhance’ its response. Gemini will also connect in the future to your YouTube and Google Photos, enabling it to really drill down to personalize responses. By the way, you can disconnect your search history from Gemini at any time, and Google is providing a ‘clear banner’ with a link to do so. 

Ukraine may not have to worry about on-again, off-again access to Elon Musk’s Starlink satellites for info they need in fighting off the Russians. European Union governments are in talks with 4 different satellite companies about providing service to Ukraine. Thenextweb.com says European leaders are increasingly concerned about relying on Starlink — fears stoked by a Reuters report that US officials had threatened to cut off the system in Ukraine if the country didn’t meet their demands on sharing its mineral wealth. It should be noted that Musk himself said this wasn’t the case. Nonetheless, the UK’s Inmarsat, Luxembourg’s SES, and Spain’s Hisdesat — told the Financial Times they were also discussing with governments and EU institutions about how to provide back-up connectivity to Ukraine. 

The Trump administration’s EPA is wasting no time in killing off the higher fuel economy requirements that were set to go into effect in 2026 through 2032. According to arstechnica.com, this takes the gas off the pressure on carmakers to sell more electric vehicles. The corporate average fuel economy target now drops from 54.5 mpg to 40.4 mpg. 

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


iOS 19-Total Revamp; AT&T Video Call from Space; TikTok Lets Parents See Teen’s Followers & Followed; Bluesky Adds 3 Min. Video Uploads

Apple may have pushed back their improved AI version of Siri, but that doesn’t mean big changes aren’t coming. 9to5mac.com reports that Cupertino is working on iOS 19, which will be the biggest overhaul of the mobil OS since iSO 7. Oh, great…a new design and interface to get used to!  Actually, Apple plans to freshen the MacOS and iPadOS, too. One big goal is to make them all more consistent. The word is, they will look more like visionOS. Honestly, after looking at that OS, it isn’t going to be a jarring change…but do expect an update to the “style of icons, menus, apps, windows, and system buttons.” iOS 19 will be previewed at WWDC in June, and should be out in September along with the iPhone 17 family.

AT&T and partner AST SpaceMobile have now made a video call using an unmodified smartphone connected by satellite. This is a small but important step, showing the viability of potential space-based cell networks that could cover unserved areas and spots that are too remote to eve attempt to wire up with cell towers. According to zdnet.com, the call was via AST SpaceMobile’s BlueBird satellites, which were launched last September. The call originated in Midland Texas, and was made over a standard WhatsApp with an unmodified smartphone. While Apple, Samsung, and others have emergency calling and even limited regular texting over satellite, a video call is quite a leap ahead, as video takes considerably more bandwidth. A new series of BlueBird satellites will allow 120 Mbps data speeds, which is enough to actually stream….although with the present costs, you probably won’t want to spend the money!

TikTok has added features to help protect teens. Parents can sow see their teenager’s follower/following list, and block access during certain hours. Techcrunch.com says the ‘Time Away’ feature might be set during school, at night, or during homework time. On the follower/ followed front, the parents can also see who the teen has blocked. All this is unlikely to move the US government, which gave the app 75 days in January to be taken over by a US company or be banned. 

Bluesky is now supporting video uploads of up to 3 minutes, tripling the former limit. This should be a nice boost for video creators. Engadget.com also notes that some inbox management has been added as well. You will now see a ‘requests’ section in Bluesky DMs, which will silo messages from users you don’t know. You can reject incoming chats, cutting the number of spam DMs that have been hitting inboxes. Bluesky now has 33 million users, according to CEO Jay Gruber, who wore a tee shirt with Latin inscribed on it…mounds sine caesaribus…translated to a world without Caesars. Gruber touted Bluesky being ‘billionaire proof’ compared to other apps. The open system of Bluesky makes it possible to ‘fork off’ if a billionaire should take over, and just move on to a new application. Mastodon is set up in a similar open manner.

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


Microsoft & Amazon Quantum-Race to Protect Encryption; Russia ‘Grooms’ Public AI Models With Propaganda; Threads Tests ‘Interests’ in Profiles; Most AI Voice Cloning Tools-Little Protection Against Stealing Voices

Quantum computing is pretty exciting…it will allow humankind to do things never before possible, even with banks of supercomputers churning away for years. We just reported recently about Microsoft’s new Majorana 1 processor chip, and Amazon and Google have also made advancements. We may see quantum computing in daily use in years not decades, now. That’s all cool…what is scary is that a quantum computer can break encryption that would take years for a regular supercomputer in seconds. Geekwire.com reports that there is essentially a parallel race on the develop ways to implement newer, more powerful encryption created by quantum computing that can’t be easily broken, and get that encryption out to companies…and particularly financial institutions before quantum computing is out in the wild and available to bad guys. Let’s hope that the so-called ‘DOGE’ that Elon Musk is using to wholesale chop government agencies doesn’t hit the National Institute of Standards and their Post-Quantum Cryptography Project! It will take years to deploy quantum created encryption to businesses and the public.

There are real plusses on AI models that are open, but there is a dangerous down side to them, too. One is that the Russians are working overtime to feed disinformation and Russian-slanted propaganda to them. According to gizmodo.com, picking up on a NewsGuard report, a propaganda network called Pravda produced more than 3.6 million articles in 2024 alone, which it found are now incorporated into the 10 largest AI models, including ChatGPT, xAI’s Grok, and Microsoft Copilot. It should be noted that the ‘Pravda’ network is not connected with the infamous Russian newspaper that was one of the two main propaganda arms of the Soviet Communist Party. It certainly picks up where that paper can go to disseminate propaganda, though. NewsGuard discovered in their audit that chatbots operated by the 10 largest AI companies collectively repeated false Russian Disinformation narratives 33.55% of the time, gave a non-response 18.22% of the time, and a debunk 48.22% of the time. NewsGuard refers to this as ‘AI grooming.’ By spinning up websites under seemingly legitimate-looking websites, the models are ingesting and regurgitating information they do not understand is propaganda. Couple this with ‘hallucinations,’ from AI and you can see the wisdom of always double checking what an AI model produces for you. Hey, you have the time…the AI generates its product in seconds!

Threads is test-driving adding ‘interests’ to profiles, in order to connect users and drive more engagement. This is no-doubt in response to Bluesky’s having a ‘description’ right under a user profile that allows people to say a little about themselves, and give their interests as well as disinterests! TechCrunch.com says Threads hopes to pick up more disgruntled X users. Along with custom feeds, they also hope to slow the fast growth of Bluesky. The Bluesky system works…I have 2200 followers there just since the election, and only 334 on Threads! Some of this is due to a number of people not wanting to use a Meta platform, but I think a lot of it is that you can quickly vet a request on Bluesky, and accept if their interests are similar, or block them if…for example…they appear to be a troll, or they just have pics showing off their body and list an Only Fans account.

There are a number of tools or apps out in the wild that do an amazing job of cloning a voice with only a few seconds of sampling of the actual voice. For those of us in the business and for famous actors, this is a huge issue that was part of the big SAG-AFTRA strike last year. But more than that, it can also mean scams, fraud, and the like for just normal folks going about life. Zdnet.com reports that Consumer Reports checked out 6 of the most widely known platforms…Descript, ElevenLans, Lovo, PlayHT, Resemble AI, and Speechify. Their tests found that four of the six…namely ElevenLabs, Speechify, PlayHT, and Lovo…didn’t have the technical ability to prevent cloning someone’s voice without their knowledge, or to limit the AI cloning to only the user’s voice. The so-called protection consisted of checkboxes and a consent statement. One of them…Descript…had the user read and record the consent statement and used that audio to create the clone. For non-professionals, the most common scam is one you have no doubt heard of. It  involves cloning the voice of a family member and then using that recording to contact a loved one to request that money be sent to help them out of a dire situation. Because the victim thinks they are hearing the voice of a family member in distress, they are more likely to send whatever funds are necessary without questioning the situation. Again, if you get a call from a relative needing money right now, don’t bite. Use another means to try to contact like email, text, etc…and then you can utilize knowledge that only you or that family member would have to verify. 

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


Kuo-Folding iPhone in ’26 or ’27; Is Using AI Cheating in Interviews? VW Tests Robotaxis in Snowy Norway; Reddit Adds Rules Check

Every year since Samsung first put out their large, pricy folding smartphone…then their flip phone…tech-watchers have speculated as to when Apple will jump into this market. Apple is rather famous for not getting into a market until they think they can blow the doors off the competition….and usually they have been able to come from behind and do so. Now, macrumors.com has picked up a report from analyst Ming-Chi Kuo claiming that Apple will release a folding iPhone around the end of 2026 or early 2027. Kuo says it will be the book-type design, not a flip…and will sell for over $2000. That sounds about right on the pricing, considering that Samsung’s Galaxy Fold sells for just a bit under $2 grand. The folding iPhone is likely to have a 7.8 inch ‘crease-free’ inner display and a 5.5 inch outer display. That lines up with a rumor from last month. The Apple folder will measure between 9 and 9.5 mm thick when folded, and 4.5 to 4.8 mm unfolded. Kuo expects a titanium alloy casing and a hinge made of stainless steel and titanium alloy. It will have a duel lens rear cam, and a front facing cam for both folded and unfolded states. Instead of FaceID, it will use Touch ID utilizing a side button in an effort to save space inside. Don’t be shocked if a fully tricked out one gobbles up $2500!

We have all heard stories…and I have reported a few right here…about generative AI writing documents at blinding speed…even if some had so-called hallucinations…or just plain made-up stuff. Well, what about using AI in an interview to get a leg up on other candidates? According to geekwire.com, some firms like Amazon are cracking down on using AI tools like coding assistants that can give an applicant an edge. This seems to echo concerns about cheating in education using AI. Gee, that sonnet you wrote sounds awfully familiar. Are you a descendant of Shakespeare’s? One tech leader speculated that some 80% of their candidates use LLMs on top-of-funnel code tests…even though they are told not to do so. A few companies are encouraging AI use by applicants, but most aren’t. Here’s an easy way to screen that kind of thing out…an in-person interview. Have the person write using a computer with net access disabled. For years, the California Bar Exam…which just recently ran an exam online, and it was fairly disastrous…only allowed typewriters after they were checked in advanced and sealed by the examiners….just to avoid cheating. As AI grows more accurate and its mastery becomes a must-have skill, using it in an interview may become more acceptable..but for now, it often gets a candidate immediately put on the ‘no-hire’ list. 

Up to now, virtually all self-driving fleets have operated in places where the weather is pretty fair all the time. Think Phoenix, Austin, LA, San Francisco, Atlanta. Yes, there has been a foray or two into Pennsylvania, but the vast majority of self drivers and all robotaxi fleets have been in places without much or any snow and ice. Arstechnica.com notes that that is changing now, with Volkswagen testing out its robotaxis in snowy, icy Norway. No slap at Norway…I have family that has traveled there, and know several people from that fine country. VW points out that a taxi service that only operates in good weather isn’t of great use to a lot of people. Some ID Buzz vehicles are now prowling the streets of Oslo. The CEO of Moia, VW’s AV division…one Sascha Meyer, says “To ensure that people worldwide can reliably experience our autonomous vehicles, we are making the technology winter-proof. The ability to drive safely under extreme weather conditions is a fundamental prerequisite for the long-term economic success of our offering in Europe and North America.” He aims to have commercial robotaxis in service in Hamburg by next year. 

Reddit has rolled out new tools aimed at getting lurkers to participate in discussions. Engadget.com reports that one is called Rules Check, which will make it easy to see if what you’re posting potentially goes against a subreddit’s rules. Before submitting your post, you can click the wand icon in the lower right-hand corner of the post composer, which you can see in the photo above. Doing that will highlight anything in your post that may be breaking a subreddit’s rules. Reddit will start testing the feature on iOS and Android before giving it a wider release. Another add is Post Recovery. This tool lets you see a prompt if your post has been removed due to a community rule violation. Besides the prompt, you will get a link that will enable you to share your deleted post to a more appropriate subreddit. Post Insights shows you how many views, upvotes, shares, and crossposts your posts have gotten. 

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


Apple Bows Fresh Air-MacBook Air Models; New Mac Studio Ultra; YouTube Premium Lite; Google Search gets ‘AI Mode’; Trump Tariffs on Mexico May Stifle Game Disc Production

No big, glitzy dog and pony show, but this week Apple continues to introduce refreshed hardware. Yesterday, we saw upgraded iPad Air models. Today, macrumors.com reports that the expected MacBook Airs with M4 chips are in the spotlight. Besides the newer, faster chips, Apple is offering a new ‘Sky Blue’ color…which will join Midnight, Starlight, and Silver. The new Air models also get a 12MP ‘center stage’ camera that keeps you centered in frame as you move around in front of the computer…handy for Zoom meetings. The new Air has a lower base price…it’s $999…with education pricing starting at $899. The Air can be preordered today and is out March 12th. 

If you are all about max power for creative work, Apple also rolled out a freshened Mac Studio with M4 Max and M3 Ultra chips. The Mac Studio starts at $3999 with the M3 Ultra, but if you really want to go nuts, and configure it with all the whistles and bells, expect to drop a bit over $14,000! By the way, the M3 Ultra is more powerful than the M4 Max…and Apple said that not every computer will have an Ultra version available. Confusing? Yes. Like the MacBook Airs, the Studios can be preordered now and will be out March 12th.

YouTube is launching YouTube Premium Lite at $7.99 a month. According to 9to5google.com, it will make ‘most’ videos ad-free. Standard YouTube Premium stays at $13.99 a month, nearly double the price of the new tier. A couple of notable changes with Lite. For one thing, YouTube Music is removed. You will see ads on music videos. You also can’t download videos or music for offline use. Besides that, Background play is not available. Lite starts out as a pilot program in the US, and will also be dropping in Thailand, Germany, and Australia, then to other countries. 

Google is rolling out a new ‘AI Mode’ experimental feature in Search that will compete head on with Perplexity AI and OpenAI’s ChatGPT search. TechCrunch.com says that the new mode will allow users to ask complex, multi-part questions and follow-ups to dig deeper on a topic directly within Google Search. AI Mode will be available to Google One AI Premium subscribers starting this week, and it’s accessible via Search Labs, Google’s experimental division. It is powered by Gemini 2.0. As with everything AI, Google warns it isn’t perfect and is subject to ‘hallucinations.’

With the 25% Trump tariffs on Mexico, most think of big ticket items like vehicles, vehicle parts, appliances, etc. Here’s something that may have slipped under your radar…video game software and hardware. Arstechnica.com notes that physical game discs are overwhelmingly produced in Mexico these days. Ars says this may mean that some publishers will move to an all-digital strategy. This has been a trend for some time, but the tariffs appear poised to accelerate it. Game makers that do keep burning physical discs will probably pass all or most of the 25% tariff on to you, the consumer…just like every other sort of goods subject to tariffs. Another issue: around 75% of all game consoles are made in China, which is just now seeing tariffs go up from 10% to 20% under the new Trump rules. If you are waiting on a new Nintendo Switch 2, you may be ok, though. Over half of those are produced outside of China. This could let Nintendo just ship the units built outside of China to the US and they could hold the line on price increases.

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