I’m a big fan of my Mac Mini, but it’s not the only option when it comes to buying one of the best mini PCs. Sure, it looks fantastic and boasts powerful hardware, but you have to pay for the privilege, and not everyone has that kind of budget.
To take advantage of the 42% discount, you’ll just need to enter the code R6VSNOOY at checkout. The deal expires March 31, though so don’t hang around.
With this spec you’ll be covered for office tasks, remote working, light content creation, gaming, and more. It’s not the only deal at Kamrui, though. Check out their Kamrui Amazon Shop, where you’re sure to find a mini PC that suits you.
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Today’s best KAMRUI deal
The Hyper H2 Mini PC is powered by an Intel Core 14450HX with 10 cores and 16 threads (up to 4.8GHz). This delivers fantastic stability and sustained multi-core performance under heavy workloads and is the superior choice compared to Ryzen 7 alternatives, perfect for high-intensity scenarios, such as 3A gaming, 3D rendering, and video editing.
The CPU is backed up by 32GB of RAM, which Kamrui claims is 50-70% faster than 16GB RAM. It’s also equipped with a 1TB NVMe PCIe4.0×4 SSD, which significantly improves loading times. This can also be expanded to 4TB if you run out of space.
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One of the best things about the Hyper H2 is that the integrated Intel UHD Graphics supports up to three 4K displays simultaneously. This is ideal for multitasking, data analysis, or multi-window design workflows.
This is the mini PC that just keeps on giving, and at just $478.39 at Amazon, we recommend it highly.
Valve said last week that it fixed an issue where VRAM on some graphics cards was not reported correctly in the Steam survey. Read Entire Article Source link
One of my biggest gripes when navigating a new area is that I’m too busy following directions on my phone to really take in my surroundings. But after trying on Google’s Android XR glasses, I’ve seen a promising solution.
At Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, I got a demo of Google’s wearable prototype frames and was more impressed than I expected to be. I’m not big on wearables; I’m good with plain-old glasses and jewelry that can’t ping me with notifications throughout the day. But I decided to give the Android XR glasses a try as I explored a strip of the MWC conference hall dubbed Android Avenue.
With a thick black frame and clear lenses, the Android XR prototype glasses look rather unassuming — especially because the display in the right lens is barely perceptible. Once I put them on, I long-pressed the right side temple to trigger Gemini and ask questions about objects around me. Then my skepticism slowly began to dissolve.
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The feature that sold me was the Google Maps demo. I looked at a photo of Barcelona stadium Camp Nou and asked Gemini to “navigate here.” White text appeared in the center of the lens, showing me how far I’d need to go before turning right. And when I looked down, I could see a visualization of the route, like you’ll find in the Maps app on a mobile device, so I could just follow the highlighted path. That would solve my dilemma of wanting to know where I’m going while also trying to take in the view.
I also looked at a vinyl cover for Barcelona, the album by Freddie Mercury and Montserrat Caballé, and asked Gemini to play a song from it. The audio quality was impressively comparable to what I’d hear with headphones — but without the feeling of something in or on my ears, which I appreciated.
And lastly, I got a demo of live translation through the glasses. The Google employee showing me the prototype spoke in Spanish and then Farsi, and an overlay of text appeared as I looked through the glasses at him and my surroundings. Perhaps the coolest part is I also heard the English translation spoken aloud in his (AI-generated) voice.
Google has also tapped this AI tech for its Pixel 10 phones, so if you’re on a phone call with someone speaking a different language, you’ll get real-time translation with a simulation of their voice. Google Translate also got an AI update last year that surfaces audio and text translations in the app as two people chat. Glasses feel like a good fit for this use case, too, since you don’t have to pull out your phone and look down at a screen when talking to someone. If the other person doesn’t have Android XR glasses, though, they’ll need to glance at their phone to see a translation of what you’re saying.
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A subtle display in the right lens shows projections of directions and other information.
Patrick Holland/CNET
I walked away from the demo finding I’d softened to the idea of potentially owning smart glasses of my own someday. I’m not completely sold, as I’m not sure I need more tech in my life, but there are certainly instances in which it could come in handy to see a subtle overlay of answers from an AI assistant like Gemini. And because Android XR glasses look more like standard specs than the doomed Google Glass, I could probably pull them off without looking too pretentious. CNET’s Patrick Holland had a similar conversion moment when he tried the Android XR glasses at Google I/O last year.
As CNET’s Scott Stein has noted, smart glasses “aim to be what you want to wear, ideally every day and all day long. They could well become constant companions like your earbuds, smartwatch, fitness band and wellness ring, and as indispensable as your phone.”
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I’ll probably have to wait a bit longer before making that call for myself. Google hasn’t shared any specifics on a launch date for glasses with Android XR, though it has said that Warby Parker and Gentle Monster will be the first eyeglass brands to carry the AI-powered glasses.
The first time I got my hands on a Vitamix blender, I was in culinary school. While I sincerely believed I had been making some nice soups and purees with my immersion blender or conventional smoothie model, the Vitamix made that all seem like child’s play after one go.
Gone was the minuscule, vegetal particulate matter that otherwise defined my early attempts at a velvety butternut squash soup. A truly emulsified, homogeneous mixture was apparently only available with a professional device, a truth I would acknowledge time and time again, no matter which Vitamix model I encountered in various restaurant kitchens.
Professional devices come with professional price tags, however, and I never enjoyed the exceptional outcome available from a Vitamix in the privacy of my own home. But small kitchen appliances have come a long way in the last decade, and with high-functioning brands like Ninja in the mix, it begs the question: Is a Vitamix worth it?
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What makes a Vitamix blender better?
Vitamix blenders have high-powered motors, but other brands offer similar pop for less money.
Vitamix
One of the primary attributes that sets Vitamix apart from many other blenders is its high-speed motor. If you’ve also had the privilege of ever using one, you will know well that the speed of its highest setting puts most other blenders squarely in the rearview mirror. Its power feels like something that could reasonably be put to use for supersonic travel.
Unlike a food processor and some standard blenders, which contain sharp blades that vivisect their contents into smaller and smaller bits, a Vitamix also relies on stainless steel, dull-edged blades that basically pulverize your food when combined with its ultra-rapid rotation and the gravitational pull of the vortex it creates. This is what creates its unparalleled smoothness, since nothing inside the jug is actually getting chopped to bits.
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Vitamix vs. Ninja Twisti
The Ninja Twisti next to a full-sized blender with 64-ounce blending jar.
David Watsky/CNET
In our most recent lineup of the best blenders, the Ninja Twisti model was neck-and-neck with the entry-level Vitamix Explorian for top honors. Here’s a side-by-side look at how they compare in terms of features, power and price.
Price
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$370
$140
Power
1400 watts
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1600 watts
Blades
Laser-cut, stainless steel
Hybrid-edge stainless steel
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Jug
48-oz, BPA-free plastic
34-oz, BPA-free plastic
Settings
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10 variable speeds plus pulse
5 speeds plus additional pre-set functions
Dishwasher safe
Yes
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Yes
Self-cleaning
Yes
Not mentioned
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Weight
10.5 lbs
7.2 lbs
Warranty
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5-year full
1-year limited
One thing that stands out here is that, while the Ninja model has more available power, its lighter base may make blending less stable at top speed, especially with harder items such as nuts. The jug is smaller, which is fine for smoothies, but may make blending soups more cumbersome, assinceyou’ll likely need to do it in several batches. The warranty also pales in comparison to Vitamix. Does that warranty justify the Vitamix price, though, at nearly 2.5 times what you can pay to take home the Ninja?
Is a Vitamix worth it? Experts weigh in
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Vitamix uses heavier, high-grade plastic that gives it a premium feel.
David Watsky/CNET
I asked several chefs and kitchen experts to share their thoughts on whether a Vitamix is worth it. Similar to the results of the same experience with Le Creuset — the (expensive) standard-bearer for Dutch ovens — brand loyalty is real, though everyone I queried brought up valid considerations about functionality, longevity, warranty, origin and whether or not you’re going to actually use the thing often enough to justify it.
First, “ask yourself, ‘how often do I use a blender?’” suggests Joanne Gallagher, co-founder and recipe developer at Inspired Taste. “Consider what you actually cook in a week. If a blender lives on your counter and gets consistent use, the investment is worth it,” she says. “If you make a smoothie every day, love to make your own nut butter, or blend hot soups straight from the pot, a Vitamix could be your best friend.”
Perhaps you believe you would do all of this more regularly if only you had a world-class appliance that inspired you to do so. “I end up cooking and trying new things the more confident I feel in the kitchen,” Gallagher says, and the right appliance can help. “When you know you’ll get the perfect tomato soup, for example, you’re likely to branch out and try new recipes and cooking methods,” she says. There is merit in that thinking, of course, but it’s a potentially expensive gamble if you don’t those sorts of things on a regular basis already.
Vitamix blenders start at around $300 and go up — way up — from there.
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Vitamix
As for the quality of output, “in the past, I struggled with cheap blenders that left smoothies chunky and couldn’t handle hard spices like cinnamon when making homemade mole sauce,” says Jessica Randhawa, founder and head chef at The Forked Spoon. “I now own two Vitamix blenders, one in each of my test kitchens,” she says. “One is an entry-level model, which is an amazing blender and does everything a blender should do perfectly every time.
Vitamix controls aren’t overly complicated, something we appreciate.
David Watsky/CNET
The other is one of Vitamix’s newer, top-of-the-line models with food processor attachments, which allowed me to get rid of my old food processor in that kitchen.” The latter point here is a worthwhile consideration. If a Vitamix can do the work of two appliances, the price tag starts to feel a little less like a reach.
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Not every chef believes that it is worth it if you’re not really using it all the time. “For most home cooks, I don’t think a Vitamix is truly worth the price,” says Rena Awada, head chef and owner of Healthy Fitness Meals. “Unless you’re making soups, nut butters, etc., daily, or running a small food business, the speed and smoothness it offers rarely justify the cost.”
Chef Molly Pisula of Vanilla Bean Cuisine offers up a workaround. “The price point is high, but refurbished blenders are available, and even sold directly on the Vitamix website,” she says. (“Reconditioned” in Vitamix-speak.) “And Amazon often runs a great Black Friday sale on Vitamix blenders.”
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If you do take the gamble on the cost of a new model, though, Randhawa points out some serious upside: “I love that Vitamix is made in the USA,” she says, “and comes with a warranty better than most cars.”
My own Vitamix alternative experiment: Chefman Obliterator
This $75 blender can match a Vitamix. How well it holds up over time is another question.
Pamela Vachon/CNET
I recently came into possession of a Chefman Obliterator, which has specs very similar to the Vitamix Explorian model, including a self-cleaning mode and speed dial that goes up to 5. (Each speed setting is subdivided by 5 hashmarks, making for effectively 25 speed settings.) Its price is listed at $75 on Amazon, putting it squarely in the budget blender camp. Despite not wanting to give up the moral of the story too soon, without taking you through my process: Run, don’t walk to pick up this blender at that price.
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I freely admit that I was initially drawn to the Obliterator on hyperbole alone. “Obliterate” is a serious claim that feels like the blender should also come with a wand and a book of spells. Turns out, those props aren’t even necessary.
Chefman’s $75 blender offers similar power to the Vitamix models we’ve tested, albeit with a less premium build.
Pamel Vachon/CNET
Since butternut squash soup is apparently my personal benchmark for evaluating the success of a given blender, butternut squash soup was made. Into the Obliterator’s generous chamber went the chunky, “country style” pre-puree concoction, and then out came something that could reasonably be called obliterated, but in a good way. It was as smooth and ungranular as that which could have been served at any high-end restaurant, and pretty much obliterated the fantasy that I might someday actually spring for a Vitamix.
A new video from Pratt & Whitney has reignited controversy over the Boeing F-47, which is slated to be the 6th Generation fighter that would eventually replace the F-22 Raptor. Halfway through a short animation focusing on engine progress, an animated fighter jet arrives in flight, its two engines burning brightly as it slashes through a picture-perfect blue skies. Observers quickly identified the image as a possible portrayal of the F-47 itself, powered by Pratt & Whitney’s XA-103 engine, which is now under development.
The F-47 was developed as part of the US Air Force’s Next Generation Air Dominance program, which aimed to create a long-range air supremacy fighter. Boeing received the contract to manufacture the F-47 in 2025, a beast capable of commanding swarms of autonomous drones while also delivering missiles over long distances. The Air Force planned only for a minimum of 185 of these aircraft. Right now, development has moved on to the engineering and manufacturing phases, with the first prototype scheduled to fly in 2028. The first tech demonstrators have been flying in secret since roughly 2020.
Lightweight & Portable Design – Weighing just 151g [9] and C0 certified, this compact drone features full-coverage propeller guards for safer…
Palm Takeoff & Landing [1], Gesture Control [2] – Enjoy easy palm takeoff and landing, plus intuitive gesture controls for hands-free operation and…
Smooth & Reliable Tracking – ActiveTrack [3] keeps your subject in focus, while Apple Watch lets you view live feed, check flight status, or use voice…
Pratt & Whitney’s Next Generation Adaptive Propulsion program was responsible for developing the XA-103 engine. This XA-103 engine is one of those ingenious adaptive-cycle engines that can alter modes to balance thrust and fuel burn dependent on mission needs. The results are amazing; it produces around 10% more thrust than the F-35 while increasing range by roughly 25%. This increased power will assist sustain all of the new sensors, and who knows, perhaps even directed energy weaponry. Meanwhile, the innovative thermal management system keeps the internal systems cool while also reducing the heat signature, which is an important feature in the aircraft’s stealth capabilities, particularly when operating in the Pacific theatre.
The video demonstrates an all-digital approach to engine design. Now, digital twins allow engineers to mimic engine performance, optimize components, and get a head start on testing without having to manufacture every part in person. Pratt & Whitney recently completed both preliminary and comprehensive design assessments. They are currently planning prototype ground tests for the late 2020s, as General Electric competes in the same propulsion contest with its own XA102 concept.
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Notably, the F-47 rendering has characteristics such as a tailless shape to limit radar visibility, blended wing surfaces with less sharp edges, forward canards for control, and a high-placed cockpit for improved pilot awareness. The thrust-vectoring nozzles resemble those used on the F-22, which aid in fast maneuvers at high speeds. Last but not least, a dorsal refueling point indicates that long operations away from bases are a high priority.
Top speed remains about Mach 2, with a combat radius of more than 1,000 nautical miles. Stealth is also impressive, outperforming the F-22 and F-35 combined. The aircraft is plainly meant to first penetrate defensive airspace and coordinate unmanned wingmen before engaging in close-range combat. [Source]
As artificial intelligence becomes integral to global business operations, we must retire the tired ‘AI vs. human jobs’ debate.
The real opportunity lies in augmented intelligence, a human-centric approach at the core of the emerging ‘Agentic Future.’ Rather than ceding control to machines, augmented intelligence positions AI as a force multiplier for human capability.
Kalyan Kumar
Chief Product Officer at HCLSoftware.
Consider a customer service interaction – an AI chatbot retrieves an order status instantly, then seamlessly transfers complex issues to a human agent. The AI handles repetitive queries whilst the human applies creativity, empathy, and ethical judgement.
Given the global push for AI governance and economic optimization, maintaining a ‘human in the loop’ has evolved from best practice to business imperative, essential for ensuring trust, transparency, and reliable outcomes as AI deepens its integration across industries.
AI’s dual role: assistance and autonomy
Augmented intelligence isn’t about surrendering control; it’s about amplification. AI excels at pattern recognition, anomaly detection, and predictive modelling, capabilities that accelerate human decision-making while preserving human accountability.
Take financial analysis. AI can process vast market datasets and surface investment strategies, but the human expert applies contextual judgement, weighs macroeconomic factors, and bears responsibility for the final call. AI informs the decision, it doesn’t own it.
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A big part of augmented intelligence involves ‘autonomous agents’, AI systems capable of independent task execution within human-defined parameters.
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These agents are poised to transform industries from IT operations to urban infrastructure. In traffic management, for instance, AI systems dynamically optimize signal timing to improve vehicle flow. But effectiveness depends on robust governance, clear accountability structures, auditable actions, and continuous human oversight.
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Building trust through fairness, transparency, and ethics
For augmented intelligence to deliver on its promise, users must trust and understand it. Unlike the ‘black box’ systems of earlier AI generations, augmented intelligence emphasizes understanding, allowing stakeholders to examine how conclusions are reached. However, three challenges demand attention:
1. Addressing algorithmic bias
AI systems inherit the biases embedded in their training data, risking the perpetuation of historical inequities. MIT researchers have developed techniques to identify and neutralize specific data points that introduce bias or degrade performance, a critical safeguard for fair outcomes.
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2. Embedding ethics from the start
Ethical AI requires more transparency and responsibility. It demands governance frameworks built into development from day one, prioritizing:
– Compliance with evolving regulatory requirements
This necessitates collaboration amongst enterprises, policymakers, and technologists.
3. Bridging the skills gap
Augmented intelligence succeeds only when workforces evolve alongside the technology. Strategic training programs must ensure that:
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– Domain experts can interpret AI outputs without needing technical expertise
– Organizations cultivate cultures of responsible AI adoption
– AI enhances roles rather than eliminates them
The World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs Report 2025 projects that AI will generate more positions than it displaces, provided companies invest in reskilling.
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The path forward
Augmented intelligence represents more than incremental technological progress; it offers a new model for human advancement. To capture its full potential, organizations must move beyond tool adoption to build genuine human-AI collaboration, guided by three principles:
Transparency and Control: AI should help people, not control them. When AI shows its decisions, people trust it more and use it
Ethical Foundation: Governance must ensure fairness, safety, and accountability from inception.
Purposeful Implementation: Deploy AI for measurable business outcomes, not novelty, with clear objectives and success metrics.
A new equation: Humans plus AI
The future belongs not to AI or humans alone, but to their collaboration – AI’s processing speed and scale, paired with human intuition, creativity, and moral reasoning.
Realizing this future requires intent. Companies must invest not only in AI tools but in responsible deployment frameworks, collaborative workflows, and governance structures. The result will be technology that genuinely serves human flourishing, driving innovation while upholding fairness and ethical standards.
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By keeping humans central to AI’s evolution, we can unlock transformative solutions, tackle complex challenges, and ensure that AI remains our instrument, not our master.
This article was produced as part of TechRadarPro’s Expert Insights channel where we feature the best and brightest minds in the technology industry today. The views expressed here are those of the author and are not necessarily those of TechRadarPro or Future plc. If you are interested in contributing find out more here: https://www.techradar.com/news/submit-your-story-to-techradar-pro
[Saturn moon] Titan has strangely few impact craters, Hyperion is tiny and misshapen, and Iapetus has a tilted orbit. What’s more, planets tend to wobble along their rotational axes as they spin, like an off-kilter spinning top in the moments before it topples over. Formally called precession, scientists have long thought that Saturn’s wobble rate should match Neptune’s because they’re probably gravitationally linked. However, data from NASA’s Cassini spacecraft, which studied the ringed planet from 2004 to 2017, revealed that Saturn’s precession rate is slightly speedier than Neptune’s.
In 2022, some researchers suggested that the destruction of a hypothetical moon, called Chrysalis, around 160 million years ago may have knocked Saturn out of sync and formed the pieces that became the planet’s rings. But this work implied that Chrysalis probably would’ve crashed into Titan, posing a major problem, study co-author Matija Äuk, an astronomer at the SETI Institute, tells New Scientist‘s Leah Crane. In that case, Chrysalis’ debris couldn’t have become the rings, he says.
So, Äuk and his colleagues used computer simulations to investigate what would happen if Chrysalis did smack into Titan. If that happened around 400 million years ago, they found, the crash would’ve wiped away Titan’s craters and made its orbit more elliptical. The altered path may have slowly pushed the trajectories of other moons, which then scraped against one another and left chunks of ice and rock that now make up Saturn’s rings. The timing seems to align with the rings’ estimated age of roughly 100 million years. Additionally, one piece of kicked-up debris may have formed the weird moon Hyperion, which may have subsequently tilted the orbit of the moon Iapetus, according to the analysis. The scenario could also resolve Saturn’s unexpected wobble, which is currently “a little bit too fast,” Äuk tells Jacopo Prisco at CNN. The study has been accepted for publication in the Planetary Science Journal, and is already available on the preprint server arXiv.
David Luan led the team responsible for Amazon’s Nova Act agentic technology. (Amazon Photo)
David Luan, who led Amazon’s San Francisco-based AGI Lab and oversaw one of its most important agentic AI initiatives, is leaving less than two years after joining the tech giant through an acqui-hire deal involving him and other leaders from AI startup Adept.
Luan announced his exit Tuesday in a LinkedIn post, saying he will leave at the end of the week “to cook up something new.”
“There’s incredible work to be done at Amazon and opportunities for me to take on more areas. But with AGI so close, I decided to spend 100% of my time on teaching AI systems brand new capabilities,” Luan wrote, adding later, “I have a bet for what’s next.”
With his departure, four of the five Adept co-founders who joined Amazon as part of the high-profile 2024 arrangement have left the company, a review of LinkedIn profiles shows.
Peter DeSantis, a 27-year Amazon veteran and senior vice president who oversees the company’s custom chips and quantum computing efforts, late last year took over the broader organization that includes the AGI team, which is responsible for Amazon’s Nova Act AI agent technologies. Luan wrote that the team “will be in great hands” with DeSantis.
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Adept co-founder Kelsey Szot remains at the company on the AGI team, and Bryan Silverthorn, a director of applied science who also joined Amazon from Adept, continues to lead agent model training research on the AGI team, his Linkedin profile shows.
Amazon declined to comment beyond Luan’s post.
The arrangement between Amazon and Adept is one of several acqui-hire deals that have drawn scrutiny from the Federal Trade Commission in recent years amid concerns that tech giants are using the structures to absorb AI startups without triggering formal merger reviews.
Under the deal, Amazon hired Luan and other Adept leaders, and licensed the startup’s agent technology and AI models, while Adept continued operating independently with its remaining employees. The FTC reportedly examined the Amazon-Adept deal in 2024.
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At Amazon, Luan served as vice president of Autonomy and led the AGI Lab, which was formally established in December 2024 as a small, focused research group. Its first major release was Nova Act, an AI model and developer toolkit for building agents that can perform tasks autonomously in web browsers, which Amazon unveiled in March 2025.
“We really think agents are the last missing piece on the path to general intelligence,” Luan told GeekWire in an interview ahead of the Nova Act launch.
In his departure post on Tuesday, Luan said Nova Act had been adopted by customers including Hertz, 1Password, and Amazon.com itself, and had reached the top of the REALBench agent research leaderboard. The model became generally available as an AWS service at Amazon’s re:Invent conference in December.
The other Adept co-founders who left Amazon scattered across the industry. Erich Elsen departed after four months and is now a principal research scientist at Databricks. Augustus Odena and Maxwell Nye both left after about a year and are now research scientists at Meta.
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Before founding Adept in 2022, Luan ran research and engineering at OpenAI for three years and led Google’s large language model effort. In his departure post, he described his career as a series of early bets, including incubating the first GPTs at OpenAI, and going all-in on agents at Adept before others.
He said Adept’s technology and people “now drive computer-use efforts at every major lab.”
Amazon has separately invested up to $8 billion in Anthropic and offers third-party AI models alongside its Nova family through AWS, competing against cloud rivals Microsoft, Google, and others.
It’s often said that those with nothing to hide have nothing to fear, but we now live in a world where that attitude has a chance of upending your life. With hackers, identity thieves, rogue nation-states, data-hungry tech companies, and AI agents on the loose, information that would normally be innocuous can become a devastating weapon against you or your loved ones. Moreover, if an attacker steals company data you were responsible for, it could result in massive losses for your employer and the termination of your employment.
You’ve probably heard about some of the usual threats: suspicious emails that could be phishing attempts, pop-ups that claim your device is hacked, and so on. You’ve been told to change your passwords regularly and not to use the same one with multiple accounts. Many corporate workers have had details about these sorts of attacks and security reminders drilled into them through company training.
But cybersecurity is an infinitely deep rabbit hole, and there are many more things you can do to keep your data private and safe as you work. Half of the battle is knowledge. You can’t fight back unless you know what you’re up against. So, from locking down your accounts and devices to practicing good digital hygiene, here are five tips that will leave you better equipped to deal with digital threats, keeping your work private and personal data safe.
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Use passkeys, not passwords, where possible
Ismagilov/Getty Images
Passwords have never been the best way to keep our digital lives secure, but we’ve been stuck with them out of necessity. They force us to choose between convenience and security. Do you use the same password for everything and risk having your entire digital life stolen when a single account is exposed, or do you set unique, complex passwords for each of your accounts and risk losing access when you inevitably forget one? Password managers have stepped in to fill that gap, remembering unique passwords so you don’t have to, but that just makes your password manager an attractive target for hackers.
One of the most basic steps anyone can take to improve their digital privacy and security is to use passkeys instead of passwords. Passkeys store an encrypted “key” on your device. When you sign into an account, you’ll be asked to use the PIN, password, or biometric scan you normally use to unlock the device itself. Instead of remembering a hundred passwords, your computer or phone’s unlock code becomes the only thing you need. This may seem less secure, but because passkeys are tied to your specific device, the website knows you aren’t some hacker on the other side of the world. The service checks your device, and your device confirms that it’s really you.
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You can already use passkeys on many commonly used accounts, including Google, Microsoft, and more. Check in the security sections of each service’s settings to make the switch. You should also pick a passkey manager to store your passkeys. Common options include 1Password, Proton Pass, NordPass, and Google Password Manager.
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Use a password on your phone, not fingerprint or face unlock
DenPhotos/Shutterstock
When setting up the lock screen on your smartphone, you will be presented with a few options. All devices offer a password or PIN, while Android phones offer a pattern lock and often a fingerprint sensor or camera-based face unlock, and iPhones offer the three-dimensional Face ID system. However, due to legal and technical factors, the only options security-conscious users should choose are a password, PIN, or pattern. Although you must take care not to reveal your password, it cannot be forcibly extracted from you.
In the United States, police and other law enforcement officers cannot warrantlessly breach your password. That’s because the Supreme Court has ruled that a password is private knowledge protected by the Fourth Amendment, meaning that you cannot be compelled to divulge it against your will. However, the law currently does not prevent a law enforcement officer from physically forcing you to unlock your phone or other devices by forcibly pressing your thumb to the fingerprint reader or putting you in a headlock to hold your face still while Face ID scans you.
Circuit courts have ruled in opposite directions, with a 9th Circuit judge finding in 2024 that forcing a defendant’s thumb to the phone’s fingerprint reader was no different than forcibly taking his fingerprints during booking. In 2025, the D.C. Circuit ruled the opposite, finding that a January 6th insurrectionist’s rights were violated when the FBI forced him to open his phone with biometrics. Until the Supreme Court weighs in, it’s a gray area. Either way, an individual officer may not know or care what the law says. For more information, see our explainer on why you should never give the police your phone without a warrant.
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Be aware of your surroundings when dealing with sensitive information
Zoran Zeremski/Shutterstock
Many people worried about their digital privacy and security go to great technical lengths to lock down their devices from prying eyes, but neglect to consider threats in the physical world around them. The weak point in all digital security is the human element, and the most effective hackers are often not typing on a supercomputer from some basement. Instead, they’re using what are called social engineering attacks — in other words, chatting you up in an attempt to make you divulge the name of your first pet and the street you grew up on so they can reset your passwords, or asking you for your number so they can see you type your phone’s password.
Some attacks may not involve any interaction, but did you notice that the security camera in your favorite cafe is pointed right toward your laptop as you type in your banking credentials? What about the man seated next to you, whose wandering eyes may have taken note of the same? Of course, one easy solution for some accounts is to use passkeys in tandem with biometric authentication on your phone, eliminating the need to enter passwords. As we discussed above, biometric security can backfire if you’re ever in a tense situation with law enforcement, so it’s up to individuals to determine whether state or non-state actors are likely to present the larger threat to you.
It’s a bit crude, but a good rule of thumb when you’re unsure whether to handle sensitive information in a particular environment is to ask yourself whether you’d look at “not safe for work” content there. If the answer is no, it’s probably a good idea to wait until you’re in a more private setting.
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Always update your devices to get the latest security patches
Max Miller/SlashGear
You should almost always install updates on your phone, laptop, PC, and other devices when prompted. Your devices are doing a lot of work on their own to protect you from threats. Major operating systems like Windows, macOS, Android, or iOS include multiple layers of defense that, in most cases, block the most severe threats without any work on your part. However, because of the complexity of our devices and OSes, there are always hidden vulnerabilities waiting to be discovered. In the worst case scenario, which is known as a zero-day exploit, a threat actor discovers them first and deploys them against defenseless users. In the best case, your OS vendor discovers them first and issues a security patch.
When you don’t update your phone or computer, you could lose a lot more than the five minutes it would have taken to install the latest software. Almost every system update to your devices contains at least a few security fixes, and if your OS vendor knows about those vulnerabilities, so do the bad guys. The sooner you update, the safer you’ll be. There are minor exceptions. In January, a series of bad updates wreaked havoc on Windows PCs, breaking important features and even causing boot cycle issues. Microsoft quickly released an out-of-band patch to rectify those issues, at which point responsible users finally updated. If an update is known to cause problems, you should hold off until they’re fixed.
Keep in mind that devices outside your phone and computer may need updates. Your smart TV, game console, smartwatch, wireless earbuds, and many other devices also receive occasional updates that should be applied as soon as possible.
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Be cautious with Wi-Fi connections
ParinPix/Shutterstock
In “The Lord of the Rings,” the corrupted wizard Saruman uses a scrying orb called a palantir to communicate with the villain Sauron. Gandalf, unaware that his old friend has succumbed to evil, warns him against using the orb, saying, “We do not know who else may be watching.” This is a particularly good metaphor for Wi-Fi, a technology nearly everyone relies on day-to-day. One of the things people aren’t taught about Wi-Fi is that it’s a two-way window. If a network is compromised, a threat actor could see everything you do and steal your most private work and personal data.
Evil twin attacks are among the most common Wi-Fi attacks, and happen most often in public areas like coffee shops, airports, and hotels, where lots of people are connected to the Wi-Fi. An attacker makes a network they control with the same name as the real network. Users may not notice that there are two networks named “Coffee Shop Guest” and connect to the fake one. Another common attack is man-in-the-middle, where an attacker positions themselves between two parties who are communicating, such as a payment vendor and a shopping site. And because Wi-Fi sends data through the air, sniffing attacks — where an attacker uses a specialized sniffing tool to intercept data packets — are also common.
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You can prevent some attacks by encrypting your data, most commonly through a VPN. Because a VPN encrypts your network traffic, a network attacker will only see scrambled data if they breach a Wi-Fi network you’re connected to. However, not all VPNs are created equal, and there are plenty of shady-looking services out there. Be sure to choose one of the best VPN services to ensure that your traffic is properly anonymized.
The system in question was modest by desktop standards: an entry-level Intel processor, two sticks of RAM, and a 2.5-inch SATA SSD running Windows 10. The hardware drew its power through a CX430 450-watt supply – until ScuffedBits swapped it for a custom ATX plug purchased online. The adapter allowed… Read Entire Article Source link
Microsoft Azure Local can now run fully disconnected without needing the cloud
European customers are increasingly demanding sovereign options
CISPE welcomes the changes, Civo warns of US CLOUD Act implications
Microsoft has announced three new updates to the company’s sovereign offerings, including improvements across Azure Local, Microsoft 365 Local and Foundry Local.
The additions come as US-EU trade tensions continue, with Europe pushing for more digitally sovereign options.
European customers are increasingly demanding local infrastructure, protection from potential US CLOUD Act data access and reduced dependency on hyperscalers.
Microsoft offers three new sovereign options for the likes of Europe
Though Microsoft’s Local additions don’t respond to the desire to step away from hyperscalers, they do tackle data and infrastructure sovereignty demands while offering already-familiar experiences for existing customers.
In a blog post, Microsoft Specialized Clouds President and CTO Douglas Phillips explained organizations can now use on-prem infrastructure with Azure’s governance and policy controls, all without cloud connectivity, in the form of the new Azure Local.
“Disconnected operations, management, policy and workload execution stay within the customer-operated environments,” he wrote.
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Previously, Azure Local needed periodic cloud connectivity. Staying offline for too long reduced functionality, but with the latest update, it can now run fully disconnected, making it ideal for highly regulated industries including defence and critical national infrastructure.
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CISPE, Europe’s body representing cloud infrastructure companies, welcomed the changes, promising to test Microsoft’s changes against its upcoming Sovereign Cloud Services Framework to see if they pass.
Microsoft doesn’t even stand out in the world of hyperscalers, with Google offering its own Google Cloud Airgapped solution and AWS selling its equivalent, the European Sovereign Cloud.
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“Our approach helps customers to meet strict sovereign requirements in fully disconnected scenarios without compromising simplicity, while retaining flexibility where connectivity is possible,” Phillips concluded.