This digest compiles the latest from Tech Spot.
Today’s Tech Spot Roundup
Seagate is now shipping HAMR disk drives holding up to 44TB of data
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Seagate introduced the Mozaic 3+ platform in 2024, turning the heat-assisted magnetic recording (HAMR) dream into a real product for customers in need of massive storage capacities. The HDD maker is now introducing the next-generation Mozaic 4+ drives, which offer capacities up to 44TB.
London doctor carries out remote robot surgery on cancer patient 1,500 miles away
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The milestone procedure saw Professor Prokar Dasgupta, based at The London Clinic’s robotic center in Harley Street, operate on 62-year-old patient Paul Buxton, who was in St Bernard’s Hospital in Gibraltar, a British overseas territory in southern Spain.
TCL unveils 4K 240Hz OLED dual-mode monitor that's just 6.4mm thick
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The recently unveiled 32X3A is a 31.5-inch display that can switch between 4K at 240Hz and 480Hz at a lower resolution, likely 1080p, with a grayscale response time of 0.03 milliseconds. According to ITHome, the OLED display covers 99% of the sRGB and DCI-P3 color gamuts. Anti-glare and anti-reflective coating…
GTA Online players in Australia will soon face age checks under new R18+ gaming rules
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The requirement states that search engines, social media platforms, pornographic websites, app stores, gaming providers, and generative AI systems – including explicit chatbots – must take “meaningful steps” to prevent children from being exposed to age-inappropriate content.
Epic beat Google in court, but Tim Sweeney can't criticize the company until 2032
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The revelation came this week, when the binding term sheet for Epic’s settlement with Google showed that Epic CEO Tim Sweeney, once the industry’s most vivid critic of platform monopolies, is bound by a non-disparagement clause that bars him from criticizing Google until 2032. It’s an extraordinary turn for a…
Anthropic says it will sue Pentagon over supply chain risk label
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The clash centers on two red lines Anthropic refused to drop during negotiations with the Department of Defense: using Claude for mass domestic surveillance of Americans and for fully autonomous weapons. Anthropic says those carveouts are narrow, reasonable, and have not affected any government mission to date. The Pentagon disagreed.
The OLED Burn-In Test: Two Years Later
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After 6,500 hours of heavy productivity use, we revisit our intentionally abused 4K QD-OLED monitor to see how burn-in has progressed under one of the worst-case scenarios for OLED panels.
Nvidia says its investments in OpenAI and Anthropic are likely its last
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Huang’s explanation was brief, but the implications are broad. Nvidia, whose products have become indispensable to generative AI infrastructure, sits in a position few companies have ever occupied: both supplier and shareholder to the firms building the software atop its hardware. That arrangement, once mutually reinforcing, now appears increasingly tangled.
Microsoft confirms "Project Helix," a next-gen Xbox that runs both Xbox and PC games
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Asha Sharma, who recently replaced Phil Spencer as the head of Microsoft’s Xbox division, provided a short update on the company’s next-generation console. Revealing the codename “Project Helix,” she confirmed that the upcoming device aims to lead in horsepower and will support both Xbox and PC games.
End of today’s Tech Spot roundup.
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