Novice - Tehnologija (angleščina)

Our Favorite Travel and Outdoor Gear Is on Sale at Huckberry
12. November 2025 (21:43)
Huckberry’s eclectic curation of travel clothing, coffee gear, and backpacks are all on sale right now. (Wired)
Microsoft’s Surface Laptop Is Marked Down by $350
12. November 2025 (21:07)
Scoop this excellent Windows laptop for a fraction of its usual price. (Wired)
Anthropic’s Claude Takes Control of a Robot Dog
12. November 2025 (20:00)
Anthropic believes AI models will increasingly reach into the physical world. To understand where things are headed, it asked Claude to program a quadruped. (Wired)
From Brazil to Belfast - pupils hold their own COP30 event
12. November 2025 (18:50)
The COP30 climate simulation negotiation brought pupils from 28 schools to Belfast Castle. (BBC News)
£220 ‘for a cut-up sock' - Apple's new iPhone Pocket ridiculed online
12. November 2025 (18:47)
Many took aim at the high price online, while others made fun of its striking likeness to a piece of footwear. (BBC News)
The AI Boom Is Fueling a Need for Speed in Chip Networking
12. November 2025 (18:00)
Next-gen networking tech, sometimes powered by light instead of electricity, is emerging as a critical piece of AI infrastructure. (Wired)
Waymo’s Robotaxis Can Now Use the Highway, Speeding Up Longer Trips
12. November 2025 (17:00)
The Alphabet company’s self-driving cars are opening up shop in more and more cities. Now—finally—they’re taking to the freeway. (Wired)
Hate Meta? Even Realities Is Making the Smart Glasses You Want
12. November 2025 (16:15)
The company announced the Even G2 smart glasses, sporting a bigger display in a lighter frame, alongside the R1 smart ring, which can control the display on the lenses. (Wired)
Danish man given suspended sentence for sharing nude film scenes on Reddit
12. November 2025 (16:13)
Police said the man shared 347 clips of naked actors on the social media site, which were viewed 4.2 million times. (BBC News)
The Physics of the Northern Lights
12. November 2025 (14:38)
The aurora borealis is usually seen near the Arctic, but solar winds and magnetic turbulence are sparking some of the best light shows in centuries throughout the US. (Wired)