Goto

Collaborating Authors

 Country


Chinese firm unveils 'transformer' style manned robot

Al Jazeera

Chinese firm unveils'transformer' style manned robot NewsFeed Chinese firm unveils'transformer' style manned robot Unitree Robotics has released footage of its CEO piloting the GD01, a 2.7-metre transformable mecha that smashes through walls with its mechanical arms. The machine is priced from $650,000. Starmer at risk because he pushed Labour to be'new Conservative Party' Trump skirts question on US'red lines' for Iran ceasefire How one Palestinian teen's life changed forever after Israeli gunfire


Lenovo's 2-pound ThinkPad is the first real test for AMD's next laptop chip

PCWorld

Lenovo's latest ThinkPad X13 Gen 7 helps launch the AMD Ryzen AI 400, a chip we haven't seen anything of since its January launch. The laptop has also earned itself a top score from iFixit for its accessible, replaceable components.


The Unitree GD01 Is a Giant Mecha Robot You Can Actually Buy

WIRED

If You Have $650,000 and Don't Buy This Giant Mecha Robot You're a Fool China's Unitree, famous for making low-cost dancing robots, will now sell you a giant, wall-smashing mecha. Unitree is a Chinese company known for making adorable, relatively affordable robots that dance and shuffle and such. Last night, it revealed its latest creation, which is something of a departure: a giant, walking, crawling, transforming, wall-smashing "mecha" called the GD01. An introductory video for the GD01--set to a thundering rock guitar soundtrack--shows the company's founder and CEO, Xingxing Wang, holding hands with the robot before climbing into its prodigious, open-air belly. A disclaimer added to Unitree's social media post reads: "Please everyone be sure to use the robot in a Friendly and Safe manner."


Sam Altman says Elon Musk wanted 90 percent of OpenAI in high-stakes trial

Al Jazeera

In a United States court, OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman has rejected claims from fellow tech mogul Elon Musk that he betrayed the artificial intelligence company's original vision. Tuesday marked the start of Altman's testimony in a contentious trial unfolding in Oakland, California, between some of tech's richest and most powerful titans. He alleged that OpenAI's leader persuaded him to invest $38bn, based on a goal of improving humanity, only to see the company pivot to a for-profit venture in 2019. On the witness stand on Tuesday, Altman instead framed Musk as a competitor obsessed with exercising control over OpenAI. "It does not fit with my conception of the words'stealing a charity' to look at what has actually happened here," Altman told the court.


A decade on, Trump will return to a stronger and more assertive China

BBC News

When China's leader Xi Jinping hosts his American counterpart in Beijing this week, Donald Trump will be reminded of his last visit in 2017 - he was wooed hard, complete with dinner inside the Forbidden City, an honour no US president before him had received. This week's reception promises to be just as grand, including a stop inside Zhongnanhai, the rarefied compound where China's top leadership lives and works. The agenda too will be just as thorny, with Iran being a new source of tension, alongside trade, technology and Taiwan. But a lot has changed as Trump returns to a stronger and far more assertive China. Now well into an unprecedented third term, an ambitious Xi has been pushing forward with plans for new productive forces with heavy investments in renewable energy, robotics and artificial intelligence.


The unassuming apps all cheaters use to hide their affairs: Where to look on your partner's phone to see exactly what they are up to... and the subtle red flags to never ignore

Daily Mail - Science & tech

Married doctor's affair with glamorous younger woman explodes into Fatal Attraction-style court war... X-rated photo claims, leaked recordings and a sinister threat: 'I'll never stop' NBA rocked as Grizzlies star Brandon Clarke dies suddenly at 29... a month after being arrested on drug charges The unassuming apps all cheaters use to hide their affairs: Where to look on your partner's phone to see exactly what they are up to... and the subtle red flags to never ignore I've treated so many cocaine users. This is the one sign that makes it so obvious you have a problem, how it can kill you in a night... and the embarrassing sexual side effect you may not have heard of: DR PHILIPPA KAYE Explosive Supreme Court LEAK reveals stinging whispers about'belligerent' justice read the wild rants troubling both sides of the aisle Surge in cancer patients taking 20 cent'wonder drug' after Mel Gibson claims that friends beat incurable disease thanks to drug The'marry me' sex move that'll make even the most commitment-phobic of men beg to see you again... and it worked for THREE of my friends Trump's chilling'treason' note revealed as he hunts down Iran war leakers... and Israel bombshell sparks fury Hollywood's $350k matchmaker exposes the secret love lives of the rich and famous: Diva demands, fake names, NDAs... and how to know if your relationship is doomed Secret trove of injury photos that blow apart married tech mogul's family-man image revealed in explosive lawsuit: Bruises, beatings and forced sex acts he allegedly inflicted on girlfriend Furious argument explodes on CNN after panelist flagged Kevin O'Leary's old age during foul-mouthed fight about politics He knew Elizabeth Taylor's secrets. Johnny Depp came to him for answers. But Hollywood's greatest confidante buried a betrayal that was too dangerous to expose The unassuming apps all cheaters use to hide their affairs: Where to look on your partner's phone to see exactly what they are up to... and the subtle red flags to never ignore The same apps millions use to share music, split bills and track workouts are now being quietly repurposed by cheaters to hide secret relationships in plain sight. Experts warn modern affairs are increasingly unfolding inside ordinary platforms that appear so harmless that most partners would never think twice about them.


I was duped by an AI customer service bot and I hate it

PCWorld

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. AI customer service bots are increasingly common, but many don't disclose they're AI. "Hey, it's Theo," said the friendly text message from the restaurant I'd just booked on Resy. Any dietary restrictions or allergies for the kitchen, and are we celebrating anything special this visit?" What a nice text, I naively thought, as I gamely replied we were coming in for Mother's Day.


Sam Altman defends OpenAI in courtroom showdown with Elon Musk

The Guardian

Sam Altman is questioned by OpenAI's attorney, Bill Savitt, before Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers, a US district judge, at a federal courthouse in Oakland, California, on 12 May 2026 in a courtroom sketch. Sam Altman is questioned by OpenAI's attorney, Bill Savitt, before Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers, a US district judge, at a federal courthouse in Oakland, California, on 12 May 2026 in a courtroom sketch. The OpenAI CEO, Sam Altman, took the stand on Tuesday to defend himself and his company against a lawsuit by Elon Musk . Altman is set to be one of the final witnesses in the trial, which has pitted two of the tech industry's most powerful men against each other in a dramatic courtroom showdown. Musk has accused Altman and OpenAI of breaking the AI firm's founding agreement by restructuring it into a for-profit enterprise, alleging that Altman essentially swindled him into co-founding the company and providing tens of millions in financial backing.


MAHA Keeps Being Weird as Hell About Fertility

WIRED

RFK Jr. and Mehmet Oz's comments about teen sperm count and "underbabied" Americans at a recent women's health event underscore the White House's pronatalist agenda. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., secretary of Health and Human Services, and President Donald Trump discuss workplace IVF benefits on October 16, 2025, in Washington, DC. The home page for Moms.gov, the Trump administration's recently launched website for "new and expecting mothers," is a trad wife's dream. Featuring soft pastel graphics and a photo of a young, white, blond woman in a field clutching her pregnant belly, the website offers resources for women of reproductive age such as anti-abortion "pregnancy centers," as well as a CDC website listing potential workplace hazards for expecting mothers without noting accompanying legal protections for pregnant women. If you were conspiratorially minded, you might conclude from the website alone that the Trump administration is champing at the bit for young (white and blond) women to have as many (white and blond) babies as possible.


Florida students boo graduation speaker who called AI 'next Industrial Revolution'

The Guardian

Florida students boo graduation speaker who called AI'next Industrial Revolution' Real estate executive got an unexpected earful when she spoke of'living in a time of profound change' Though college graduations usually consist of a speaker giving advice to students, one recent ceremony featured students giving the speaker their opinions - loudly. The University of Central Florida's 2026 graduating class booed as a real estate development executive spoke about how "the rise of artificial intelligence is the next Industrial Revolution" and about "living in a time of profound change". US university's commencement speaker reveals he will pay off students' final-year loans The crowd of students was so loud that Gloria Caulfield paused, turned away from the podium and threw her hands up in the air. As the crowd calmed down, Caulfield proceeded. "Only a few years ago, AI was not a factor in our lives."