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Will quantum be bigger than AI?

BBC Tech News - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 7:10pm
The highly complex technology is increasingly being tipped to transform computing.

Will quantum be bigger than AI?

BBC Tech News - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 7:10pm
The highly complex technology is increasingly being tipped to transform computing.

Will quantum be bigger than AI?

BBC Tech News - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 7:10pm
The highly-complex technology is increasingly being tipped to transform computing.

Gemini AI To Transform Google Maps Into a More Conversational Experience

Slashdot - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 7:10pm
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Associated Press: Google Maps is heading in a new direction with artificial intelligence sitting in the passenger's seat. Fueled by Google's Gemini AI technology, the world's most popular navigation app will become a more conversational companion as part of a redesign announced Wednesday. The hands-free experience is meant to turn Google Maps into something more like an insightful passenger able to direct a driver to a destination while also providing nearby recommendations on places to eat, shop or sightsee, when asked for the advice. "No fumbling required -- now you can just ask," Google promised in a blog post about the app makeover. The AI features are also supposed to enable Google Maps to be more precise by calling out landmarks to denote the place to make a turn instead of relying on distance notifications. AI chatbots, like Gemini and OpenAI's ChatGPT, have sometimes lapsed into periods of making things up -- known as "hallucinations" in tech speak -- but Google is promising that built-in safeguards will prevent Maps from accidentally sending drivers down the wrong road. All the information that Gemini is drawing upon will be culled from the roughly 250 million places stored in Google Maps' database of reviews accumulated during the past 20 years. Google Maps' new AI capabilities will be rolling out to both Apple's iPhone and Android mobile devices.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

FAA Plan to Cut Flights Might Not Be a Total Nightmare

Wired Top Stories - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 6:58pm
The US government is aiming to ease the pressure on air traffic controllers suffering shutdown-related woes by curtailing flights. But airlines have experience with this kind of sudden disruption.

King handed Nvidia boss a letter warning of AI dangers

BBC Tech News - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 6:40pm
In the 2023 remarks from the King he said AI was "no less important than the discovery of electricity" but warned the risks must be tackled.

King handed Nvidia boss a letter warning of AI dangers

BBC Tech News - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 6:40pm
In the 2023 remarks from the King he said AI was "no less important than the discovery of electricity" but warned the risks must be tackled.

King handed Nvidia boss a letter warning of AI dangers

BBC Tech News - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 6:40pm
In the 2023 remarks from the King he said AI was "no less important than the discovery of electricity" but warned the risks must be tackled.

King handed Nvidia boss a letter warning of AI dangers

BBC Tech News - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 6:40pm
In the 2023 remarks from the King he said AI was "no less important than the discovery of electricity" but warned the risks must be tackled.

New Bipartisan Bill Would Require Companies To Report AI Job Losses

Slashdot - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 6:30pm
A new bipartisan bill introduced by Senators Mark Warner and Josh Hawley would require companies and federal agencies to report quarterly on AI-related workforce changes, including layoffs, new hires, and retraining efforts. The data from the AI-Related Job Impacts Clarity Act (PDF) would then be compiled by the Department of Labor into a publicly available report. "This bipartisan legislation will finally give us a clear picture of AI's impact on the workforce," Warner said in a statement. "Armed with this information, we can make sure AI drives opportunity instead of leaving workers behind."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

43% of Gen Z Prefer YouTube and TikTok To Traditional TV and Streaming

Slashdot - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 5:50pm
A new Activate Consulting report reveals that 43% of Gen Z now prefer YouTube and TikTok over traditional TV or paid streaming. With global media revenues surging and traditional TV viewership collapsing, the average person now spends over 13 hours a day consuming content across platforms, effectively living a "32-hour day" through multitasking. Variety reports: Per the same survey, the popularity of "microdramas" -- one of the latest trends on those platforms, consisting of 1-2 minute scripted episodes of an ongoing storyline -- has been increasing at a fast rate with 28 million U.S. adults (52% aged 18-34) reportedly watching that new form of content. Additional findings include projections for global internet and media revenue to increase by $388 billion by 2029, while average daily time spent streaming video will climb to 4 hours and 8 minutes as time spent watching traditional TV is set to collapse to just 1 hour and 17 minutes. Activate estimates that, as a result, streaming revenues (from ads and subscriptions) will grow 18-19% annually while traditional TV revenues will fall 4-6% year to year.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

New business-based coalition forms to address Maine’s housing shortage

Portland Press Herald Business - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 5:36pm
Build Homes Build Community is a statewide group of business leaders, nonprofits, trade associations and others that will advocate for pro-housing policies and encourage Mainers to support home construction in their communities.

Danish Authorities In Rush To Close Security Loophole In Chinese Electric Buses

Slashdot - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 5:10pm
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Guardian: Authorities in Denmark are urgently studying how to close an apparent security loophole in hundreds of Chinese-made electric buses that enables them to be remotely deactivated. The investigation comes after transport authorities in Norway, where the Yutong buses are also in service, found that the Chinese supplier had remote access for software updates and diagnostics to the vehicles' control systems -- which could be exploited to affect buses while in transit. Amid concerns over potential security risks, the Norwegian public transport authority Ruter decided to test two electric buses in an isolated environment. Bernt Reitan Jenssen, Ruter's chief executive, said: "The testing revealed risks that we are now taking measures against. National and local authorities have been informed and must assist with additional measures at a national level." Their investigations found that remote deactivation could be prevented by removing the buses' sim cards, but they decided against this because it would also disconnect the bus from other systems. Ruter said it planned to bring in stricter security requirements for future procurements. Jenssen said it must act before the arrival of the next generation of buses, which could be even "more integrated and harder to secure." Movia, Denmark's largest public transport company, has 469 Chinese electric buses in operation -- 262 of which were manufactured by Yutong. Jeppe Gaard, Movia's chief operating officer, said he was made aware of the loophole last week. "This is not a Chinese bus problem," he said. "It is a problem for all types of vehicles and devices with Chinese electronics built in."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

T-Mobile Brings Free 911 Emergency Texting To AT&T and Verizon Customers

Slashdot - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 4:30pm
An anonymous reader shares a report: T-Mobile is opening up access to its Starlink-powered emergency texting service. The carrier announced on Wednesday that anyone with a compatible phone -- even AT&T and Verizon customers -- can sign up to text 911 over satellite for free. In July, T-Mobile launched its "T-Satellite" service to customers across the US for $10 per month, allowing both T-Mobile and non-T-Mobile customers to send messages, share their location, and access select apps over satellite. This service also includes texts to 911, but now, that's available for free.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Windows 11 Store Gets Ninite-Style Multi-App Installer Feature

Slashdot - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 3:51pm
An anonymous reader shares a report: The Microsoft Store on the web now lets you create a multi-app install package on Windows 11 that installs multiple applications from a single installer. This means you can now install multiple apps simultaneously without having to download each one manually. The experience is similar to that of the third-party app Ninite, a package manager that lets you install multiple apps at once.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Smartphone Maker Nothing Retreats on Bloatware After User Backlash

Slashdot - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 3:10pm
Nothing has announced that it will allow users to delete Facebook, Instagram and other Meta services from its mid-range and entry-level phones after users objected to the company's decision to pre-install these apps. The update will arrive by the end of November for devices running the Android 16-based OS 4.0 on the Phone (3a) series. Nothing said it will continue to pre-install partner apps on non-flagship devices in most regions. Devices in the United Kingdom, European Union and Japan will also come with TikTok installed by default. The company defended the practice by saying most users rely on these apps and that pre-installing them allows faster cold starts. Carl Pei's company blamed razor-thin margins on mid-range devices for the decision to bundle third-party software. Nothing did not address whether users can uninstall the service that powers newly introduced lock screen advertisements, which the company previously described as disabled by default and standard across the industry.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Solar Geoengineering in Wrong Hands Could Wreak Climate Havoc, Scientists Warn

Slashdot - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 2:30pm
Solar geoengineering could increase the ferocity of North Atlantic hurricanes, cause the Amazon rainforest to die back and cause drought in parts of Africa if deployed above only some parts of the planet by rogue actors, a report has warned. The Guardian: However, if technology to block the sun was used globally and in a coordinated way for a long period -- decades or even centuries -- there is strong evidence that it would lower the global temperature, the review from the UK's Royal Society concluded. The world is failing to halt the climate crisis and the researchers said that in future, a judgment might need to be made between the risks of geoengineering and the those of continued global heating, which is already costing lives and livelihoods. The logistics of a large-scale geoengineering effort would be daunting, the experts said, but the cost would be small relative to climate action -- billions of dollars a year against trillions. The researchers emphasised that geoengineering only masked the symptoms of the climate crisis, and did not tackle the root cause -- the burning of fossil fuels. Geoengineering could only complement the cutting of emissions, not replace it, they said. If geoengineering was halted abruptly but emissions had not been reduced, there would be a termination shock of rapidly rising temperatures -- 1-2C within a couple of decades -- that would have severe effects on people and ecosystems unable to rapidly adapt.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

'Substantial' layoffs coming to Tripadvisor in planned reorganization: report

Mass High Tech News - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 2:12pm
According to a report, the Needham-based company, which is under pressure from activist investor Starboard Value, plans to merge two of its three business units.

The Pixel 10 Family Is Marked Down on Amazon

Wired Top Stories - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 2:06pm
You can snag a discount on all the Pixel 10 phone varieties if you act fast.

Deutsche Bank Explores Hedges For Data Centre Exposure as AI Lending Booms

Slashdot - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 1:50pm
Financial Times: Deutsche Bank is exploring ways to hedge its exposure to data centres after extending billions of dollars in debt to the sector to keep up with demand for artificial intelligence and cloud computing. Executives inside the bank have discussed ways to manage its exposure to the booming industry as so-called hyperscalers pour hundreds of billions of dollars into building infrastructure for their AI needs that is increasingly funded by debt. The German lender is looking at options including shorting a basket of AI-related stocks that would help mitigate downside risk by betting against companies in the sector. It is also considering buying default protection on some of the debt using derivatives through a transaction known as synthetic risk transfer (SRT). Deutsche's investment banking business has "bet big" on data centre financing, according to one senior executive. However, the scale of expenditure on AI infrastructure has prompted concerns that a bubble is forming with some likening the enthusiasm to that which preceded the dotcom crash. Sceptics have pointed out that billions of dollars have been deployed in an untested industry with assets that quickly depreciate in value due to the rapid change in technology.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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