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SpaceX Starmind orbital AI compute & Musk’s integrated space-and-AI empire - Tech News (Jun 26, 2026)

10 min · 26. juni 2026
episode SpaceX Starmind orbital AI compute & Musk’s integrated space-and-AI empire - Tech News (Jun 26, 2026) cover

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Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Discover the Future of AI Audio with ElevenLabs - https://try.elevenlabs.io/tad [https://try.elevenlabs.io/tad] - KrispCall: Agentic Cloud Telephony - https://try.krispcall.com/tad [https://try.krispcall.com/tad] - Consensus: AI for Research. Get a free month - https://get.consensus.app/automated_daily [https://get.consensus.app/automated_daily] Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily [https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily] TODAY'S TOPICS: SPACEX STARMIND ORBITAL AI COMPUTE - ELON MUSK CONFIRMED “STARMIND,” A SPACEX CONCEPT FOR IN-ORBIT AI COMPUTING WHERE SATELLITES ACT LIKE SERVERS. REGULATORS ARE BEING TOLD IT COULD SCALE TO UP TO A MILLION COMPUTE NODES, RESHAPING DATA CENTER ECONOMICS AND LOW-LATENCY AI ACCESS. MUSK’S INTEGRATED SPACE-AND-AI EMPIRE - A FOREIGN POLICY ANALYSIS ARGUES SPACEX, STARLINK, XAI, AND X ARE BECOMING A TIGHTLY CONNECTED INFRASTRUCTURE STACK. THE CONCENTRATION OF CONNECTIVITY, AI TOOLING, AND INFORMATION DISTRIBUTION RAISES GEOPOLITICAL AND REGULATORY QUESTIONS AROUND POWER AND ACCOUNTABILITY. GLOBAL RULES FOR DRIVERLESS CARS - THE UN’S UNECE WORLD FORUM APPROVED THE FIRST GLOBAL FRAMEWORK FOR FULLY AUTONOMOUS DRIVING SYSTEMS. IT SETS SHARED SAFETY VALIDATION METHODS, LIFECYCLE SAFETY MANAGEMENT, AND POST-DEPLOYMENT MONITORING TO REDUCE FRAGMENTED NATIONAL RULES. US ROBOTAXI RULES WITHOUT PEDALS - THE US DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION PROPOSED UPDATING SAFETY STANDARDS SO ADS-ONLY VEHICLES WOULDN’T NEED BRAKE PEDALS. THAT COULD ACCELERATE PURPOSE-BUILT ROBOTAXIS, WHILE SAFETY ADVOCATES WARN ABOUT PASSENGER AND FIRST-RESPONDER RISKS AND THE NEED FOR STRONGER AUTONOMOUS-SPECIFIC SAFEGUARDS. OPEN-SOURCE SECURITY WITH AKRITES - THE LINUX FOUNDATION LAUNCHED AKRITES TO STRENGTHEN SECURITY FOR CRITICAL OPEN SOURCE SOFTWARE AMID FASTER AI-ASSISTED VULNERABILITY DISCOVERY. IT CENTRALIZES COORDINATED DISCLOSURE, INCIDENT RESPONSE, AND “MAINTAINER OF LAST RESORT” SUPPORT TO GET REAL-WORLD PATCHES DEPLOYED FASTER. FRONTIER AI ROLLOUT GOVERNMENT OVERSIGHT - THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION REPORTEDLY ASKED OPENAI TO STAGGER THE RELEASE OF AN UPCOMING FRONTIER MODEL, AIMING FOR A LIMITED FIRST WAVE TO TRUSTED PARTNERS. THE MOVE HIGHLIGHTS GROWING US GOVERNMENT INVOLVEMENT IN MODEL DEPLOYMENT TIMING, ACCESS CONTROL, AND NATIONAL SECURITY RISK MANAGEMENT. IBM NANOSTACK AND CHIP SCALING - IBM REVEALED A NANOSTACK TRANSISTOR ARCHITECTURE THAT LEANS ON 3D STACKING TO REACH SUB‑1NM-CLASS DENSITY CLAIMS. IF IT TRANSLATES TO MANUFACTURING, IT COULD DELIVER MORE AI COMPUTE PER WATT FOR DATA CENTERS, THOUGH COMMERCIALIZATION IS STILL YEARS AWAY. APPLE MAC CHIPS SHIFT TO M7 - APPLE IS REPORTEDLY REWORKING ITS MAC SILICON CADENCE BY SHIPPING A BASE M6 WHILE SKIPPING M6 PRO AND M6 MAX. THE COMPANY APPEARS TO BE PRIORITIZING AN AI-FOCUSED M7 GENERATION FOR HIGHER-END MACS, REFLECTING SHIFTING DEMAND AND SUPPLY REALITIES. AI BREAKTHROUGHS IN HISTORY AND HEALTH - AI HELPED VIRTUALLY UNWRAP AND READ A CARBONISED HERCULANEUM SCROLL WITHOUT DAMAGING IT, UNLOCKING NEW ANCIENT TEXT. SEPARATELY, RESEARCHERS IN CAMBRIDGE SAY AI-GUIDED VACCINE DESIGN COULD PUSH “UNIVERSAL” VACCINES THAT TARGET WHOLE VIRUS FAMILIES, POTENTIALLY IMPROVING PANDEMIC READINESS. CHINA’S SUPERCOMPUTING AND WORLD MODELS - CHINA IS RUMORED TO HAVE A NEW SUPERCOMPUTER, LINESHINE, THAT COULD TOP US BENCHMARK PERFORMANCE USING DOMESTIC COMPONENTS—SIGNALING MOMENTUM DESPITE EXPORT CONTROLS. MEANWHILE, AI LABS ARE INCREASINGLY SHIFTING FROM CHATBOTS TOWARD “WORLD MODELS” THAT PREDICT AND PLAN IN SIMULATED ENVIRONMENTS, A KEY STEP FOR ROBOTICS. Episode Transcript SpaceX Starmind orbital AI compute Let’s start in space, because Elon Musk just confirmed “Starmind” as the name for SpaceX’s planned AI satellite constellation. The pitch to regulators is bold: a network that could scale to as many as a million orbital compute nodes. Unlike Starlink, which is mainly about moving internet traffic around, Starmind is being framed as “computing in space,” where satellites do AI work onboard and send back results instead of raw data. SpaceX’s argument is essentially a data-center argument: on Earth, power, permits, land, and cooling are becoming hard constraints. In orbit, you’ve got solar power and a very different thermal environment, and SpaceX claims that could push compute costs down fast—Musk even suggests space-based compute could become the cheapest place to run AI within a couple of years. Prototypes are being pointed to for early 2027, with talk of ramping production later that year. And this connects to a bigger storyline: a Foreign Policy piece is spotlighting how Musk’s companies are increasingly intertwined—SpaceX and Starlink for launch and connectivity, xAI for models, and the social platform X as a distribution and data engine. The concern isn’t just scale; it’s leverage. When one constellation can decide who gets connected, and one platform can shape what information spreads, the geopolitical stakes get a lot higher—especially if governments are still figuring out how to regulate something that looks increasingly “too important to fail.” Musk’s integrated space-and-AI empire Staying with transportation, the UN’s vehicle standards body has approved what it’s calling the first global regulations for fully autonomous driving systems. This is a big deal not because it instantly puts driverless cars everywhere, but because it creates a shared baseline across major markets for how safety is demonstrated and monitored. The framework emphasizes audited safety management across the system’s life, credible testing including simulation, and ongoing monitoring once vehicles are on the road. It also requires data recording for oversight—think of it as making sure there’s an accountable trail when something goes wrong. The aim is to reduce the patchwork problem, where each country makes its own rules and deployment slows to a crawl. In the US, there’s a parallel regulatory shift underway. The Department of Transportation has proposed updates that would stop requiring brake pedals in vehicles designed to operate exclusively with automated driving systems. That would remove a major barrier for purpose-built robotaxis that don’t have traditional driver controls. Supporters say it will reduce red tape and let companies scale without begging for limited exemptions. Critics, including safety groups, are warning about practical realities—like what a passenger can do in an emergency, or how first responders interact with a vehicle that doesn’t have familiar controls. The key tension here is whether deregulation is being paired with enough autonomous-specific safety expectations, instead of just removing old assumptions about human drivers. Global rules for driverless cars Now to software security, where a new effort is trying to make the open source backbone of the internet a little less fragile. The Linux Foundation and a broad coalition have launched an initiative called Akrites, aimed at tightening how critical open source vulnerabilities are handled. The timing is telling: AI-assisted vulnerability discovery is accelerating, meaning flaws in widely used libraries can be found faster than volunteer maintainers can realistically respond. Akrites is setting up a shared incident response capability and a standardized coordinated disclosure process, so the same issue doesn’t get reported a dozen ways, patched inconsistently, or dumped on a single exhausted maintainer. The most interesting promise is the “maintainer of last resort” idea—stepping in when a project is too important to fail but doesn’t have active stewardship. If this works, it’s less about flashy security announcements and more about the unglamorous goal that actually matters: patches landing and getting deployed before attackers capitalize. US robotaxi rules without pedals On frontier AI governance, there’s another sign that model releases are becoming a political process, not just a product launch. The Trump administration has reportedly asked OpenAI to stagger the rollout of an upcoming powerful model, pushing for a limited initial release to a small group of trusted partners before wider availability. Whatever you think of that approach, it signals a more assertive posture from the federal government: worries about misuse, national security, and who gets access first are now shaping timelines. It also highlights how ad-hoc the rules still are. Labs, platforms, and regulators are effectively negotiating the playbook in real time—and that uncertainty is becoming part of the ecosystem for anyone building on top of these models. Open-source security with Akrites Let’s talk chips, because the industry is clearly hunting for the next big leap in compute efficiency. IBM has unveiled a new transistor architecture it calls NanoStack, built around stacking transistor layers vertically—more like a skyscraper than a ranch. IBM is describing it as delivering sub‑1nm-class density benefits, and it’s positioning the work as a path to more performance without proportional power growth, particularly for AI data centers. The important detail is that today’s “node” naming is more marketing than geometry; the real story is that 3D stacking is becoming the way forward as traditional shrinking gets harder. Commercial production is still years away, but it’s a signal that Moore’s Law is being extended by going upward as much as inward. Apple, meanwhile, is reportedly reshaping its Mac chip roadmap. The chatter is that Apple will ship a base M6 for entry-level Macs but skip the usual higher-end M6 Pro and M6 Max—saving the bigger architectural jump for an AI-focused M7 generation in top-tier machines later. If that’s accurate, it suggests Apple is prioritizing where it spends its silicon budget: pushing more capability into the generations that matter most for on-device AI and heavier creative workloads, even if it means an unusual cadence in the middle. Frontier AI rollout government oversight A couple of AI stories this week show the range—from ancient history to future public health. Researchers have used AI to virtually unwrap and read part of a carbonised papyrus scroll from Herculaneum, burned and buried by Vesuvius in AD79. Using high-resolution scans and machine learning, they recovered substantial hidden text without physically unrolling the fragile document. This matters because it changes what’s scarce. The bottleneck may no longer be whether we can open these scrolls, but how quickly scholars can interpret what AI makes readable. It’s one of the clearest examples of AI expanding access to knowledge that was effectively locked away. On the medical side, researchers at the University of Cambridge say AI-assisted vaccine design could help create “universal” vaccines that protect against whole families of viruses. Early human testing of a universal Sarbeco coronavirus vaccine reported no significant safety concerns, and it’s moving to larger studies. The bigger point is preparedness: if spillovers are more frequent, anything that helps science stop “chasing the virus” could change how fast the world responds. IBM NanoStack and chip scaling In computing geopolitics, China is reportedly claiming a new lead in supercomputing with a system dubbed LineShine. The story—still light on publicly confirmed details—is that it reaches performance beyond a major recent US system and does so using domestic components. If accurate, the significance isn’t just bragging rights. It would be another marker that export controls don’t automatically freeze progress; they can also accelerate “full-stack” independence. And in an era where AI capability is tied to national power, supercomputing becomes a strategic headline, not a niche benchmark. Apple Mac chips shift to M7 Zooming out, there’s a noticeable shift in where AI research excitement is going. A growing set of researchers and startups argue that chatbots are hitting diminishing returns for certain kinds of intelligence, and they’re pivoting toward so-called “world models”—systems that learn how environments behave over time, so they can plan actions and predict consequences. That’s especially relevant for robotics. Language alone doesn’t teach a machine how objects move, how contact works, or what happens when you push something off-balance. If world models mature, they could become the bridge from “talking AI” to “doing AI” in real spaces, with far more practical impact than another incremental improvement in conversation. AI breakthroughs in history and health Finally, a couple of stories about work—because technology changes aren’t confined to screens anymore. Teleoperation is starting to turn physical jobs into something that can be done remotely, with early examples ranging from construction machinery controlled from office-like stations to robots supervised across borders. The upside is real: fewer people in dangerous environments, and potentially better staffing flexibility. The downside is also familiar: the same offshoring and wage-arbitrage pressures that reshaped knowledge work could spill into hands-on labor, along with new questions about licensing, liability, and safety oversight. And in software, there’s a candid argument making the rounds that the labor market is “repricing” engineering. With less cheap venture money and with AI tools making routine implementation faster, the claim is that the premium is shifting away from broad, throughput-driven generalists and toward engineers with deep production judgment—reliability, security, latency, and the kind of hard-earned experience you only get when things break at scale. A related cultural footnote: Disqus co-founder Ben Vinegar shared a lesson from the early 2010s about blindly following tech thought leaders into trendy tooling choices that looked clever but became a maintenance headache at scale. It’s a useful reminder for the AI era: hype travels faster than operational reality, and the bill often arrives later. 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episode Brain-to-text AI breakthrough & South Korea’s trillion-dollar AI push - Tech News (Jun 30, 2026) artwork

Brain-to-text AI breakthrough & South Korea’s trillion-dollar AI push - Tech News (Jun 30, 2026)

Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Invest Like the Pros with StockMVP - https://www.stock-mvp.com/?via=ron [https://www.stock-mvp.com/?via=ron] - SurveyMonkey, Using AI to surface insights faster and reduce manual analysis time - https://get.surveymonkey.com/tad [https://get.surveymonkey.com/tad] - Consensus: AI for Research. Get a free month - https://get.consensus.app/automated_daily [https://get.consensus.app/automated_daily] Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily [https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily] TODAY'S TOPICS: BRAIN-TO-TEXT AI BREAKTHROUGH - META’S BRAIN2QWERTY V2 TURNS NON-INVASIVE MEG BRAIN RECORDINGS INTO SENTENCES IN REAL TIME, HITTING MUCH HIGHER WORD ACCURACY THAN EARLIER APPROACHES. KEYWORDS: BRAIN-TO-TEXT, MEG, ACCESSIBILITY, OPEN RESEARCH. SOUTH KOREA’S TRILLION-DOLLAR AI PUSH - SOUTH KOREA OUTLINED A ROUGHLY $1 TRILLION PUBLIC-PRIVATE PLAN TO EXPAND MEMORY-CHIP FABS, BUILD AI DATA CENTERS, AND COMMERCIALIZE HUMANOID ROBOTS BY 2028. KEYWORDS: SAMSUNG, SK HYNIX, DRAM, DATA CENTERS, HUMANOID ROBOTS. BIS WARNS OF AI BUBBLE - THE BANK FOR INTERNATIONAL SETTLEMENTS CAUTIONED THAT HYPERSCALER AI CAPITAL SPENDING MAY BE OUTRUNNING EARNINGS AND COULD UNWIND SHARPLY IF RETURNS DISAPPOINT OR FINANCING TIGHTENS. KEYWORDS: BIS, HYPERSCALERS, OVERINVESTMENT, PRIVATE CREDIT, MARKET REPRICING. AMAZON, ANTHROPIC, OPENAI RESHUFFLE - AMAZON IS REPORTEDLY LOOKING AT CHEAPER MODEL OPTIONS AFTER SHIFTING ITS ANTHROPIC DEAL TOWARD PER-TOKEN PRICING, WHILE TIES WITH OPENAI AND ANTHROPIC’S MULTI-CLOUD MOVES COMPLICATE ALLIANCES. KEYWORDS: AWS, CLAUDE, OPENAI, TOKEN PRICING, CLOUD COMPETITION. OPEN-WEIGHT CYBER AI SPREADS - CHINA’S Z.AI RELEASED AN MIT-LICENSED OPEN-WEIGHT CODING AND SECURITY MODEL, RAISING CONCERN THAT ADVANCED VULNERABILITY-FINDING CAPABILITY IS NOW AVAILABLE WITHOUT PROVIDER-SIDE CONTROLS. KEYWORDS: OPEN-WEIGHT, VULNERABILITIES, OFFENSIVE AI, PATCH CYCLES, SECURITY. CHINA TECH CONTROLS AND CHIPS - CHINA TIGHTENED EXPORT CONTROLS AIMED AT JAPANESE DEFENSE-LINKED ENTITIES AS NVIDIA’S CHINA POSITION KEEPS ERODING UNDER EXPORT RESTRICTIONS AND HUAWEI GAINS GROUND, ALONGSIDE NEW SUPERCOMPUTING CLAIMS. KEYWORDS: EXPORT CONTROLS, RARE EARTHS, NVIDIA, HUAWEI ASCEND, TOP500. APPLE TOOLING DEAL AND IPHONE LEAK - APPLE QUIETLY ACQUIRED ASSETS BEHIND THE AWARD-WINNING SWIFTUI PROTOTYPING TOOL PLAY, WHILE A LEAK SUGGESTS MAJOR IPHONE 18 PRO CHIP PACKAGING CHANGES FOR SUSTAINED PERFORMANCE AND ON-DEVICE AI. KEYWORDS: SWIFTUI, XCODE, A20 PRO, THERMAL DESIGN, NEURAL ENGINE. MYANMAR SCAM FACTORIES USING AI - INVESTIGATIONS DESCRIBE INDUSTRIAL SCAM COMPOUNDS IN MYANMAR USING U.S.-MADE AI AND INFRASTRUCTURE TO RUN ROMANCE AND INVESTMENT SCAMS AT SCALE, WITH STARLINK FREQUENTLY IMPLICATED. KEYWORDS: SCAM COMPOUNDS, TRAFFICKING, AI TRANSLATION, CLOUD ROUTING, STARLINK. CLEAN ENERGY GROWTH VS DEMAND - NEW ENERGY DATA SHOWS WIND AND SOLAR ADDED MORE GLOBAL SUPPLY THAN ANY OTHER SOURCE IN 2025, YET TOTAL FOSSIL USE STILL HIT RECORDS AS DEMAND GROWS AND DATA CENTERS DRAW MORE POWER. KEYWORDS: RENEWABLES, ELECTRICITY DEMAND, NUCLEAR, DATA CENTERS, PRIMARY ENERGY. RETHINKING WEB CACHING AND ATTENTION - COMMENTARY THIS WEEK QUESTIONED WHEN SERVICE WORKERS ARE TRULY NECESSARY VERSUS SIMPLER HTTP CACHING, AND WHY ADDING FRICTION CAN HELP PEOPLE RECLAIM ATTENTION FROM ALWAYS-ON DEVICES. KEYWORDS: SERVICE WORKERS, HTTP CACHING, RELIABILITY, NOTIFICATIONS, DIGITAL BOUNDARIES. Episode Transcript Brain-to-text AI breakthrough We’ll start with the biggest ambition-on-paper story of the day: South Korea says it’s lining up about a trillion dollars in combined government and corporate commitments to expand memory-chip production, build new AI data centers, and push humanoid robots toward mass commercialization by 2028. The headline driver here is memory. With AI systems hungry for high-end DRAM, shortages have been rippling into electronics costs, and Korea wants to protect its lead. Samsung and SK Hynix are tied to the largest chunk of investment, with a national goal of sharply increasing DRAM output over the next several years. Alongside that, major Korean groups plan data centers outside Seoul to broaden compute capacity beyond the capital. What makes this more than an industrial-policy headline is the social and political tension it carries: these projects demand huge amounts of power and water, and they land at a moment when workers are pushing back—especially in manufacturing—over job protections as robots arrive on the factory floor. South Korea’s trillion-dollar AI push That theme of “AI money, and what happens if it goes wrong,” showed up in a warning from the Bank for International Settlements. In its 2026 annual report, the BIS argues that the global surge in AI investment—especially by the biggest tech players—could end in a painful reversal. The BIS isn’t saying AI is a fad. It’s saying spending is starting to run ahead of the cash coming in, and that the competitive dynamic can push everyone to build too much, too fast, even when returns are uncertain. It also flags a web of financing relationships—hyperscalers, model labs, chipmakers, data-center builders, and private credit—where stress in one corner can spread quickly. And here’s the kicker: if AI-linked stocks reprice sharply, it can leak into the real economy through household wealth effects, particularly given how central U.S. equities are to global portfolios. BIS warns of AI bubble Speaking of the economics of AI, one of the most closely watched partnerships in the model-and-cloud world looks like it’s getting complicated. Reports say Amazon is exploring cheaper AI model options, including OpenAI, after renegotiating how it pays for Anthropic’s models. The key shift is billing: moving toward per-token pricing next year. If you’re running lots of customer-facing features and internal tools on a model, token-based pricing can turn “pretty expensive” into “hard to predict,” fast. Amazon even removed an internal leaderboard that had nudged employees to use more tokens—an early sign it’s trying to clamp down on runaway usage. What makes this strategically interesting is the triangle it creates. Amazon has been a major backer of Anthropic, but it’s also been edging closer to OpenAI through infrastructure and access deals. Meanwhile, Anthropic is spending more with Google Cloud, signaling it wants less dependence on AWS. The alliances in AI aren’t just about model quality anymore—they’re about cost, leverage, and who controls the relationship when the bill comes due. Amazon, Anthropic, OpenAI reshuffle Now to the most surprising research update of the day: Meta announced Brain2Qwerty version 2, an AI system that decodes sentences from non-invasive brain recordings in real time. Until recently, the most impressive brain-to-text results usually came from implanted sensors, which limits who can use them and when. Meta’s approach uses magnetoencephalography, or MEG, paired with language-model fine-tuning so the system can use context to clean up noisy signals. Meta reports an average word accuracy a bit above sixty percent, with one participant reaching the high seventies. This is still early-stage, lab-based work—not a consumer product. But it’s a meaningful step toward communication tools for people who can’t speak due to injury or disease. Meta is also releasing code, and a partner lab is releasing a dataset, which could speed up independent research and clinical exploration. Open-weight cyber AI spreads Staying with AI capability—but from a security angle—China’s Z.ai, previously known as Zhipu, released an open-weight model aimed at long-horizon coding and vulnerability discovery, published under a permissive license. The story here isn’t just performance. It’s distribution. With open-weight models, there’s no provider “switch” to flip off, no centralized monitoring, and no practical way to stop misuse once it’s running locally. Reporting suggests offensive workflows and jailbreaks spread quickly after release. For defenders, the implication is blunt: patch faster, audit more continuously, and assume capable attackers can bring sophisticated AI to bear without asking anyone’s permission. China tech controls and chips That leads neatly into the broader geopolitics of compute. Nvidia’s attempt to keep selling advanced AI chips into China continues to hit walls as U.S. export controls tighten and China pushes buyers toward domestic alternatives, especially Huawei. Estimates now suggest Nvidia’s share of China’s AI-chip market has fallen sharply from its earlier dominance, with Huawei climbing fast on both chips and large computing clusters. Even if Nvidia retains an edge at the frontier, the center of gravity is shifting: developers adapt their software to whatever hardware they can reliably get, and that rewrites ecosystems over time. Meanwhile, China is also escalating pressure points elsewhere. Beijing expanded export controls aimed at Japan, adding multiple defense-linked research institutes to a list that blocks transfers of Chinese-origin dual-use items, and tightening scrutiny for other firms. It’s another reminder that supply chains for critical materials and components are now policy tools, not just commerce. Apple tooling deal and iPhone leak And on the supercomputing bragging-rights front, China is claiming it’s back on top of the TOP500 rankings with a new system called LineShine in Shenzhen. The claim is notable for two reasons: it’s framed as achieving extreme performance without GPUs, and it serves as a signal that China can still assemble world-leading systems under restrictions. But there’s also a tradeoff highlighted in the reporting—power draw. Even when raw performance climbs, energy efficiency is becoming the defining constraint, especially as AI and HPC expand. Myanmar scam factories using AI Now to Apple, which had two very different kinds of headlines. First, a quieter one that matters to developers: Apple struck an asset deal for parts of Rabbit 3 Times, the small team behind “Play,” an award-winning Swift and SwiftUI prototyping tool. It looks less like a classic acquisition and more like an acquihire-plus-tech pickup. Either way, it reinforces Apple’s steady focus on improving how apps are designed and built—especially as more development shifts toward faster iteration and UI-heavy workflows. Second, a much noisier item: a leak claims the iPhone 18 Pro logic board will use a new chip-and-memory packaging approach that puts key components side-by-side rather than stacked, potentially helping with heat and sustained performance. If true, it would also be a strong hint that Apple expects on-device AI workloads to keep getting heavier—and wants the phone to maintain speed without throttling. Clean energy growth vs demand In health tech, researchers at UNSW and the Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute unveiled a wireless, non-invasive sensor platform for monitoring lab-grown “mini hearts,” also called cardiac organoids. Instead of attaching instruments to delicate tissue or relying only on video, the system reads subtle pressure changes in the surrounding liquid as the organoid beats. The practical upside is scale and continuity: more automated monitoring, faster drug screening, and a clearer path toward personalized tests using organoids grown from a patient’s own cells. It’s another example of the broader trend where better sensors and smarter analysis reduce reliance on slow, expensive, and sometimes ethically contentious testing methods. Rethinking web caching and attention Finally, one of the most unsettling investigations today: AP and PBS FRONTLINE detailed how industrial scam compounds in Myanmar are using American-made technology and AI to target victims worldwide at unprecedented scale. The reporting describes trafficked workers forced to run many scam identities at once, using systems built on mainstream AI models to translate, personalize scripts, and optimize deception. It also points to the role of internet infrastructure—cloud services, routing, and satellite connectivity—arguing that the ecosystem enabling these operations is more international, and more preventable, than many people assume. The takeaway for listeners is practical: scams are getting more convincing, more persistent, and more industrialized. Verification habits—like slowing down, cross-checking identities, and treating unexpected investment pitches as hostile by default—are no longer optional. Story 11 Before we wrap, a quick pair of “reality check” notes. On energy, new global data says wind and solar added more to energy supplies in 2025 than any other single source, and low-carbon power covered growth in electricity demand. Yet coal, oil, and gas still hit record highs too. The transition is real, but so is demand growth—and data centers are a visible contributor, even if they’re not the only one. And in the developer-and-digital-life corner, two essays made the rounds: one argued many service-worker use cases are better handled with simpler, more predictable web caching patterns, and another made the case for reintroducing physical boundaries—fewer notifications, more single-purpose devices—to protect attention. Different topics, same moral: complexity and always-on convenience have hidden costs, and designing for reliability and focus is becoming a competitive advantage. Subscribe to edition specific feeds: - Space news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/4cLLrdt] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/4jN8Dui] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_space] Spanish [https://theautomateddaily.com/space_es/feed.xml] French [https://theautomateddaily.com/space_fr/feed.xml] - Top news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/3PTvdUF] Spanish [https://apple.co/3ECCMgk] French [https://apple.co/4hmcxbB] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/3ZYXAW2] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/414h4JD] French [https://spoti.fi/3Di0jDe] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_news] Spanish [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_news_es] French [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_news_fr] - Tech news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/3RYWbg4] Spanish [https://apple.co/4i0WqRM] French [https://apple.co/4bEAXMm] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/3S089pG] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/3EE2Fwv] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/3DlObRE] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_tech] Spanish [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_tech_es] French [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_tech_fr] - Hacker news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/48QWyzj] Spanish [https://apple.co/4ke9jtE] French [https://apple.co/41E1qFd] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/45zD1kf] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/4hF8h81] French [https://spoti.fi/3QY26Ak] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hacker_news] Spanish [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hacker_news_es] French [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hacker_news_fr] - AI news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/3M6Tg1o] Spanish [https://apple.co/4315L7Y] French [https://apple.co/3DkZbPb] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/3tzOfrz] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/416m40q] French [https://spoti.fi/41HuJGW] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hackernews_ai] Spanish [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hackernews_es_ai] French [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hackernews_fr_ai] Visit our website at https://theautomateddaily.com/ [ https://theautomateddaily.com/] Send feedback to feedback@theautomateddaily.com Youtube [https://www.youtube.com/@TheAutomatedDaily] LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/the-automated-daily/] X (Twitter) [https://x.com/automated_daily]

30. juni 202610 min
episode Open cyber AI goes public & SpaceX eyes retail mobile service - Tech News (Jun 29, 2026) artwork

Open cyber AI goes public & SpaceX eyes retail mobile service - Tech News (Jun 29, 2026)

Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Discover the Future of AI Audio with ElevenLabs - https://try.elevenlabs.io/tad [https://try.elevenlabs.io/tad] - SurveyMonkey, Using AI to surface insights faster and reduce manual analysis time - https://get.surveymonkey.com/tad [https://get.surveymonkey.com/tad] - Prezi: Create AI presentations fast - https://try.prezi.com/automated_daily [https://try.prezi.com/automated_daily] Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily [https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily] TODAY'S TOPICS: OPEN CYBER AI GOES PUBLIC - CHINA’S Z.AI RELEASED GLM-5.2 AS AN OPEN-WEIGHT, MIT-LICENSED CYBER-CAPABLE MODEL, REMOVING PROVIDER CONTROL POINTS LIKE MONITORING AND THROTTLING. THAT RAISES URGENCY FOR FASTER PATCHING, AI-ASSISTED AUDITS, AND VULNERABILITY MANAGEMENT AS OFFENSIVE WORKFLOWS SPREAD. SPACEX EYES RETAIL MOBILE SERVICE - SPACEX’S SPECTRUM BUYING SPREE NOW LOOKS LIKE A DELIBERATE ENTRY TICKET TO A DIRECT-TO-CONSUMER STARLINK MOBILE BUSINESS IN THE U.S. IF SPACEX GOES RETAIL, IT COULD CHALLENGE VERIZON, AT&T, AND T-MOBILE WHILE RESHAPING HOW SATELLITE CONNECTIVITY COMPETES WITH TERRESTRIAL NETWORKS. SPACEX VALUATION HYPE VERSUS REALITY - AFTER SPACEX’S IPO POP, SOME ANALYSTS FLOATED MULTI-TRILLION-DOLLAR MARKET-CAP PROJECTIONS POWERED BY STARLINK GROWTH AND NEW AI NARRATIVES. THE TENSION IS THAT SPACEX IS STILL SPENDING HEAVILY AND ISN’T MATCHING NVIDIA-LIKE MARGINS, MAKING EXPECTATIONS VULNERABLE TO EXECUTION RISK. GOOGLE CAPS GEMINI FOR META - GOOGLE REPORTEDLY LIMITED META’S ACCESS TO GEMINI AFTER FAILING TO SUPPLY THE COMPUTE META WANTED, FORCING INTERNAL RATIONING OF AI USAGE. IT’S A VIVID SIGNAL THAT EVEN HYPERSCALERS FACE HARD INFRASTRUCTURE BOTTLENECKS, INFLUENCING WHO BUILDS VERSUS WHO BUYS MODELS. TOKEN ECONOMICS AND AI COMPUTE CRUNCH - THE ‘TOKENMAXXING’ ERA IS SHIFTING AS PROVIDERS TIGHTEN PLANS AND COMPANIES PAY CLOSER ATTENTION TO AI SPEND. WITH AGENTS GETTING MORE RELIABLE, THE FIGHT MAY BECOME WHO CAN AFFORD MORE ITERATIONS—TURNING TOKEN BUDGETS INTO A COMPETITIVE WEAPON, ESPECIALLY IN CYBERSECURITY. META PREDICTION APP PLANS AND BACKLASH - META IS EXPLORING PARTNERSHIPS WITH PREDICTION-MARKET PLAYERS WHILE BUILDING ITS OWN PREDICTION APP, ARENA, AIMED AT YOUNGER USERS WITH POINTS-BASED FORECASTING. THE IDEA COULD DRIVE ENGAGEMENT, BUT IT ALSO INVITES SCRUTINY AROUND GAMBLING-LIKE BEHAVIOR, INSIDER INFORMATION, AND ETHICS. CHILD SAFETY LAWSUITS PRESSURE PLATFORMS - RECENT JURY VERDICTS AGAINST META AND GOOGLE HAVE ENERGIZED U.S. EFFORTS TO REGULATE SOCIAL MEDIA DESIGN CHOICES TIED TO HARM, ESPECIALLY FOR MINORS. LAWMAKERS ARE AGAIN DEBATING SECTION 230, AND CEO TESTIMONY IS BEING FRAMED AS A ‘BIG TOBACCO’-STYLE ACCOUNTABILITY MOMENT. CHINA SUPERCOMPUTER CLAIM SHOCKS TOP500 - CHINA CLAIMS IT RECLAIMED THE TOP500 LEAD WITH ‘LINESHINE,’ REPORTEDLY SURPASSING 2,000 EXAFLOPS USING DOMESTICALLY USED CPUS AND A CUSTOM INTERCONNECT. IF VALIDATED, IT’S A GEOPOLITICAL SIGNAL ON HIGH-PERFORMANCE COMPUTING RESILIENCE UNDER EXPORT CONTROLS—THOUGH WITH AN EFFICIENCY TRADEOFF. NVIDIA LOSES GROUND IN CHINA - NVIDIA’S CHINA STRATEGY IS STALLING AMID U.S. EXPORT CONTROLS AND BEIJING’S PUSH TOWARD HUAWEI ALTERNATIVES, WITH MARKET SHARE REPORTEDLY SLIDING SHARPLY. THE SHIFT ACCELERATES CHINA’S SEMICONDUCTOR SELF-SUFFICIENCY AND COULD RESHAPE GLOBAL AI HARDWARE COMPETITION. HEALTHCARE CLAIMS DATA RESHAPES PROVIDERS - GARNER HEALTH SAYS IT HAS MERGED COMMERCIAL, MEDICARE, AND MEDICAID CLAIMS PLUS TRANSPARENCY DATA TO SCORE INDIVIDUAL PHYSICIANS ON QUALITY AND EFFICIENCY. IF SUCH MEASUREMENT PROVES RELIABLE, IT COULD INFLUENCE EMPLOYER BENEFITS, PATIENT STEERING, AND PROVIDER CONTRACTING ACROSS U.S. HEALTHCARE. COASTAL LAND RECLAMATION MEETS REGULATION - A POLICY ARGUMENT IS RESURFACING: U.S. COASTAL CITIES LARGELY STOPPED LAND RECLAMATION AFTER THE 1970S, POTENTIALLY DUE TO ENVIRONMENTAL PERMITTING AND LITIGATION BURDENS. THE DEBATE IS WHETHER REFORMS COULD ENABLE DENSER, MORE RESILIENT COASTAL DEVELOPMENT WITHOUT REPEATING PAST ECOLOGICAL DAMAGE. Episode Transcript Open cyber AI goes public We’ll start with the story that may have the biggest near-term impact on security teams. China’s Z.ai, formerly known as Zhipu AI, released an open-weight model called GLM-5.2 aimed at long-horizon coding and vulnerability discovery. The headline isn’t just capability—it’s distribution. This model is published under an MIT license, meaning it can be downloaded and run privately, without a vendor watching for abuse or cutting off access. That removes the enforcement layer U.S. frontier labs increasingly rely on. If you’re defending software, the implication is blunt: patch cycles and internal code auditing need to get faster, because attackers can now scale their tooling with fewer constraints. SpaceX eyes retail mobile service Now to SpaceX, which is suddenly looking less like ‘satellite internet plus launches’ and more like an emerging telecom rival. Reports say SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell told investors during an IPO roadshow that the company is considering a Starlink-branded mobile service for U.S. consumers—and possibly even building a land-based cellular network. That’s a meaningful shift from the earlier framing, where Starlink’s phone connectivity was mostly presented as a partnership feature, like the deal with T-Mobile that extends coverage into dead zones. Going direct would let SpaceX own the customer relationship and potentially capture more revenue per user, but it also puts them in the ring with Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile in a brutally competitive market. SpaceX valuation hype versus reality That SpaceX telecom angle also recontextualizes a huge, long-questioned move: the company’s spending on wireless spectrum. SpaceX bought AWS-4 and H-block licenses from EchoStar for roughly seventeen billion dollars, and later added AWS-3 spectrum for a couple billion more, with the FCC approving the transfer. It’s hard to call that a side bet now. Spectrum like that is the kind of asset you buy when you’re thinking beyond partnerships—more like making a down payment on a standalone network. The open question is timing, because building dense terrestrial coverage is a multi-year grind, and incumbents have decades of infrastructure and spectrum strategy behind them. Google caps Gemini for Meta SpaceX’s IPO momentum is also feeding a separate, heated conversation on Wall Street: valuation. Shares surged after the listing, and some forecasts being floated are eye-watering—multi-trillion market caps within just a few years, with Starlink cited as the main growth engine. Bulls point to rapid subscriber growth, next-generation satellite upgrades, and broader narratives like AI compute initiatives. But the skeptical view is that comparing SpaceX to Nvidia misses something important: Nvidia prints cash with enormous margins, while SpaceX is still spending heavily on rockets, constellations, and new bets. That makes the stock more sensitive to execution hiccups—and if the market decides the timeline is slipping, pullbacks could be sharp. Token economics and AI compute crunch Staying with AI—today’s clearest theme is that compute is still the choke point, even for the biggest players. The Financial Times reports Google has limited Meta’s access to Gemini models because it couldn’t provide the compute capacity Meta asked for. The caps reportedly hit multiple customers, but Meta felt it enough that employees were told to use AI tokens more efficiently. What makes this interesting is the use case: Meta had been leaning on Gemini for safety automation, including removing harmful content and scams, because it was viewed internally as stronger than some in-house options. Now those constraints are reportedly accelerating Meta’s shift toward its own model efforts, partly to reduce dependence on a direct competitor. Meta prediction app plans and backlash That compute squeeze ties into a broader shift in how companies think about AI spending. There’s an argument making the rounds that the earlier corporate phase of pushing everyone to burn through AI tokens wasn’t a mistake—it was adoption strategy. Now budgets are tightening, and ‘unlimited’ plans are disappearing as providers raise prices and restrict access. But the next phase may actually bring heavy token usage back for a different reason: agents that can run longer, check their work, and iterate can turn extra compute into better outcomes—if the workflow is designed well. The competitive implication is stark in places like cybersecurity: defenders may need to outspend attackers in AI-driven discovery and remediation cycles, not just hire more people. Child safety lawsuits pressure platforms Meta, meanwhile, is also testing the edges of what ‘social engagement’ can look like. Reports say Mark Zuckerberg has pushed teams to explore partnerships with prediction-market platforms like Polymarket and Kalshi as Meta builds a prediction-focused app called Arena. The early concept uses points instead of real-money wagers, at least at first, and the pitch is that forecasting becomes a social game—something you do with friends, in chats, and in feeds. But prediction markets are already under legal and political scrutiny, and even a points-based system can raise ethical questions when it starts to feel like gambling, or when it touches politics and finance. Inside Meta, some employees are reportedly uncomfortable with how close this could get to the line. China supercomputer claim shocks TOP500 That discomfort is landing in a moment when U.S. lawmakers are already sharpening knives around social media harms, especially involving minors. A set of landmark jury verdicts against Meta and another against Google has energized a strategy that tries to work around the broad protections of Section 230 by focusing on alleged product design choices, not just user-generated content. Families and advocates argue the mechanics of these platforms can amplify bullying, risky behavior, and dangerous connections. On Capitol Hill, there’s new movement around a bipartisan child safety bill, though it’s already facing criticism for how far it does—or doesn’t—go. And there’s a fresh push to haul major tech CEOs into hearings that some lawmakers are openly framing as an accountability inflection point. Nvidia loses ground in China On the geopolitical tech front, China is making two different kinds of statements—one with supercomputers, and one with chips. First, China claims it’s back on top of the TOP500 supercomputer rankings with a system called LineShine, reportedly beating the U.S. machine El Capitan. The claim is especially notable because it reportedly does this without GPUs, leaning on a huge number of domestically used CPUs and a custom network. If the numbers hold up, it’s a signal that China can still reach world-leading high-performance computing milestones under export restrictions—though the tradeoff appears to be power consumption and efficiency. Healthcare claims data reshapes providers Second, Nvidia’s grip on the China AI-chip market continues to slip. Nvidia’s CEO has said the company once dominated that market, but estimates now suggest a steep decline as China shifts toward domestically designed alternatives led by Huawei. Even if Nvidia remains the gold standard at the frontier, the strategic takeaway is that export controls and policy pressure are accelerating a hardware and software migration inside China. Developers are adapting models to run on Huawei systems, which strengthens China’s ecosystem—and over time, could create exportable alternatives if performance and supply keep improving. Coastal land reclamation meets regulation Finally, a quick look at data power in healthcare. Garner Health says it has assembled a massive merged claims dataset spanning commercial insurance plus Medicare and Medicaid, alongside newer transparency data. The company’s pitch is that with enough coverage you can measure individual doctors more consistently, then steer patients and employer plans toward ‘top providers’ using quality and efficiency metrics. The upside is obvious: fewer complications, less waste, and clearer comparisons. The risk is equally clear: when you score clinicians at scale, methodology and incentives matter a lot, and small errors can turn into big consequences for referrals, contracts, and reputations. Story 12 And one policy-heavy item that still has real tech implications: a new argument says the U.S. largely stopped expanding coastal cities through land reclamation after the 1970s, not because the easy projects ran out, but because environmental review and permitting made it slow and lawsuit-prone. The author points to long-running projects that take decades to clear approvals. The provocative claim is that reforming the process could add valuable land near city centers for housing and infrastructure, and even help with sea-level resilience—while acknowledging that the original regulations responded to real environmental damage. Whether you agree or not, it’s a reminder that ‘infrastructure capacity’ isn’t only about engineering; it’s also about how long it takes to get permission to build. Subscribe to edition specific feeds: - Space news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/4cLLrdt] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/4jN8Dui] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_space] Spanish [https://theautomateddaily.com/space_es/feed.xml] French [https://theautomateddaily.com/space_fr/feed.xml] - Top news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/3PTvdUF] Spanish [https://apple.co/3ECCMgk] French [https://apple.co/4hmcxbB] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/3ZYXAW2] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/414h4JD] French [https://spoti.fi/3Di0jDe] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_news] Spanish [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_news_es] French [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_news_fr] - Tech news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/3RYWbg4] Spanish [https://apple.co/4i0WqRM] French [https://apple.co/4bEAXMm] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/3S089pG] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/3EE2Fwv] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/3DlObRE] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_tech] Spanish [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_tech_es] French [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_tech_fr] - Hacker news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/48QWyzj] Spanish [https://apple.co/4ke9jtE] French [https://apple.co/41E1qFd] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/45zD1kf] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/4hF8h81] French [https://spoti.fi/3QY26Ak] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hacker_news] Spanish [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hacker_news_es] French [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hacker_news_fr] - AI news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/3M6Tg1o] Spanish [https://apple.co/4315L7Y] French [https://apple.co/3DkZbPb] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/3tzOfrz] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/416m40q] French [https://spoti.fi/41HuJGW] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hackernews_ai] Spanish [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hackernews_es_ai] French [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hackernews_fr_ai] Visit our website at https://theautomateddaily.com/ [ https://theautomateddaily.com/] Send feedback to feedback@theautomateddaily.com Youtube [https://www.youtube.com/@TheAutomatedDaily] LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/the-automated-daily/] X (Twitter) [https://x.com/automated_daily]

Yesterday9 min
episode AI revives buried ancient texts & Open-source AI challenges US leaders - Tech News (Jun 28, 2026) artwork

AI revives buried ancient texts & Open-source AI challenges US leaders - Tech News (Jun 28, 2026)

Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - SurveyMonkey, Using AI to surface insights faster and reduce manual analysis time - https://get.surveymonkey.com/tad [https://get.surveymonkey.com/tad] - Discover the Future of AI Audio with ElevenLabs - https://try.elevenlabs.io/tad [https://try.elevenlabs.io/tad] - Lindy is your ultimate AI assistant that proactively manages your inbox - https://try.lindy.ai/tad [https://try.lindy.ai/tad] Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily [https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily] TODAY'S TOPICS: AI REVIVES BURIED ANCIENT TEXTS - AI-ASSISTED “VIRTUAL UNWRAPPING” AND PARTICLE-ACCELERATOR IMAGING ARE MAKING THE HERCULANEUM SCROLLS READABLE, REVEALING NEW ANCIENT BOOKS AND LONGER CONTINUOUS PASSAGES. OPEN-SOURCE AI CHALLENGES US LEADERS - CHINA’S ZHIPU RELEASED GLM 5.2 AS OPEN SOURCE, WITH AGENTIC BENCHMARK RESULTS CLOSE TO TOP CLOSED MODELS AND FAR LOWER COST, BOOSTING “INTELLIGENCE PER DOLLAR” AND ENTERPRISE CONTROL. AI BOOM RAISES GADGET PRICES - MEMORY AND STORAGE CHIPS ARE BEING PULLED INTO AI DATA CENTERS, PUSHING UP CONSUMER ELECTRONICS COSTS AND SLOWING UPGRADES AS SUPPLY STAYS TIGHT THROUGH AT LEAST 2027. UNDER-16 SOCIAL MEDIA BANS SPREAD - AUSTRALIA’S UNDER-16 SOCIAL MEDIA BAN IS PROMPTING COPYCAT POLICIES ACROSS INDONESIA, MALAYSIA, AND THE UK, WHILE US LAWMAKERS PUSH NEW CHILD-SAFETY RULES AMID LAWSUITS OVER ADDICTIVE DESIGN. DRONES BECOME EVERYDAY MILITARY TOOLS - SOUTH KOREA WANTS EVERY SOLDIER TRAINED ON DRONES WHILE UKRAINE ESCALATES LONG-RANGE DRONE STRIKES, SHOWING HOW INEXPENSIVE UNMANNED SYSTEMS RESHAPE TACTICS AND DEFENSE PLANNING. SPACEX EYES RETAIL MOBILE SERVICE - AFTER MAJOR SPECTRUM PURCHASES AND FCC APPROVAL, SPACEX IS REPORTEDLY CONSIDERING A DIRECT-TO-CONSUMER STARLINK MOBILE OFFERING, SIGNALING BIGGER AMBITIONS BEYOND PARTNERSHIPS. CAR T THERAPY FOR BLADDER CANCER - RESEARCHERS ENGINEERED MUC16-TARGETING CAR T CELLS DELIVERED DIRECTLY INTO THE BLADDER, HINTING AT SAFER, MORE PRACTICAL APPROACHES FOR SOLID TUMORS AND BLADDER-SPARING TREATMENTS. Episode Transcript AI revives buried ancient texts Let’s start with that breakthrough in reading the Herculaneum scrolls—carbonized papyrus buried in 79 A.D. and long treated as essentially unreadable. Researchers at the University of Kentucky say they’ve now digitally unwrapped one scroll completely and recovered more than seventy columns of text from another. They’ve also identified two previously unknown ancient books. One finding suggests the Epicurean philosopher Philodemus may have written a longer series than scholars believed survived. What’s changed here is that the project is moving past tiny excerpts and into something closer to complete arguments—meaning historians may soon be debating full works, not just fragments. There are still hundreds of scrolls left, and the next challenge may be less about decoding and more about careful editing and interpretation. Open-source AI challenges US leaders Staying with AI, but shifting to today’s enterprise reality: China’s Zhipu has released GLM 5.2 as an open-source model, and it’s drawing unusually quick adoption from developers. Reporting highlighted that on a major benchmark aimed at “agent-like” tasks—things like planning, writing code, testing, and iterating—GLM 5.2 is landing close to a top US closed model, while being far cheaper to run. That gap matters because more companies are now measuring AI in “intelligence per dollar,” especially as token bills climb. The other big point is control. Because GLM 5.2 can be downloaded and run on a company’s own servers, access can’t be pulled back overnight. That’s suddenly a practical concern as some frontier systems have become harder to reach due to policy pressure, limited rollouts, or restricted partner programs. Put it together—competitive performance, lower cost, and non-revocable access—and you can see why open source is becoming not just a philosophy, but a procurement strategy. US AI labs may feel real pricing and adoption pressure if this trend continues. AI boom raises gadget prices Now, a side effect of the AI boom that’s likely to hit everyday consumers: after decades of electronics getting cheaper over time, analysts say many devices are now trending more expensive, and AI is a big reason. The short version is that key components—especially memory and storage—are being pulled into data centers, where large tech companies are buying aggressively to build and run AI systems. Chipmakers are prioritizing the most profitable AI-focused demand, leaving less supply for laptops, tablets, and game consoles. Major brands have already hinted at price increases on certain product lines, and analysts say phones could be next if component costs keep rising. The notable part here is the timeline: expanding chip production takes years, and forecasts suggest the squeeze could last well into 2027. For consumers, that can mean slower upgrades, fewer discounts, and a longer life cycle for the gadgets you already own. Under-16 social media bans spread Next, a global policy story that’s accelerating: bans and strict limits on social media for under-16s. Australia’s move is becoming a test case, and other governments are now lining up behind similar restrictions—Indonesia and Malaysia among them, and the UK aiming for implementation in the next couple of years. The political force behind this is growing legal pressure on platforms, especially lawsuits arguing that some apps were intentionally designed to be addictive or failed to protect children from harm. Supporters of bans argue that even imperfect enforcement can reduce exposure at scale. Critics—Amnesty International among them—say bans are a blunt instrument that kids can bypass, and that real progress comes from safer product design, stronger data protections, and clearer accountability. In the United States, the landscape is different. Constitutional limits, Section 230 debates, and partisan gridlock have slowed sweeping action, but momentum is building through court verdicts and renewed pressure on Congress. Lawmakers are floating new child-safety legislation, and there’s talk of a “Big Tobacco” moment where platform leaders face sustained scrutiny not just for content, but for design choices that keep young users hooked. Drones become everyday military tools Let’s turn to drones—because two separate stories this week point to the same conclusion: unmanned systems are no longer niche tools. In South Korea, the defense ministry says it wants every service member trained to operate drones as routinely as they handle personal weapons. The goal is to make drones a universal tool for scouting and, if needed, strikes, while also scaling counter-drone defenses. At the same time, reporting from eastern Ukraine describes a specialized unit launching long-range drones capable of hitting targets far inside Russia. Ukraine has leaned into these systems as a substitute for the missiles it lacks, using frequent, mobile launches to keep pressure on infrastructure and supply lines. Whatever your view of the strategy, the significance is hard to miss: drones are reshaping how countries think about cost, reach, and persistence in conflict. And they’re pushing militaries to treat operator training, supply chains, and defenses as everyday necessities, not special projects. SpaceX eyes retail mobile service On the business side of connectivity, SpaceX’s long-questioned spending on wireless spectrum is starting to look like a deliberate step toward something bigger: a direct-to-consumer mobile offering. SpaceX has been buying up valuable spectrum assets, and regulators have approved key transfers. The new twist is reporting that company leadership has discussed, at least with investors, the possibility of launching a retail Starlink mobile service in the US—moving beyond partnerships where another carrier owns the customer relationship. Why it matters is straightforward: retail subscriptions can be far more lucrative than simply supplying capacity. But it’s also a high bar to clear—building terrestrial coverage and competing with entrenched carriers takes time, money, and execution discipline. Still, the spectrum purchases now read less like a hedge and more like a down payment on entering the broader wireless market. CAR T therapy for bladder cancer Finally, a notable biotech advance with a strong “tech-enabled medicine” angle: researchers at Weill Cornell Medicine and Roswell Park engineered CAR T cells to target a protein called MUC16, which appears on many bladder cancer cells but is largely absent from normal bladder tissue. In preclinical testing, the therapy looked promising—especially when delivered directly into the bladder using a catheter approach that clinicians already understand. The interesting lesson here is about delivery. The same therapy didn’t work well when given through the bloodstream, underscoring one of the toughest barriers in bringing powerful cell therapies to solid tumors: getting enough of the treatment to the right place without causing harm elsewhere. If these results translate to humans, this could open a more practical path for treating high-risk bladder cancer—and potentially offer options that avoid the most drastic surgeries for some patients. Subscribe to edition specific feeds: - Space news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/4cLLrdt] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/4jN8Dui] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_space] Spanish [https://theautomateddaily.com/space_es/feed.xml] French [https://theautomateddaily.com/space_fr/feed.xml] - Top news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/3PTvdUF] Spanish [https://apple.co/3ECCMgk] French [https://apple.co/4hmcxbB] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/3ZYXAW2] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/414h4JD] French [https://spoti.fi/3Di0jDe] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_news] Spanish [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_news_es] French [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_news_fr] - Tech news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/3RYWbg4] Spanish [https://apple.co/4i0WqRM] French [https://apple.co/4bEAXMm] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/3S089pG] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/3EE2Fwv] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/3DlObRE] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_tech] Spanish [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_tech_es] French [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_tech_fr] - Hacker news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/48QWyzj] Spanish [https://apple.co/4ke9jtE] French [https://apple.co/41E1qFd] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/45zD1kf] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/4hF8h81] French [https://spoti.fi/3QY26Ak] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hacker_news] Spanish [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hacker_news_es] French [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hacker_news_fr] - AI news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/3M6Tg1o] Spanish [https://apple.co/4315L7Y] French [https://apple.co/3DkZbPb] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/3tzOfrz] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/416m40q] French [https://spoti.fi/41HuJGW] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hackernews_ai] Spanish [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hackernews_es_ai] French [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hackernews_fr_ai] Visit our website at https://theautomateddaily.com/ [ https://theautomateddaily.com/] Send feedback to feedback@theautomateddaily.com Youtube [https://www.youtube.com/@TheAutomatedDaily] LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/the-automated-daily/] X (Twitter) [https://x.com/automated_daily]

28. juni 20267 min
episode AI unreads ancient Roman scrolls & IBM teases sub-1nm chips - Tech News (Jun 27, 2026) artwork

AI unreads ancient Roman scrolls & IBM teases sub-1nm chips - Tech News (Jun 27, 2026)

Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Consensus: AI for Research. Get a free month - https://get.consensus.app/automated_daily [https://get.consensus.app/automated_daily] - KrispCall: Agentic Cloud Telephony - https://try.krispcall.com/tad [https://try.krispcall.com/tad] - Prezi: Create AI presentations fast - https://try.prezi.com/automated_daily [https://try.prezi.com/automated_daily] Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily [https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily] TODAY'S TOPICS: AI UNREADS ANCIENT ROMAN SCROLLS - AI-POWERED “VIRTUAL UNWRAPPING” AND PARTICLE-ACCELERATOR IMAGING ARE UNLOCKING THE CARBONIZED HERCULANEUM SCROLLS, REVEALING NEW ANCIENT TEXTS AND RESHAPING CLASSICAL SCHOLARSHIP. IBM TEASES SUB-1NM CHIPS - IBM’S NANOSTACK PROTOTYPE POINTS TO SUB-1NM-ERA SCALING VIA 3D TRANSISTOR STACKING, PROMISING BIG GAINS FOR DATA CENTERS AND GENERATIVE AI—IF HEAT AND LEAKAGE CAN BE SOLVED. DRONES RESHAPE MODERN MILITARIES - SOUTH KOREA IS MAKING DRONE OPERATION A CORE SOLDIER SKILL, WHILE UKRAINE’S LONG-RANGE DRONE STRIKES HIGHLIGHT HOW CHEAP UNMANNED SYSTEMS ARE CHANGING STRATEGY AND DETERRENCE. GOVERNMENTS MOVE TO BAN TEEN SOCIAL MEDIA - AUSTRALIA’S UNDER-16 SOCIAL MEDIA BAN IS TRIGGERING COPYCAT POLICIES IN ASIA AND EUROPE, ESCALATING LEGAL PRESSURE OVER ADDICTIVE DESIGN, CHILD SAFETY, AND PLATFORM ACCOUNTABILITY. CAR T CELLS FOR BLADDER CANCER - NEW PRECLINICAL RESEARCH SUGGESTS MUC16-TARGETING CAR T THERAPY DELIVERED DIRECTLY INTO THE BLADDER COULD EXPAND CAR T BEYOND BLOOD CANCERS WITH IMPROVED SAFETY AND ACCESS. ROBOTAXIS MAY LOSE BRAKE PEDALS - THE U.S. DOT IS PROPOSING SAFETY-RULE CHANGES THAT COULD ALLOW AUTONOMOUS-ONLY VEHICLES WITHOUT BRAKE PEDALS, ACCELERATING ROBOTAXI DEPLOYMENT WHILE RAISING NEW SAFETY CONCERNS. CONNECTED-CAR RULES SQUEEZE EV BRANDS - POLESTAR SAYS U.S. ‘CONNECTED VEHICLE’ RESTRICTIONS TIED TO CHINA-LINKED TECH WILL BLOCK ITS 2027 MODELS, UNDERSCORING HOW DATA SECURITY RULES ARE RESHAPING EV MARKET ACCESS. AI SUPPLY CHAINS BECOME GEOPOLITICS - A U.S.-LED ‘TRUSTED AI SUPPLY CHAIN’ PUSH GAINED MORE INTERNATIONAL BACKING AT PAX SILICA, SPOTLIGHTING COMPUTE, ENERGY, CHIPS, AND TALENT AS THE NEW LEVERS OF AI LEADERSHIP. Episode Transcript AI unreads ancient Roman scrolls Let’s start with that remarkable archaeology-meets-AI story. Researchers at the University of Kentucky say they’ve made a major leap in reading the carbonized Herculaneum scrolls, buried when Mount Vesuvius erupted in 79 A.D. Instead of physically unrolling the fragile papyrus, the team combined advanced imaging—captured with the kind of gear you’d expect at a particle accelerator—with AI-driven “virtual unwrapping.” They report one scroll has been fully unwrapped digitally, another has yielded a substantial stretch of readable text, and they’ve even identified two previously unknown ancient books. The big significance here is scale: scholars can move from isolated phrases to reconstructing complete arguments, potentially changing what we think we know about ancient philosophy and literature. IBM teases sub-1nm chips Staying with big leaps—IBM has revealed a prototype chip architecture it says could push computing into the sub‑1‑nanometer era, at least in public terms. The headline claim is enormous transistor density on a tiny piece of silicon, along with early test results that point to meaningful performance gains and far better energy efficiency versus IBM’s own leading-edge work. The more interesting “why” is the approach: instead of only shrinking features on a flat surface, IBM is leaning into vertical construction—stacking transistor layers like a skyscraper. This is one of the clearest signs that the next phase of Moore’s Law may depend less on making things smaller in two dimensions, and more on building upward. The catch is also predictable: heat management and electrical leakage become brutal problems when you pack layers tightly together, so commercialization is still described as years away. Drones reshape modern militaries That chip story connects to a broader policy thread: who controls the supply chains that make AI possible. At the second Pax Silica Summit in Washington, dozens of countries signed onto a joint statement backing a U.S.-led push for what it calls “trusted and resilient” AI supply chains. The framing is telling: the argument is that leadership in AI will hinge as much on capacity—power, compute, chips, and talent—as it does on regulation. The practical impact is geopolitical. This is another signal that AI is being treated like strategic infrastructure, and that alliances may increasingly form around sourcing, manufacturing, and energy buildouts as much as around software. Governments move to ban teen social media Now to autonomy and regulation in the United States. The Department of Transportation has proposed updating federal safety standards so that vehicles designed to operate exclusively with automated driving systems would no longer be required to include brake pedals. In plain terms, it’s a step toward making purpose-built robotaxis easier to deploy at scale—without companies needing limited exemptions that restrict how many vehicles they can put on the road. Supporters, including major autonomous-vehicle players, say it removes outdated rules that assume a human driver must always be present. Critics, including safety advocates, warn that removing familiar controls could create new risks for passengers and first responders—especially in edge cases where a vehicle needs to be moved, secured, or handled after a crash. Expect a noisy public comment period, because this is one of those decisions that quietly shapes what streets look like a few years from now. CAR T cells for bladder cancer On the auto side of tech policy, Polestar says it will stop selling new cars in the U.S. starting with the 2027 model year due to enforcement of America’s “Connected Vehicles” rules. The regulation restricts importing or selling vehicles with connected-vehicle technology tied to China, citing national-security concerns around data access through common connectivity systems. Even though Polestar is headquartered in Sweden, it’s majority-owned by China’s Geely—making ownership structure and component sourcing a market-access issue, not just a finance detail. Polestar says it will keep selling current models for now and maintain service, but the message to the industry is sharp: in the connected-car era, geopolitics can determine which brands can compete, and how quickly they’ll need to regionalize supply chains. Robotaxis may lose brake pedals Shifting to online safety and youth regulation: Australia’s upcoming ban on social media use for under‑16s is quickly becoming a global test case. Several governments across Asia and Europe are now moving in a similar direction, and the political momentum is being fueled by lawsuits and public pressure alleging that major platforms used addictive design patterns while failing to protect children from harmful content and predatory behavior. Supporters argue that even imperfect enforcement can reduce exposure and change norms. Critics—including rights groups—say blanket bans are a blunt instrument that kids will route around, potentially pushing risky behavior into less visible corners of the internet. What’s notable is the spillover: some policymakers are starting to talk about youth protections not just for social apps, but for AI tools as well—suggesting a wider reckoning about how fast new tech is reaching kids. Connected-car rules squeeze EV brands In medical tech, researchers at Weill Cornell Medicine and Roswell Park report progress on a CAR T approach aimed at bladder cancer—one of the tougher frontiers for cell therapies. They engineered CAR T cells to target a protein called MUC16, which appears on many bladder cancer cells but is largely absent from normal bladder tissue. In preclinical tests, the therapy worked best when delivered directly into the bladder via catheter—essentially putting the treatment where it needs to be—rather than sending it through the bloodstream. That matters because one of the biggest challenges for CAR T in solid tumors is getting the therapy into the tumor safely and effectively. If this holds up in human trials, it could point to a bladder-sparing option for high-risk patients who today may face recurrence or even removal of the bladder. AI supply chains become geopolitics Finally, drones—and the way they’re rewriting defense doctrine in real time. South Korea’s defense ministry says it wants drone operation to become a basic skill across its forces, treating drones as standard equipment rather than a niche specialty. The motivation is straightforward: low-cost drones used at scale have reshaped tactics in Ukraine and the Middle East, and Seoul is also responding to North Korea’s evolving capabilities—especially after past incidents where drones penetrated sensitive airspace. That urgency is echoed on the front lines in eastern Ukraine, where reporting describes specialized units launching long-range drone strikes deep into Russia. Ukraine is using drones in part as a substitute for the kinds of missiles it can’t field in large numbers, aiming to pressure logistics and energy infrastructure over time. Whether or not any single strike is decisive, the strategic shift is clear: drones are becoming a persistent, scalable tool of state power—less about occasional headline moments, and more about sustained attrition and disruption. Subscribe to edition specific feeds: - Space news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/4cLLrdt] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/4jN8Dui] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_space] Spanish [https://theautomateddaily.com/space_es/feed.xml] French [https://theautomateddaily.com/space_fr/feed.xml] - Top news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/3PTvdUF] Spanish [https://apple.co/3ECCMgk] French [https://apple.co/4hmcxbB] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/3ZYXAW2] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/414h4JD] French [https://spoti.fi/3Di0jDe] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_news] Spanish [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_news_es] French [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_news_fr] - Tech news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/3RYWbg4] Spanish [https://apple.co/4i0WqRM] French [https://apple.co/4bEAXMm] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/3S089pG] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/3EE2Fwv] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/3DlObRE] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_tech] Spanish [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_tech_es] French [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_tech_fr] - Hacker news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/48QWyzj] Spanish [https://apple.co/4ke9jtE] French [https://apple.co/41E1qFd] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/45zD1kf] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/4hF8h81] French [https://spoti.fi/3QY26Ak] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hacker_news] Spanish [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hacker_news_es] French [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hacker_news_fr] - AI news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/3M6Tg1o] Spanish [https://apple.co/4315L7Y] French [https://apple.co/3DkZbPb] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/3tzOfrz] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/416m40q] French [https://spoti.fi/41HuJGW] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hackernews_ai] Spanish [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hackernews_es_ai] French [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hackernews_fr_ai] Visit our website at https://theautomateddaily.com/ [ https://theautomateddaily.com/] Send feedback to feedback@theautomateddaily.com Youtube [https://www.youtube.com/@TheAutomatedDaily] LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/the-automated-daily/] X (Twitter) [https://x.com/automated_daily]

27. juni 20267 min
episode SpaceX Starmind orbital AI compute & Musk’s integrated space-and-AI empire - Tech News (Jun 26, 2026) artwork

SpaceX Starmind orbital AI compute & Musk’s integrated space-and-AI empire - Tech News (Jun 26, 2026)

Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Discover the Future of AI Audio with ElevenLabs - https://try.elevenlabs.io/tad [https://try.elevenlabs.io/tad] - KrispCall: Agentic Cloud Telephony - https://try.krispcall.com/tad [https://try.krispcall.com/tad] - Consensus: AI for Research. Get a free month - https://get.consensus.app/automated_daily [https://get.consensus.app/automated_daily] Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily [https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily] TODAY'S TOPICS: SPACEX STARMIND ORBITAL AI COMPUTE - ELON MUSK CONFIRMED “STARMIND,” A SPACEX CONCEPT FOR IN-ORBIT AI COMPUTING WHERE SATELLITES ACT LIKE SERVERS. REGULATORS ARE BEING TOLD IT COULD SCALE TO UP TO A MILLION COMPUTE NODES, RESHAPING DATA CENTER ECONOMICS AND LOW-LATENCY AI ACCESS. MUSK’S INTEGRATED SPACE-AND-AI EMPIRE - A FOREIGN POLICY ANALYSIS ARGUES SPACEX, STARLINK, XAI, AND X ARE BECOMING A TIGHTLY CONNECTED INFRASTRUCTURE STACK. THE CONCENTRATION OF CONNECTIVITY, AI TOOLING, AND INFORMATION DISTRIBUTION RAISES GEOPOLITICAL AND REGULATORY QUESTIONS AROUND POWER AND ACCOUNTABILITY. GLOBAL RULES FOR DRIVERLESS CARS - THE UN’S UNECE WORLD FORUM APPROVED THE FIRST GLOBAL FRAMEWORK FOR FULLY AUTONOMOUS DRIVING SYSTEMS. IT SETS SHARED SAFETY VALIDATION METHODS, LIFECYCLE SAFETY MANAGEMENT, AND POST-DEPLOYMENT MONITORING TO REDUCE FRAGMENTED NATIONAL RULES. US ROBOTAXI RULES WITHOUT PEDALS - THE US DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION PROPOSED UPDATING SAFETY STANDARDS SO ADS-ONLY VEHICLES WOULDN’T NEED BRAKE PEDALS. THAT COULD ACCELERATE PURPOSE-BUILT ROBOTAXIS, WHILE SAFETY ADVOCATES WARN ABOUT PASSENGER AND FIRST-RESPONDER RISKS AND THE NEED FOR STRONGER AUTONOMOUS-SPECIFIC SAFEGUARDS. OPEN-SOURCE SECURITY WITH AKRITES - THE LINUX FOUNDATION LAUNCHED AKRITES TO STRENGTHEN SECURITY FOR CRITICAL OPEN SOURCE SOFTWARE AMID FASTER AI-ASSISTED VULNERABILITY DISCOVERY. IT CENTRALIZES COORDINATED DISCLOSURE, INCIDENT RESPONSE, AND “MAINTAINER OF LAST RESORT” SUPPORT TO GET REAL-WORLD PATCHES DEPLOYED FASTER. FRONTIER AI ROLLOUT GOVERNMENT OVERSIGHT - THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION REPORTEDLY ASKED OPENAI TO STAGGER THE RELEASE OF AN UPCOMING FRONTIER MODEL, AIMING FOR A LIMITED FIRST WAVE TO TRUSTED PARTNERS. THE MOVE HIGHLIGHTS GROWING US GOVERNMENT INVOLVEMENT IN MODEL DEPLOYMENT TIMING, ACCESS CONTROL, AND NATIONAL SECURITY RISK MANAGEMENT. IBM NANOSTACK AND CHIP SCALING - IBM REVEALED A NANOSTACK TRANSISTOR ARCHITECTURE THAT LEANS ON 3D STACKING TO REACH SUB‑1NM-CLASS DENSITY CLAIMS. IF IT TRANSLATES TO MANUFACTURING, IT COULD DELIVER MORE AI COMPUTE PER WATT FOR DATA CENTERS, THOUGH COMMERCIALIZATION IS STILL YEARS AWAY. APPLE MAC CHIPS SHIFT TO M7 - APPLE IS REPORTEDLY REWORKING ITS MAC SILICON CADENCE BY SHIPPING A BASE M6 WHILE SKIPPING M6 PRO AND M6 MAX. THE COMPANY APPEARS TO BE PRIORITIZING AN AI-FOCUSED M7 GENERATION FOR HIGHER-END MACS, REFLECTING SHIFTING DEMAND AND SUPPLY REALITIES. AI BREAKTHROUGHS IN HISTORY AND HEALTH - AI HELPED VIRTUALLY UNWRAP AND READ A CARBONISED HERCULANEUM SCROLL WITHOUT DAMAGING IT, UNLOCKING NEW ANCIENT TEXT. SEPARATELY, RESEARCHERS IN CAMBRIDGE SAY AI-GUIDED VACCINE DESIGN COULD PUSH “UNIVERSAL” VACCINES THAT TARGET WHOLE VIRUS FAMILIES, POTENTIALLY IMPROVING PANDEMIC READINESS. CHINA’S SUPERCOMPUTING AND WORLD MODELS - CHINA IS RUMORED TO HAVE A NEW SUPERCOMPUTER, LINESHINE, THAT COULD TOP US BENCHMARK PERFORMANCE USING DOMESTIC COMPONENTS—SIGNALING MOMENTUM DESPITE EXPORT CONTROLS. MEANWHILE, AI LABS ARE INCREASINGLY SHIFTING FROM CHATBOTS TOWARD “WORLD MODELS” THAT PREDICT AND PLAN IN SIMULATED ENVIRONMENTS, A KEY STEP FOR ROBOTICS. Episode Transcript SpaceX Starmind orbital AI compute Let’s start in space, because Elon Musk just confirmed “Starmind” as the name for SpaceX’s planned AI satellite constellation. The pitch to regulators is bold: a network that could scale to as many as a million orbital compute nodes. Unlike Starlink, which is mainly about moving internet traffic around, Starmind is being framed as “computing in space,” where satellites do AI work onboard and send back results instead of raw data. SpaceX’s argument is essentially a data-center argument: on Earth, power, permits, land, and cooling are becoming hard constraints. In orbit, you’ve got solar power and a very different thermal environment, and SpaceX claims that could push compute costs down fast—Musk even suggests space-based compute could become the cheapest place to run AI within a couple of years. Prototypes are being pointed to for early 2027, with talk of ramping production later that year. And this connects to a bigger storyline: a Foreign Policy piece is spotlighting how Musk’s companies are increasingly intertwined—SpaceX and Starlink for launch and connectivity, xAI for models, and the social platform X as a distribution and data engine. The concern isn’t just scale; it’s leverage. When one constellation can decide who gets connected, and one platform can shape what information spreads, the geopolitical stakes get a lot higher—especially if governments are still figuring out how to regulate something that looks increasingly “too important to fail.” Musk’s integrated space-and-AI empire Staying with transportation, the UN’s vehicle standards body has approved what it’s calling the first global regulations for fully autonomous driving systems. This is a big deal not because it instantly puts driverless cars everywhere, but because it creates a shared baseline across major markets for how safety is demonstrated and monitored. The framework emphasizes audited safety management across the system’s life, credible testing including simulation, and ongoing monitoring once vehicles are on the road. It also requires data recording for oversight—think of it as making sure there’s an accountable trail when something goes wrong. The aim is to reduce the patchwork problem, where each country makes its own rules and deployment slows to a crawl. In the US, there’s a parallel regulatory shift underway. The Department of Transportation has proposed updates that would stop requiring brake pedals in vehicles designed to operate exclusively with automated driving systems. That would remove a major barrier for purpose-built robotaxis that don’t have traditional driver controls. Supporters say it will reduce red tape and let companies scale without begging for limited exemptions. Critics, including safety groups, are warning about practical realities—like what a passenger can do in an emergency, or how first responders interact with a vehicle that doesn’t have familiar controls. The key tension here is whether deregulation is being paired with enough autonomous-specific safety expectations, instead of just removing old assumptions about human drivers. Global rules for driverless cars Now to software security, where a new effort is trying to make the open source backbone of the internet a little less fragile. The Linux Foundation and a broad coalition have launched an initiative called Akrites, aimed at tightening how critical open source vulnerabilities are handled. The timing is telling: AI-assisted vulnerability discovery is accelerating, meaning flaws in widely used libraries can be found faster than volunteer maintainers can realistically respond. Akrites is setting up a shared incident response capability and a standardized coordinated disclosure process, so the same issue doesn’t get reported a dozen ways, patched inconsistently, or dumped on a single exhausted maintainer. The most interesting promise is the “maintainer of last resort” idea—stepping in when a project is too important to fail but doesn’t have active stewardship. If this works, it’s less about flashy security announcements and more about the unglamorous goal that actually matters: patches landing and getting deployed before attackers capitalize. US robotaxi rules without pedals On frontier AI governance, there’s another sign that model releases are becoming a political process, not just a product launch. The Trump administration has reportedly asked OpenAI to stagger the rollout of an upcoming powerful model, pushing for a limited initial release to a small group of trusted partners before wider availability. Whatever you think of that approach, it signals a more assertive posture from the federal government: worries about misuse, national security, and who gets access first are now shaping timelines. It also highlights how ad-hoc the rules still are. Labs, platforms, and regulators are effectively negotiating the playbook in real time—and that uncertainty is becoming part of the ecosystem for anyone building on top of these models. Open-source security with Akrites Let’s talk chips, because the industry is clearly hunting for the next big leap in compute efficiency. IBM has unveiled a new transistor architecture it calls NanoStack, built around stacking transistor layers vertically—more like a skyscraper than a ranch. IBM is describing it as delivering sub‑1nm-class density benefits, and it’s positioning the work as a path to more performance without proportional power growth, particularly for AI data centers. The important detail is that today’s “node” naming is more marketing than geometry; the real story is that 3D stacking is becoming the way forward as traditional shrinking gets harder. Commercial production is still years away, but it’s a signal that Moore’s Law is being extended by going upward as much as inward. Apple, meanwhile, is reportedly reshaping its Mac chip roadmap. The chatter is that Apple will ship a base M6 for entry-level Macs but skip the usual higher-end M6 Pro and M6 Max—saving the bigger architectural jump for an AI-focused M7 generation in top-tier machines later. If that’s accurate, it suggests Apple is prioritizing where it spends its silicon budget: pushing more capability into the generations that matter most for on-device AI and heavier creative workloads, even if it means an unusual cadence in the middle. Frontier AI rollout government oversight A couple of AI stories this week show the range—from ancient history to future public health. Researchers have used AI to virtually unwrap and read part of a carbonised papyrus scroll from Herculaneum, burned and buried by Vesuvius in AD79. Using high-resolution scans and machine learning, they recovered substantial hidden text without physically unrolling the fragile document. This matters because it changes what’s scarce. The bottleneck may no longer be whether we can open these scrolls, but how quickly scholars can interpret what AI makes readable. It’s one of the clearest examples of AI expanding access to knowledge that was effectively locked away. On the medical side, researchers at the University of Cambridge say AI-assisted vaccine design could help create “universal” vaccines that protect against whole families of viruses. Early human testing of a universal Sarbeco coronavirus vaccine reported no significant safety concerns, and it’s moving to larger studies. The bigger point is preparedness: if spillovers are more frequent, anything that helps science stop “chasing the virus” could change how fast the world responds. IBM NanoStack and chip scaling In computing geopolitics, China is reportedly claiming a new lead in supercomputing with a system dubbed LineShine. The story—still light on publicly confirmed details—is that it reaches performance beyond a major recent US system and does so using domestic components. If accurate, the significance isn’t just bragging rights. It would be another marker that export controls don’t automatically freeze progress; they can also accelerate “full-stack” independence. And in an era where AI capability is tied to national power, supercomputing becomes a strategic headline, not a niche benchmark. Apple Mac chips shift to M7 Zooming out, there’s a noticeable shift in where AI research excitement is going. A growing set of researchers and startups argue that chatbots are hitting diminishing returns for certain kinds of intelligence, and they’re pivoting toward so-called “world models”—systems that learn how environments behave over time, so they can plan actions and predict consequences. That’s especially relevant for robotics. Language alone doesn’t teach a machine how objects move, how contact works, or what happens when you push something off-balance. If world models mature, they could become the bridge from “talking AI” to “doing AI” in real spaces, with far more practical impact than another incremental improvement in conversation. AI breakthroughs in history and health Finally, a couple of stories about work—because technology changes aren’t confined to screens anymore. Teleoperation is starting to turn physical jobs into something that can be done remotely, with early examples ranging from construction machinery controlled from office-like stations to robots supervised across borders. The upside is real: fewer people in dangerous environments, and potentially better staffing flexibility. The downside is also familiar: the same offshoring and wage-arbitrage pressures that reshaped knowledge work could spill into hands-on labor, along with new questions about licensing, liability, and safety oversight. And in software, there’s a candid argument making the rounds that the labor market is “repricing” engineering. With less cheap venture money and with AI tools making routine implementation faster, the claim is that the premium is shifting away from broad, throughput-driven generalists and toward engineers with deep production judgment—reliability, security, latency, and the kind of hard-earned experience you only get when things break at scale. A related cultural footnote: Disqus co-founder Ben Vinegar shared a lesson from the early 2010s about blindly following tech thought leaders into trendy tooling choices that looked clever but became a maintenance headache at scale. It’s a useful reminder for the AI era: hype travels faster than operational reality, and the bill often arrives later. 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26. juni 202610 min