Google Workspace gets a slew of new AI features. Here's how they can help your daily workflow
Google Workspace, a cornerstone of many professionals' everyday workflows, has been at the forefront of Google's AI push. The company made the best of its AI offerings available across all Google Workspace commercial plans earlier this year. This release was well received, with Gemini providing business users with more than two billion AI assists every month, according to Google. At Google Cloud Next, the tech giant's annual conference on technology for business applications, Workspace received a slew of AI updates across its most popular apps, including Google Docs, Sheets, Meet, and Chat, to enhance how people do everyday work. The updates even include agentic AI capabilities.
Google reveals new Kubernetes and GKE enhancements for AI innovation
Everyone and their dog is investing in AI, but Google has more reason than most to put serious effort into its offerings. As Google CEO Sundar Pichai said in an internal meeting before last year's holidays: "In 2025, we need to be relentlessly focused on unlocking the benefits of [AI] technology and solve real user problems." To help realize that vision, at the Google Cloud Next 2025 event in Las Vegas, Google announced substantial advancements in its Kubernetes and Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE) offerings. These advances aim to empower platform teams and developers to succeed with AI while leveraging their existing Kubernetes skills. Indeed, Gabe Monroy, Google's VP of Cloud Runtimes, said: "Your Kubernetes skills and investments aren't just relevant; they're your AI superpower."
Samsung's house robot Ballie will have Google Cloud's generative AI built in
Samsung's Ballie might soon be the smartest thing rolling around your living room. The tech giant announced today that it's partnering with Google to bring Google Cloud's generative AI technology to its Ballie AI companion home robot. If you're not familiar, Ballie first rolled out at CES 2020. As it moves, Ballie can manage lights and temperature, interact with smart appliances, send video updates of pets or loved ones, project videos or websites on the wall, play music, answer phone calls, and more. ZDNET's Senior Editor Sabrina Ortiz got an up-close look at Ballie last year, calling it "a serious attempt at making a robot assistant without being overly ambitious."
The best drone for 2025
Drones have become an important tool in a creator's bag of tricks, allowing them to capture aerial footage that elevates their videos. And nowadays, they've become more accessible as video quality and features have dramatically improved while prices have dropped. Recent budget-friendly models include DJI's Neo and Flip drones, along with the HoverAir X1 Pro lineup, all under 500. If you've got more to spend, the options are similarly plentiful with drones like the DJI Mini 4 Pro and HoverAir X1 Pro Max. And for the price of a good mirrorless camera, you can get DJI's Mavic 3 Pro that offers awesome image quality, range and other features.
Revealed: Big tech's new datacentres will take water from the world's driest areas
Amazon, Microsoft and Google are operating datacentres that use vast amounts of water in some of the world's driest areas and are building many more, an investigation by SourceMaterial and the Guardian has found. With Donald Trump pledging to support them, the three technology giants are planning hundreds of datacentres in the US and across the globe, with a potentially huge impact on populations already living with water scarcity. "The question of water is going to become crucial," said Lorena Jaume-Palasí, founder of the Ethical Tech Society. "Resilience from a resource perspective is going to be very difficult for those communities." Efforts by Amazon, the world's largest online retailer, to mitigate its water use have sparked opposition from inside the company, SourceMaterial's investigation found, with one of its own sustainability experts warning that its plans are "not ethical".
Titanic's Scottish scapegoat is CLEARED after 113 years: 3D scans confirm First Officer William Murdoch did NOT abandon his post as the ship sank
It has been 113 years since the Titanic sank beneath the waves, claiming the lives of more than 1,500 passengers and crew. But new evidence has finally cleared the tragedy's Scottish scapegoat: First Officer William Murdoch. For years, Officer Murdoch has been accused of taking bribes, abandoning his post, and was even depicted shooting a passenger in the James Cameron movie. Now, more than a century later, 3D scans show that Officer Murdoch did not flee his position, but died while helping passengers escape until the very end. Deep sea scanning company Magellan has snapped 715,000 photos of the Titanic wreck 12,500 feet beneath the Atlantic.
Apple iPad Air M3 review: The smallest of upgrades
Apple's new iPad Air is here, but you wouldn't know it just by looking at it. For this version, Apple decided to leave the tablet unchanged on the outside, save for the new (optional) Magic Keyboard. Inside, however, the Air has Apple's M3 chip, which means it supports Apple Intelligence, the company's AI assistant. Once again, the iPad Air comes in two sizes, one with an 11-inch display, and the other with a 13-inch display. For my Apple iPad Air (M3) review, I tested the 13-inch version.
Humanoid robot breakdances its way into history
Boston Dynamics is at it again, wowing us with some seriously cool robotic moves. Their latest video of Atlas, their bipedal robot, has blown up online with its mind-blowing human-like movements, including breakdancing. These impressive moves are the result of a collaboration between Boston Dynamics and the Robotics and AI Institute. Get security alerts & expert tech tips – sign up for Kurt's'The CyberGuy Report' now. Breakdancing, including the famous "coffee grinder" move, is just one of the many impressive feats Atlas can perform.
Can A.I. Writing Be More Than a Gimmick?
The new essay collection "Searches: Selfhood in the Digital Age," by Vauhini Vara, opens with a transcript. "If I paste some writing here, can we talk about it?" Her interlocutor, the large language model ChatGPT, responds, "Of course!" The chatbot asks what specific themes it should focus on. "Nothing in particular," Vara replies.
"A Minecraft Movie" Is a Tale of Two Cinematic Universes
I've never played Minecraft in my life--but then I'm not a Christian, either, and have always delighted in the distinctly Mormon cinematic universe of Jared Hess, the director of "A Minecraft Movie." He's best known for "Napoleon Dynamite," from 2004, which evokes its spiritual milieu only implicitly, by the absence of secular pop culture and of teen-age ribaldry. He followed it with "Nacho Libre," starring Jack Black as a friar who enters the wrestling ring to save a convent, and, in 2009, with "Gentlemen Broncos," a celestial gross-out vision of an adolescent gospel. His satire "Don Verdean," from 2015, is explicitly set in church communities and involves relic smuggling in Israel; his 2016 comedy, "Masterminds," is a heist film that's centered on grace and holy innocence. With "A Minecraft Movie," I was impatient to see what Hess would do with another world of extreme fantasy, akin to that of "Gentlemen Broncos." The short answer is, too much and not nearly enough; the I.P. is the boss, the characters are its minions, and Hess--constrained both by a script that he didn't write and by the demands of complex C.G.I.--struggles to live up to his own œuvre, which is among the most substantially loopy (or loopily substantial) in modern cinema.