180614426
submission
BrianFagioli writes:
The New York Stock Exchange, owned by Intercontinental Exchange, is developing a platform for trading tokenized versions of U.S. listed stocks and ETFs around the clock, pending regulatory approval. The system would combine the NYSEâ(TM)s existing matching engine with blockchain-based settlement, enabling 24x7 trading, instant settlement, and fractional share purchases priced in dollar amounts. Shares would remain fully regulated securities, with dividends and voting rights intact, rather than cryptocurrencies, even though the backend would run on blockchain-style infrastructure.
If approved, the move would quietly rewrite how markets operate, replacing multi-day settlement cycles with near-instant clearing and allowing money to move outside normal banking hours using stablecoin-based funding. ICE is already working with major banks to support tokenized deposits at its clearinghouses, signaling a shift toward always-on market infrastructure. The big question is whether regulators, brokers, and institutional investors are ready for a stock market that never closes, and what happens when Wall Street volatility has no off switch.
180576324
submission
BrianFagioli writes:
A new survey from PasswordManager.com suggests Americans still have not learned their lesson about password security. Polling 1500 adults nationwide, the report finds that 84 percent reuse passwords across accounts and nearly two-thirds rely on predictable patterns such as pet names, birthdays, simple number strings and everyday words like âoebaseballâ or âoepassword.â Even after years of security warnings and highly publicized breaches, many respondents said they avoid changing passwords because they fear forgetting them or find updates too inconvenient.
The survey also highlights a gap between security awareness and real-world behavior. About 43 percent of respondents have already been notified that one of their accounts was involved in a hack or scam, yet password managers are only used by 23 percent of users. Two-factor authentication sees better adoption, but nearly half still only enable it when forced to do so. Awareness of passkeys is growing, but consumers want clearer guidance before shifting away from passwords entirely.
180574940
submission
BrianFagioli writes:
Wine 11.0 has officially landed, wrapping up a year of development with more than 6,000 code changes and a broad set of upgrades that touch gaming, desktop behavior, and long-standing architectural work. The biggest milestone is the completion of the new WoW64 model, which is now considered fully supported and allows 32-bit and even 16-bit applications to run in a cleaner way inside 64-bit prefixes. Wine also gains support for the NTSYNC kernel module now bundled in Linux 6.14, which cuts overhead from thread synchronization and should deliver observable performance benefits in games and multi-threaded applications. A single unified wine binary now replaces the old wine64 launcher, and several system behaviors align more closely with modern Windows, including syscall numbering and NT reparse points.
Graphics and desktop integration received more polish, including deeper Vulkan support (up to API 1.4.335), hardware-accelerated H.264 decoding through Direct3D, and further improvements to Wineâ(TM)s Wayland driver, which now supports clipboard operations, IMEs, and shaped windows. X11 users gain better window activation and fullscreen handling, and legacy DirectX features continue to expand under Wineâ(TM)s Vulkan renderer. Device support also moves forward, with better joystick handling, improved Bluetooth visibility and pairing, and working TWAIN scanning on 64-bit apps. Broad multimedia updates, DirectMusic refinements, .NET/XNA improvements, and developer-facing tools round out a release that appears focused on smoothing sharp edges rather than introducing flashy experiments. As always, source is live now and distro packages are rolling out.
180570552
submission
BrianFagioli writes:
Acer has filed three separate patent infringement lawsuits against AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile, taking the unusual step of hauling the nation’s largest wireless carriers into federal court. The suits, filed in the Eastern District of Texas, claim the companies are using Acer-developed cellular networking technology without paying for the privilege. Acer says it tried to negotiate licenses for years but reached a dead end, arguing it was left with no option except litigation. The case centers on six U.S. patents Acer asserts are core to modern wireless networks, rather than anything tied to PCs or laptops.
The company describes itself as reluctant to pursue courtroom battles, but it has been quietly building a large global patent portfolio after pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into R&D. Acer also notes that some of its patents count as standard-essential, hinting the carriers may be required to license them. All three companies are expected to push back, and the dispute could become another long-running telecom patent saga. Consumers will not notice any immediate changes, but if Acer wins or settles, it may find a new revenue stream far beyond its traditional hardware business.
180563594
submission
BrianFagioli writes:
Walmart and Google are teaming up to plug Walmartâ(TM)s catalog straight into Gemini, letting people browse and buy everyday items inside an AI chat instead of jumping through apps or search engines. The idea is simple but timely: if people increasingly ask an AI how to plan a camping trip, stock a pantry, or prep for a party, Walmart wants Gemini to serve up product suggestions automatically and complete the purchase within Walmart or Samâ(TM)s Club. Linked accounts pull in past shopping history, Walmart Plus perks still apply, and the retailerâ(TM)s same-day delivery network closes the loop in as little as thirty minutes in some regions.
It also reflects a defensive move. If AI becomes the main gateway to online shopping, retailers risk losing customers before they ever hit a website. Walmart securing a default presence inside Gemini positions it ahead of the curve, while Google gets a more practical use case than just generating answers or explanations. The pilot starts in the United States with plans to expand internationally, and it lands right as investors are watching whether conversational commerce is hype or the next shift in how people buy things online.
180555982
submission
BrianFagioli writes:
The IRS has flipped the switch on Free File for the 2026 tax season, letting most Americans file federal taxes for exactly zero dollars. Anyone with 2025 adjusted gross income of $89,000 or less qualifies, covering an estimated 70 percent of taxpayers. The catch is that you have to start at IRS.gov/FreeFile, not the commercial sites that steer users into paid upgrades. Free File partners include familiar software brands like TaxAct, FreeTaxUSA, 1040.com and TaxSlayer, and many will throw in free state returns too. The program works on computers and phones and supports e-filing before the official opening of tax season.
What surprises me every year is how few people know this exists. Despite more than 77 million returns filed through Free File since 2003, most folks reach for TurboTax or H&R Block and end up paying for something the government already supports at no cost. Even gig workers and renters qualify now if their AGI is under the limit. If you want to keep more money in your wallet, start at IRS.gov/FreeFile and skip the upsell parade.
180520813
submission
BrianFagioli writes:
Red Hat and NVIDIA are clearly done pretending AI lives on a single GPU shoved into a lonely server. Their expanded collaboration is all about rack scale AI, and the star of the show is Red Hat Enterprise Linux for NVIDIA. The idea is simple and very enterprise: when NVIDIA rolls out new hardware like Vera Rubin, Red Hat wants Linux ready on day zero, not six months later after admins burn weekends chasing drivers and compatibility issues. This is Red Hat saying, flat out, that production AI needs boring reliability before it needs hype.
What makes this interesting is how aggressively Red Hat is centering Linux again. RHEL for NVIDIA is not a weird fork or science project. It stays aligned with regular RHEL, meaning enterprises can adopt it early and still land safely back on the main platform later. Tie that into OpenShift, Confidential Computing, and rack scale systems packed with accelerators, and you can see the play. Red Hat wants to be the default OS underneath enterprise AI factories, quietly doing its job while everyone else argues about models and agents.
180515483
submission
BrianFagioli writes:
Hyundai Motor Group is telling employees and the industry that AI, not engines or even batteries, will define the next era of cars. In a wide ranging internal address outlining its 2026 vision, executive chair Euisun Chung framed AI as something deeper than a feature set or software layer, arguing it must become part of the companyâ(TM)s organizational DNA. Hyundai is betting that its scale, manufacturing data, robotics work, and software defined vehicle efforts will give it an edge as the industry shifts toward what it calls physical AI, systems that learn from real world interaction rather than simulations alone.
Whatâ(TM)s notable is what Hyundai did not announce. There were no new vehicles, no timelines drivers can mark on a calendar, and no promises that infotainment systems or voice controls will suddenly stop being annoying. Instead, the company focused on internal change, faster decision making, ecosystem coordination, and long term bets on robotics, factories, and AI trained on real world usage. It is a sober acknowledgment that meaningful AI in cars is harder than press releases make it sound, and that drivers may not feel the payoff for a while, even if the race to get there is already underway.
180512927
submission
BrianFagioli writes:
The Retro X5 from Acemagic is a modern mini PC wrapped in nostalgia, but its inspiration is anything but subtle. The box closely mirrors the original Nintendo Entertainment System in shape, color, ribbed detailing, and even power button placement. While it avoids Nintendo logos and branding, the resemblance is immediately obvious, raising questions about whether nostalgia has crossed into imitation. Given Nintendoâ(TM)s long history of aggressively defending its intellectual property, Acemagicâ(TM)s NES-like design choice could attract unwanted legal attention.
Under the hood, however, this is no toy. The Retro X5 runs on AMDâ(TM)s AI 9 HX 370 processor with 12 cores, 24 threads, Radeon 890M graphics, and an integrated XDNA 2 NPU rated at up to 50 TOPS. Acemagic pairs the hardware with RetroPlay Box software designed to strip away emulator setup friction and make classic gaming feel plug-and-play. Whether the system ends up remembered for its technical ambition or for provoking a potential design dispute may depend on how much Nintendo is willing to tolerate a look that feels uncomfortably familiar.
180489303
submission
BrianFagioli writes:
SoftBank has completed its full $40 billion commitment to OpenAI, finalizing a $22.5 billion second closing in late December and bringing its ownership stake to roughly 11 percent. The investment was made entirely through Vision Fund 2 and follows an earlier $7.5 billion tranche completed in April. With an additional $11 billion coming from oversubscribed third party co investors, the overall round reached $41 billion, underscoring how aggressively capital is still flowing into OpenAI despite rising scrutiny around AI costs, governance, and safety.
The move reinforces Masayoshi Son’s long standing strategy of placing massive, conviction driven bets on technologies he believes will reshape society. For OpenAI, the funding provides scale and runway to expand infrastructure and model development without immediate pressure to optimize for short term returns. At the same time, SoftBank’s growing financial stake highlights broader questions around concentration of influence in frontier AI systems that are increasingly treated as strategic infrastructure rather than conventional software products.
180484801
submission
BrianFagioli writes:
The United States is rapidly building a society that assumes artificial intelligence will always be available. AI now sits at the center of banking, healthcare, logistics, education, media, and government workflows, increasingly handling not just automation but decision-making and cognition itself. The risk is not AI being “too smart,” but Americans slowly losing the ability — and habit — of thinking and functioning without it. As more writing, research, planning, and judgment are outsourced to centralized systems, human fallback skills quietly atrophy, making society efficient but brittle.
That brittleness becomes a national risk when AI’s real dependencies are considered. Large-scale AI depends on data centers, power grids, and stable infrastructure that can fail due to outages, cyber incidents, or geopolitical pressure. Foreign adversaries do not need to defeat the US militarily to cause disruption; they only need to interrupt systems Americans assume will always work. A society optimized for AI uptime rather than resilience may discover, very suddenly, that when the intelligence layer goes dark, confusion spreads faster than solutions.
180466779
submission
BrianFagioli writes:
South Korea has unveiled a massive 519B-parameter AI model designed as national infrastructure, not a consumer chatbot. Backed by SK Telecom and major universities, the system is framed as a sovereign âoeteacher modelâ meant to power smaller AIs, validate domestic chips, and reduce reliance on American and Chinese platforms.
180465223
submission
BrianFagioli writes:
TikTok users are increasingly claiming that time feels âoeoff,â with many saying December vanished and Christmas arrived without warning. Some online are framing the sensation as a timeline shift or a break in reality itself. A new opinion piece argues the cause is far more mundane: short-form video and streaming culture may be flattening memory, erasing shared experiences, and compressing how time is perceived.
The article points to TikTokâ(TM)s endless scroll, lack of natural stopping points, and constant novelty as factors that prevent the brain from forming clear memory anchors. Combined with the decline of synchronized TV viewing and shared cultural moments, the result is a growing sense that time is accelerating — even though the clock has not changed. The author suggests that restoring structure, rituals, and uninterrupted experiences can make time feel âoenormalâ again.
180446521
submission
BrianFagioli writes:
MAINGEAR has introduced a new option called BYO RAM Builds that lets buyers order a fully built desktop without purchasing DDR5 memory through the system configurator. Customers can supply their own compatible RAM kit or buy one separately and ship it to MAINGEAR, which will then install it and run the system through its normal validation process before shipping. The goal is to remove memory pricing from the equation when locking in a new gaming or creator PC.
The move comes as DDR5 prices remain volatile due to demand from AI infrastructure, tighter manufacturer allocations, and spotty retail availability. By separating the system purchase from memory sourcing, MAINGEAR is effectively acknowledging that RAM has become one of the least predictable components in a modern PC build. It is a consumer friendly nod to how enthusiasts already shop, and an unusual level of flexibility for a prebuilt system vendor.
180435547
submission
BrianFagioli writes:
Samsung is bringing Google Gemini directly into the kitchen, starting with a refrigerator that can see what you eat. At CES 2026, the company plans to show off a new Bespoke AI Refrigerator that uses a built in camera system paired with Gemini to automatically recognize food items, including leftovers stored in unlabeled containers. The idea is to keep an always up to date inventory without manual input, track what is added or removed, and surface suggestions based on what is actually inside the fridge. It is the first time Googleâ(TM)s Gemini AI is being integrated into a refrigerator, pushing generative AI well beyond phones and laptops.
The pitch sounds convenient, but it also raises familiar questions. This is vision based AI tied to cloud services, not just local smarts, and it depends on cameras watching what goes in and out of your fridge over years of ownership. Samsung is framing this as friction free food management, but critics may see it as another example of AI being embedded into everyday appliances whether consumers asked for it or not. The real test will be whether this becomes a genuinely useful background feature, or just another smart screen that people stop paying attention to once the novelty wears off.