Disney bought the movie studio, the film library, and a large chunk of Fox’s Hollywood muscle in 2019, but Fox Corporation did not exactly retreat to a rocking chair. It kept news, sports, broadcast television, and eventually built Tubi into a serious free-streaming player. Now Fox is making a much bigger move: a $22 billion agreement to acquire Roku, putting the company much closer to the TV home screen, the ad dollars, and the moment when viewers decide what they are going to watch before Netflix, Disney+, YouTube, or anyone else gets a shot.
Fox Has the Content, Roku Has the Front Door
This unexpected deal brings together FOX’s news, sports, Tubi streaming service, entertainment assets, and owned-and-operated television stations with Roku’s connected TV platform. That includes Roku streaming players, Roku-branded and licensed TVs, The Roku Channel, Howdy, first-party data, and a direct relationship with more than 100 million global streaming households.
Combined, FOX and Roku would create a scaled media and technology company positioned at the intersection of two forces reshaping video: the continued importance of live sports and news, and the ongoing shift from traditional television to streaming.
Both companies have indicated that Roku will continue to operate as an open, partner-friendly platform while supporting the continued distribution of FOX content. On a pro forma basis, the combined company would become the third-largest player in U.S. television by share of viewing, with FOX’s sports, news, and entertainment programming sitting alongside Tubi and The Roku Channel. That reach would span broadcast, cable, local television, and streaming, giving the combined company broader distribution, deeper engagement, and a much larger advertising platform.
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Lachlan K. Murdoch, Executive Chair and Chief Executive Officer of Fox Corporation, said: “This is a defining moment for FOX, and a natural extension of the deliberate and focused strategy we have been executing for nearly a decade. In 2019, we reoriented the company around live news and sports. In 2020, we acquired Tubi, and under our stewardship, it has become one of the most successful businesses in streaming. Today, we take the next step: bringing together the most valuable live content portfolio in video consumption with the preeminent streaming platform through which America watches it. This combination will transform the scope of our company into high-growth verticals and yield a step change in our overall growth profile. And we are executing this acquisition from a position of financial strength – maintaining our investment grade balance sheet while providing our shareholders with an uninterrupted return of capital program in the form of share buybacks and dividends. Roku pioneered streaming TV and scaled it into a leading CTV platform. Together, we intend to lead its next chapter.”
Anthony Wood, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer of Roku, said:“Over the past two decades, we’ve built Roku into the leading TV streaming platform, reaching more than 100 million households globally and reshaping how people discover and enjoy entertainment. I’m incredibly proud of what our team has built, and the combination with FOX is an extraordinary opportunity to accelerate our vision, scale faster, and innovate more aggressively for viewers, partners, and advertisers. That’s why our Board of Directors unanimously determined, after concluding its strategic review process, that this transaction offers a significant premium to Roku shareholders while also providing them with the opportunity to participate in the compelling future upside of the combined company. I couldn’t be more excited about what we’ll accomplish together.”
The Strategy Behind Fox’s Roku Bet
Fox Corporation and Roku have outlined what their combined strategy would look like if the deal is completed.
Scale and Reach: The transaction would pair one of the strongest players in live news and sports with one of the leading connected TV platforms. Roku reaches more than 100 million global streaming households, including more than half of all U.S. broadband households. FOX brings major live programming across the NFL, MLB, NASCAR, Big Ten, FIFA World Cup, FOX News, and FOX Business. Together, FOX and Roku would combine premium live content, broad distribution, and significant audience reach across both linear television and streaming.
Position in High-Growth Verticals: The acquisition would give FOX a much larger position across Roku’s video ecosystem and a wider entry point into connected TV, particularly in advertising and streaming subscriptions.
More Powerful Streaming Platform: The deal would bring together FOX’s content and advertising capabilities with Roku’s consumer interface, home screen, platform technology, and direct viewer relationships. That combination could improve content discovery, deepen engagement, and create a more compelling streaming experience for consumers, advertisers, and content partners.
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Long-Term Growth: The combined company would push FOX’s business mix further toward streaming and connected TV while maintaining a balance across advertising and distribution. It would also strengthen FOX’s long-term growth profile while preserving the company’s stated focus on disciplined capital allocation.
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Transaction Details
FOX is acquiring Roku in a cash-and-stock transaction valued at $160.00 per Roku share. Under the terms of the agreement, Roku shareholders will receive $96.00 in cash and 0.9693 shares of FOX Class A common stock for each Roku share. Upon closing, existing FOX shareholders are expected to own approximately 73% of the combined company, with Roku shareholders owning approximately 27%.
The transaction has been unanimously approved by the boards of directors of both companies. FOX expects to fund the cash portion of the transaction with a combination of new debt and cash on hand.
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Roku Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer Anthony Wood will have an ongoing role at the combined company and will join the FOX Board of Directors following the close of the transaction.
The transaction remains subject to customary closing conditions, including approvals by FOX and Roku shareholders, receipt of U.S. and certain non-U.S. regulatory approvals, and other customary conditions.
In connection with the execution of the acquisition agreement, Anthony Wood and certain associated trusts and related entities that together hold at least a majority of the voting power of Roku stock have entered into a voting and support agreement, agreeing to vote in favor of the transaction. LGC Holdco LLC has also entered into a voting and support agreement with respect to the issuance of FOX shares in the transaction. The transaction is expected to close in the first half of calendar year 2027.
The deal will also be subject to the required securities filings and review process, including disclosures filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
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The Bottom Line
The Fox/Roku deal is the latest sign that media, entertainment, and the connected TV business are still in full consolidation mode. It may not be as large as Paramount Skydance’s $110 billion acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery, which recently received U.S. Department of Justice approval, but its impact should not be underestimated.
At $22 billion, this is not just another media acquisition. Fox is buying deeper access to the TV home screen, streaming discovery, advertising inventory, first-party data, and a direct relationship with more than 100 million global streaming households. That matters because the future of television is not only about who owns the shows, movies, news, and sports. It is also about who controls the interface viewers use before they decide what to watch.
Fox wins by gaining a much stronger position in connected TV, a larger advertising platform, and a major distribution advantage for Tubi, Fox Sports, Fox News, and its broader entertainment portfolio. Roku wins by getting the scale, capital, and content muscle of a major media company at a time when the streaming device and smart TV platform business is becoming more competitive and expensive.
The potential losers are less obvious, but they matter. Rival streaming services, smaller content providers, and independent channels may have reason to worry if Roku’s platform becomes less neutral over time, even though both companies are promising that it will remain open and partner-friendly. Advertisers may benefit from better targeting and scale, but viewers could face a more aggressively programmed home screen, more data collection, and fewer truly neutral paths to content discovery.
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It is also important to note that this is not a rescue deal. Fox and Roku are both strong companies going into the transaction. This is not a dominant company buying a distressed asset just to strip it for parts. It is a strategic bet on where television is headed: live sports, news, free ad-supported streaming, connected TV advertising, and control of the screen before the viewer ever presses play.
As with any deal of this size, the press-release version sounds tidy. The reality will depend on execution, remaining regulatory approvals, leadership stability, platform neutrality, and how much independence Roku is allowed to keep once the deal closes. Right now, Fox and Roku can talk about scale, innovation, and a better streaming experience. The harder question is whether consumers and content partners actually benefit once Fox owns the remote.
In case Microsoft Flight Simulator is a little too realistic for your tastes, there’s a new way you can take to the virtual skies. Google Earth has a flight sim mode of its own, and it can now be accessed by anyone globally via their browser. Android Police spotted a social media post from the Google property announcing this update.
Prepare for takeoff. ✈️ Flight simulator is now available globally on web to all users. https://t.co/jV5ZW7BZeW
We’ve recently added many our most powerful professional desktop features to web. Elevation profiles, new import types, but there’s always been one other feature… pic.twitter.com/s11NDaCx60
Google Earth seems to be the area where the massive company remembers that tech can be cool and downright fun. In 2024, it added an option for seeing historical recreations of select times and places. This is the sort of clever curio we love, and Google delivered even more the following year.
Once you have Google Earth open, go to Explore Earth, then the Tools menu to find the Flight Simulator mode. There’s an FAQ for you newbie virtual pilots to help you get acclimated to the Google Earth simulation. Just bear in mind two caveats. For one, this is an experimental feature, so you might have some wonky moments with the flight simulator. And second, Google wants to be very clear that this isn’t enough to put you in the cockpit of an actual 747: “The flight simulator is designed for casual exploration rather than high-fidelity aerodynamic training,” it notes. Happy travels!
Retroid has brought back the 12GB RAM configuration of the internet-famous Pocket 6, returning it to the lineup at the same $279 price point as the discontinued version.
The original 12GB RAM variant was pulled from sale earlier this year after Retroid cited the rising cost of RAM and storage, leaving the Pocket 6 available only in its 8GB RAM configuration.
However, the updated model comes with the catch of reduced internal storage. That storage reduction is the most consequential change in the new configuration, with the returning 12GB model shipping with 128GB of UFS 3.1 storage rather than the 256GB that the discontinued version carried, effectively halving the built-in capacity at an unchanged retail price.
The new variant also arrives with a more limited set of options than the original, restricted to a single control layout with asymmetrical thumbsticks, meaning buyers who prefer the symmetrical D-pad Top arrangement will need to step down to the 8GB RAM version to get that configuration.
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Colour availability has narrowed as well, with the 12GB RAM model offered only in Black, 16Bit, and Silver, dropping the Light Purple and Orange options that were available on earlier Pocket 6 configurations sold through the official Retroid store.
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Retroid also announced the returning model through its official Discord channel rather than a formal press release, confirming the device is in stock and available to ship immediately, which places it ahead of competing handhelds such as the AYN Thor and Odin 3 that are currently operating on pre-order timelines.
The new 12GB RAM Pocket 6 is priced at $279 and remains exclusive to the official Retroid website, with the device confirmed in stock and ready to ship immediately.
Fluance has built its reputation by walking the line between affordability and performance, offering a wide range of powered speakers, passive loudspeakers, and turntables aimed at listeners who want better sound without wandering into boutique audio bankruptcy. The new $799.99 Fluance RT87 turntable pushes that formula further, arriving as the company’s most advanced record player to date with a dual plinth construction and a choice of moving magnet cartridges.
That matters because the entry-level turntable category is no longer a sleepy corner of the hi-fi market. Fluance, U-Turn Audio, Pro-Ject, Rega, and Audio-Technica are all fighting for the same growing audience: vinyl buyers who want real performance, clean industrial design, upgrade potential, and pricing that does not require explaining a “lifestyle purchase” to another adult. With the RT87, Fluance is clearly trying to move higher up the food chain without abandoning the value equation that made the brand relevant in the first place.
“With the RT87, we wanted to push every aspect of high-fidelity playback performance further, from vibration isolation to tonearm precision,” said Justin Koetsier, Product Manager at Fluance. “Every decision behind this turntable was made with musical accuracy in mind. As more listeners demand higher-resolution analog systems, the demand is no longer just for a turntable, but for a platform that allows the stylus to retrieve the clearest possible signal from the groove.”
Dual Plinth Construction
The RT87’s most distinctive physical attribute is its newly developed dual-plinth architecture, designed to isolate key signal-path components from unwanted resonance and environmental vibration. The motor is mounted independently on the lower plinth, while the tonearm and cartridge assembly sit on a decoupled upper plinth, separated by precision conical isolators.
The physical separation created by the RT87’s dual-plinth construction is designed to reduce the transfer of motor-borne resonance and external vibration before it can reach the stylus. The dense wood plinths are also intended to help damp mechanical resonance within the chassis. If properly implemented, this type of isolation can support more stable groove tracking, a lower noise floor, and improved clarity across the soundstage.
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The Tonearm
The RT87 features a 9-inch carbon fiber tonearm designed for low resonance, high rigidity, and precise stylus control. Its straight-arm geometry and 230 mm effective length are intended to trace a controlled arc across the record surface, helping reduce tracking error when properly aligned. The tonearm supports cartridges weighing 5 to 9.5 grams.
Adjustable Vertical Tracking Angle (VTA)
This feature enables listeners to fine-tune cartridge alignment for optimal stylus contact and enhanced detail retrieval, while a removable headshell makes cartridge upgrades and adjustments simple, giving listeners the flexibility to evolve their setup over time.
Two Premium Cartridge Options
The Fluance RT87 is available in two configurations, each fitted with a premium moving magnet cartridge. The Audio-Technica AT-VM95ML version uses a Microlinear stylus and offers a 3.5 mV output, making it the more detail-focused option, particularly for listeners concerned with groove tracing and inner-groove distortion.
The Ortofon 2M Blue version uses a nude elliptical stylus and delivers a higher 5.5 mV output, giving it a stronger signal into a MM phono stage and a different tonal balance. These are not interchangeable flavors of the same cartridge; the AT-VM95ML and 2M Blue have distinct output levels, stylus profiles, and sonic personalities.
“Each cartridge brings its own character to the RT87,” said Justin Koetsier, Product Manager at Fluance. “Whether listeners prioritize warmth, detail retrieval, or overall musicality, both options were selected to fully showcase the capabilities of the platform.”
High-Mass Acrylic Platter
Fluance RT87 Turntable (Walnut) with Audio-Technica AT-VM95ML
For improved playback stability, the RT87 uses a thicker and heavier 22 mm, 4.1-pound anti-static acrylic platter. Compared with the 16 mm, 3-pound acrylic platter used on the RT85 and RT85N, the new platter adds both thickness and mass, which should increase rotational inertia and may help reduce speed instability. Fluance also claims the acrylic construction helps damp unwanted resonance and reduce static. The belt-drive system supports 33⅓, 45, and 78 RPM playback speeds, and the RT87 also includes auto-stop functionality.
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Traditional Connectivity
Fluance takes a traditional connectivity approach with the RT87. There is no built-in phono preamp, USB output, or Bluetooth connectivity, so the turntable is aimed at listeners who plan to use a conventional analog setup. The RT87 provides a standard phono-level output with a ground connection. To connect it directly to an integrated amplifier or stereo/AV receiver, that component needs a dedicated MM phono input. If it does not, an external MM phono preamp must be connected between the turntable and an available line-level input on the amplifier or receiver.
Comparison
In the following chart, we have compared the Fluance RT87 with their popular, but lower-priced RT85N and the popular Denon DP-500BT at a similar RT87 price point, which includes built-in Bluetooth.
Fluance RT87 Turntable (White) with Ortofon 2M Blue Cartridge
The Bottom Line
The under-$1,000 turntable category has become one of the more competitive corners of hi-fi, and Fluance is clearly trying to move beyond its value-driven comfort zone with the RT87. At $799.99, this is not just another RT85 variant with a different cartridge bolted to the headshell. The RT87 adds a dual-plinth chassis, a thicker 22 mm acrylic platter, a 9-inch carbon fiber tonearm with VTA adjustment, 78 RPM playback, auto-stop, and the choice of either the Audio-Technica AT-VM95ML or Ortofon 2M Blue moving magnet cartridge.
That makes the RT87 more focused than many of the lifestyle-driven turntables now crowding this price range. Fluance is not chasing Bluetooth, USB ripping, app control, or plug-and-play convenience here. There is no built-in phono preamp, no wireless output, and no USB connection, which means buyers will need an amplifier or receiver with a proper MM phono input, or a separate outboard phono stage.
Those omissions will matter to anyone looking for an all-in-one vinyl solution. The Technics SL-40CBT and Denon DP-500BT offer more modern convenience, while Pro-Ject, Rega, and U-Turn continue to fight hard on tonearm design, speed control, build quality, and upgrade paths. But the RT87’s argument is different: spend the money on the mechanical parts that matter most to analog playback and leave the digital extras outside the plinth.
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That makes the Fluance RT87 a more serious step up for listeners who already own, or plan to buy, a proper phono stage. It is less convenient than some of its rivals, but also more purpose-built. For the dedicated record listener who wants cartridge flexibility, better isolation, and a more substantial platform without crossing the $1,000 line, the RT87 looks like Fluance’s most credible turntable yet.
Price & Availability
The Fluance RT87 is available now in Natural Walnut, Piano White, and Piano Black with a choice of an Audio Technica AT-VM95ML or Ortofon 2M Blue phono cartridge for $799.99 at Amazon or Fluance.
JBL is not done feeding the party speaker machine in 2026. Following the PartyBox On The Go 2 Plus, the company has added two more portable party speakers to the lineup with the new JBL PartyBox 330 and PartyBox 130.
Both models arrive with upgraded woofers, new tweeters, deeper bass extension, and clearer highs, along with JBL’s AI Sound Boost and Smart EQ to help optimize playback across different tracks. That matters in this category, where “loud” is easy and “loud without sounding like a shopping cart full of Bluetooth regrets” is the harder trick.
The design has also been updated, with a new hexangle profile, curved front grille, redesigned lightshow, and a simplified top control panel built around a single dial for volume, sound modes, and lighting effects. Available in Black or White with orange accents, the PartyBox 330 and 130 look like JBL is pushing the line toward a cleaner, more modern identity without forgetting the main job: make the room, backyard, beach, or basement move.
JBL PartyBox 330
JBL PartyBox 330
At its core, the JBL PartyBox 330 uses dual 6.5-inch woofers and delivers 280 watts of total output power. Making their PartyBox debut, twin PEN dome tweeters bring technology used in JBL’s professional concert systems, with the goal of producing cleaner, more detailed highs that can cut through the mix when the volume climbs.
JBL also includes AI Sound Boost with Smart EQ Mode, which adjusts playback to help keep the sound balanced across different tracks. The redesigned cabinet adds a new profile, ripple-effect side panels built from miniature JBL horn shapes, and a reinvented beat-synced lightshow because, apparently, standing still in the corner was never part of the brief.
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Battery life is rated at up to 18 hours, while a 10-minute Fast Charge can provide up to 2 hours of playback. The battery is also replaceable, so users can charge a spare and swap it in when the party outlasts the first pack.
For easier transport, the PartyBox 330 includes a telescopic locking handle and wide all-terrain wheels. The IPX4 splashproof rating adds protection against splashes, making it suitable for poolside use, patios, and outdoor gatherings.
Dual mic and guitar inputs support karaoke, sing-alongs, and basic live performance use. JBL has also added an optical TV input, USB-C for lossless audio, and Bluetooth for wireless streaming from smartphones and tablets.
Auracast support allows users to pair multiple compatible JBL speakers, making it easier to expand coverage for larger spaces or bigger crowds.
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JBL PartyBox 130
JBL PartyBox 130
For those looking for a more compact PartyBox model, the JBL PartyBox 130 delivers up to 200 watts of output power. It uses upgraded 5.25-inch woofers and 25mm silk dome tweeters, with JBL promising stronger bass and clearer highs from the smaller cabinet.
The PartyBox 130 also includes a redesigned lightshow with strobe edge lighting and dynamic visual effects. Battery life is rated at up to 15 hours, while a 10-minute Fast Charge provides up to 80 minutes of additional playback.
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A redesigned foldable carry handle makes the 130 easier to move, and its IPX4 splashproof rating adds protection against splashes and light spills. Like the PartyBox 330, it includes mic and guitar inputs, Bluetooth streaming, and Auracast support for connecting multiple compatible JBL speakers.
EasySing Mics
To get more out of the PartyBox 330 and PartyBox 130, JBL also offers EasySing Mics as an optional accessory. They add karaoke-focused features for users who want to use either speaker for sing-alongs, parties, or casual live performance.
Pro Tip: JBL EasySing Mics are not included with the PartyBox 330 or PartyBox 130. They require a separate purchase.
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The JBL EasySing Mics provide real-time, AI-powered vocal removal from tracks while maintaining clear, balanced audio. Users can adjust the vocal level to 25%, 50%, or fully removed. The EasySing algorithm enhances live vocals with Voice Boost for improved high-frequency clarity, along with reverb, echo, and noise suppression.
The JBL EasySing Mic Mini is a new compact version that provides a pocket-sized solution for singing and content creation. It includes Voice Boost for high-pitch support and AI-based noise suppression to reduce background interference.
The PartyBox 330 and 130 push JBL deeper into the portable party speaker category with more power, upgraded drivers, Auracast support, mic and guitar inputs, splash resistance, replaceable batteries, and updated lightshows. The 330 adds more output and longer battery life, while the 130 offers a smaller, less expensive option that still keeps the core PartyBox feature set intact.
What’s missing? EasySing microphones are optional, not included, and neither model is pretending to replace a serious PA system. But for parties, outdoor gatherings, karaoke, casual performances, or buskers who need portable amplification without a complicated setup, the PartyBox 330 and 130 make a practical case at $629.95 and $449.95, respectively.
Pricing & Availability
The JBL PartyBox 130 and 330 will be available for presale starting June 7, 2026. Shipping is expected to start on June 28, 2026.
Total Wireless, formerly known as Total by Verizon, is a prepaid, no-contract wireless provider with unlimited data covered by the Verizon 5G network. Total Wireless Total 5G Unlimited plan has unlimited data, talk, and text, along with a five-year price guarantee—meaning it won’t get jacked up after a trial period, guaranteeing you get unlimited data at a low price. Total Wireless has also introduced unlimited data on Verizon’s 5G Ultra Wideband network that promises to be up to 10 times faster than the median download speeds of other providers.
Whether you have to have the newest iPhone 17, or are more of an Android phone person, we wanted to highlight the best Total Wireless promo codes and discounts that will make anyone happy!
50% Off With BYOD at Total Wireless (No Promo Code Required)
My phone bill is always way more expensive than I think it will be, and it doesn’t help that phone contracts can be confusing and difficult. Total Wireless makes it easy, with incentives like free items and price-lock discounts. Right now, you can get 50% off the Total 5G Unlimited plan when you bring your own phone (aka ‘Bring Your Own Device’). These plans start at as low as $20 per month, with taxes and fees included.
Total Wireless Discount: 15% Off
To get this Total Wireless promo code for 15% off, all you have to do is sign up for the Total Wireless newsletter and get 15% off on your first phone purchase. Plus, with the newsletter, you’ll get exclusive Total Wireless offers and promotions delivered to your inbox to save even more and get up-to-date on the latest drops.
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Save up to $250 on Select Devices When You Switch to Total Wireless
Total Wireless wants to thank you for switching. Right now, you can get a free Galaxy A36 5G when you switch to a Total 5G or 5G+ unlimited plan. Or, you could choose to get up to 4 free Moto G Stylus 5G phones when you switch to the Total Base 5G Unlimited plan (or higher). They have tons of other promos going on too, so there’s something no matter your taste. Right now, if you switch, you’ll get up to $250 off select devices, including the iPhone 13 for $50 ($249 off), a free Samsung Galaxy, or a free Samsung Galaxy A25 5 (originally $180), and so much more.
Loop in Friends, Get a Month Free
Total Wireless also has a loyalty program; when your friend gives you a referral code to join, you’ll get a free month of service upon joining. Once you make the switch to Total Wireless and join Total Rewards, as long as you enter your friend’s code within 14 days of activation, you’ll both receive 5,000 points, which is enough for a $50 service plan.
Fin raised $250m in debt in March to help fund its AI agents and make 650 new hires.
Salesforce is purchasing Irish customer agent unicorn Fin for approximately $3.6bn, marking the latest in a series of acquisitions aimed at strengthening its enterprise AI capabilities.
Fin was founded as Intercom in 2011 by CEO Eoghan McCabe, chief strategy officer Des Traynor, chief engineer Ciaran Lee and David Barrett, who worked as a front-end developer at the company before departing in 2018. The company changed its name to Fin – after its AI customer agent platform – last month.
The company’s core offering is Fin, an AI service agent that resolves end-to-end customer queries across channels including live chats, email, WhatsApp, phone and Slack. The AI agent is powered by the company’s proprietary AI model called Apex, purpose-built for customer support.
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The company said that it surpassed $400m in annual recurring revenue in March, with Fin alone set to reach the $100m revenue mark.
Fin’s wide-ranging customer base includes companies such as Anthropic, cloud company Snowflake and crypto prediction platform Polymarket. More than 30,000 companies use Fin’s products.
The acquisition comes a few months after Fin raised $250m in debt to help fund its AI agents. The company, at the time, said that it planned to make 650 new hires across offices in Dublin, London, Berlin, Sydney, Chicago and San Francisco this year.
“We’re thrilled to welcome Fin to Salesforce as we enable every company to become an agentic enterprise,” said Marc Benioff, the CEO and chair of Salesforce.
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“Fin brings proven agent technology, a deep commitment to customer success, and an incredible AI team that will complement Agentforce with powerful service agent capabilities.”
Salesforce’s AI platform Agentforce grew 205pc, hitting $1.2bn in annual recurring revenue in its fiscal quarter ending in May. Fin’s AI package is expected to help Salesforce provide organisations with improved autonomous resolution and reduced cost-to-serve.
McCabe said that “this is a major win for consumers of the world”.
“Our technology has defined this category and set the new standards for what great customer service looks like today,” he said.
Last summer, the company acquired enterprise cloud data management business Informatica in an $8bn deal to integrate the tech into its AI platform Agentforce.
In October, it acquired automation platform Regrello, followed by Qualified, an agentic AI marketing solutions provider, this April.
Salesforce shares are up more than 1.5pc today (15 June), but overall has dropped around 35pc over the past year.
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Every now and then a project comes into the Hackaday feed that has so many levels of wrong about it that you really shouldn’t do it at home, but is amusing enough to feature anyway with a warning. So it is with [ArcaEge]’s Capacitor Alarm Clock, which wakes up its unfortunate owner by blowing up electrolytic capacitors with reverse voltage. If you survive, you’ll certainly be awake!
It’s inspired unsurprisingly by an [ElectroBoom] video, and the premise is simple enough. An ESP32 serves as the clock, and triggers a relay for the alarm, which in turn overloads a suitably low-voltage electrolytic capacitor in a socket. The resulting explosion which appears in a video we’ve placed below the break, wakes the slumberer.
We don’t have to tell you that this is not the safest of hacks, and is presented here only for your entertainment. But it does provide a few points of interest, for example in identifying the difference between capacitors with a vent, and those without.
According to the one person who actually read the research paper
The “jailbreak” that prompted the Trump administration to block Anthropic’s most advanced models was actually a simple three-word prompt: “Fix this code.”
That’s according to Katie Moussouris, founder and CEO of Luta Security, and the fairy godmother of bug bounties. She says she was the only outside expert to read the third-party research paper on the Fable 5 guardrail bypass techniques that prompted the ban.
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On Friday, the US government, reportedly citing national security concerns, issued an export control directive to suspend access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 by any foreign national, inside or outside the United States. In response, Anthropic disabled both models “for all our customers to ensure compliance.”
Anthropic shared the report privately with her, Moussouris wrote in a Monday blog post.
The outside researchers reportedly fed Anthropic’s Fable 5, Mythos, and Claude Opus models open-source code containing known CVEs, plus new code intentionally laced with vulnerabilities, and asked the models to “review the code for security issues.”
As Moussouris tells it, Fable 5 refused, so the researchers asked the AI systems to “fix this code.” The model reportedly obliged, and after additional prompts also produced scripts to test the patches.
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“That’s it,” Moussouris wrote. “‘Fix this code,’ plus several manual steps to generate test scripts, should never have triggered an export control. I feel like making ’90s-style t-shirts with ‘fix this code’ on the front and ‘this shirt is a munition’ on the back.”
Between 2013 and 2017, Moussouris served on the technical expert group that renegotiated the Wassenaar Arrangement, a voluntary agreement between 42 nations that governs certain export controls for classified dual-use software and technology.
The group eventually won exemptions for defensive cybersecurity activity. This allows defenders to share vulnerability data, conduct malware analysis, and coordinate incident response internationally without the threat of criminal prosecution.
On Sunday, Moussouris joined more than 100 other cybersecurity leaders and signed an open letter urging the Trump administration to reverse the restrictions on Fable 5 and Mythos and restore cybersecurity firms’ access to the advanced models.
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“To pull the best capabilities away from defenders without a good reason when our adversaries are rapidly advancing is dangerous,” they wrote.
In her blog, Moussouris argues that there was no guardrail bypass or jailbreak. Defenders should be able to ask AI systems to find and fix bugs, and write tests to validate the patch, she said. Anthropic’s models were doing “the most valuable thing an AI model can do for defensive security: executing the find, fix, and test loop defenders run every day.”
Removing the capability for models to respond to defensive requests makes AI systems “worse at finding bugs and verifying patches,” she continued.
Plus, the US can’t extend export controls to open-weight systems or similar advanced models from China and other countries – and these systems will soon achieve Mythos-like capabilities, anyway. Anthropic and Google have both accused China-based rivals including DeepSeek of using “distillation attacks” to train their models by siphoning knowledge from American companies’ AI.
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Banning Anthropic’s advanced models is going to hurt defenders more than attackers, Moussouris warns. “Defense improves when defenders find the same bugs attackers find and fix them faster,” she wrote. “We need the best tools to defend against increasingly capable attackers in the AI era of cybersecurity.”
The Register reached out to the Trump administration for comment on Moussouris’ assertion, and we’ll update this post if we hear back. ®
Xiaomi’s home robotic charging arm auto-plugs and unplugs your EV. Q4 2026 retail launch in China, no price yet.
Xiaomi has unveiled a robotic charging arm designed for residential garages that automatically plugs and unplugs an electric vehicle without any owner intervention. The system detects the vehicle’s position after parking, extends to the charging port, connects the cable, and retracts it once charging is complete or a preset battery level is reached. Xiaomi is targeting a Q4 2026 retail launch in China, though no price has been announced.
The concept is not new. In December 2014, Elon Musk tweeted that Tesla was working on a charger that “automatically moves out from the wall and connects like a solid metal snake.” Tesla demonstrated a functional prototype in August 2015, a multi-segmented robotic arm that located the charge port on a Model S and plugged itself in.
The product never shipped. Tesla has since pivoted to wireless charging, acquiring German startup Wiferion in 2023 and designing the Cybercab robotaxi without a physical charging port entirely. Xiaomi’s approach is more conventional but potentially more practical: a compact unit that works with existing plug-in standards rather than requiring new vehicle hardware.
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The arm has a body width of just 152mm, narrow enough to mount alongside tight residential parking spaces. It uses AI-based vision recognition for what Xiaomi describes as sub-millimetre precision when inserting the plug. Owners can also initiate charging remotely via smartphone if the vehicle is parked within the arm’s reach.
The company emphasised that the promotional video was filmed in a real-world setting rather than a controlled environment, and that all demonstrated features are production-ready. That claim has not been independently verified, and Xiaomi has shipped more than 600,000 EVs in under two years, giving it the manufacturing scale to bring accessories like this to market. Whether a robotic charging arm appeals to enough buyers to justify production remains an open question, particularly without pricing.
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The robotic arm is designed to integrate with Xiaomi’s broader smart home and automated parking ecosystem. The intended workflow pairs autonomous parking with autonomous charging: the car parks itself in the garage, the arm plugs in, and the owner walks away. That vision depends on vehicle-to-infrastructure communication protocols that Xiaomi controls end-to-end across its SU7 and YU7 lineup, an advantage of building both the car and the accessory.
Xiaomi is not the only Chinese company pursuing this technology. Huawei demonstrated a robotic charging arm for the Maextro S800 in January 2025 with full unmanned automation. Li Auto and its partner CGXi have developed a rail-based robotic charging system for public stations, with commercial deployment planned for Q2 2026 across Li Auto’s 5C fast-charging network. BYD has filed patents for an AI-powered charging robot that also handles tyre inflation.
The competitive landscape extends beyond plug-in robotics. Dutch startup Rocsys raised $13 million in April to scale its M1 overhead rail-mounted robotic charger for robotaxi depots, a commercial-fleet application rather than a consumer one. Porsche has taken a different path altogether with its 11kW wireless inductive charging pad for the Cayenne Electric, which transfers power through a magnetic field between a floor plate and a receiver under the vehicle. Porsche’s system launches in Europe in 2026.
The common thread is that multiple companies have concluded EV owners should not have to handle charging cables. The approaches differ, robotic arms for plug-in automation, wireless pads for cable elimination, overhead rails for fleet operations, but the underlying bet is the same: that convenience is a barrier to EV adoption and that the charging experience needs to become invisible.
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For Xiaomi, the robotic arm also serves a strategic purpose beyond convenience. The company is targeting 550,000 vehicle deliveries in 2026 and has built its automotive brand on the promise that everything in a Xiaomi ecosystem, phone, home appliances, car, works together seamlessly. A robotic charging arm that only works with Xiaomi vehicles strengthens that lock-in. Whether the product reaches production at a price point that makes it more than a novelty will determine if it stays a concept video or becomes a real differentiator.
The Federal Data Center Enhancement Act (FDCEA) is set to expire in September without an apparent replacement, potentially ending requirements for federal agencies to report on data-center efficiency, resilience, energy and water use, and contractor sustainability. Wired reports: Despite the public backlash, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), the government agency that sets guidance for how agencies implement policies in line with the president’s agenda, is not providing any plans for how federal agencies should manage the sunset or continue to implement reporting beyond the timeline of the law. This, current and former workers at OMB and the General Services Administration (GSA) say, signals that the Trump administration is set to take an even more hands-off approach to data center oversight and regulation.
A replacement for the requirements laid out in FDCEA would, in other administrations, have been in the works for months ahead of its expiration. An employee with the GSA, the agency that oversees the government’s IT services and helps to implement the FDCEA, says that the lack of any sort of plan is highly uncommon. The employee spoke to WIRED on the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation. “Never in the history of data center policies has a policy expired without another one having been painstakingly worked on for three years behind the scenes,” says the GSA employee. “The technology has changed so much it’s not about getting everything right, it’s about doing the best they can and updating to a new policy. They claim they’re going to make sure private companies pay their fare share, but they haven’t explained how they’ll do that.”
[…] There has been a burst of data-center-related legislation introduced in Congress this year, from bills that mandate environmental reviews of data centers to bills designed to protect local moratoriums. However, it appears that none of these bills are designed to address the requirements in FDCEA, nor do they specifically address federally run or leased data centers. […] A search of reginfo.gov, the OMB website that contains reports on the president’s Unified Agenda, also turns up nothing for the FDCEA. “By letting this expire, OMB is going to enter into this new age of prioritizing rapid AI development over any sort of centralized control or rigorous standards,” says the anonymous GSA employee who spoke to Wired. “In the absence of a new policy from OMB, [GSA] has no directive or measurable standards with which to point agencies towards managing data centers efficiently.”
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