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  • A web of X profiles is amplifying AI nudify services, endangering victims

    A web of X profiles is amplifying AI nudify services, endangering victims

    A web of X profiles is pushing AI nudify applications into more timelines, giving abuse‑prone tools another route to users while victims scramble to limit the damage.

    According to a Wall Street Journal report, Graphika senior researcher Matthew Patane said some nudify services are advertised through coordinated social accounts that recycle similar phrasing. One network comprised about 45,000 X accounts, with posts relying on indirect language and blurred visuals to slip past moderation.

    The discovery adds fresh pressure on X and on sites such as Undress AI, a Belize‑based service that markets explicit‑image tools and teases paid video creation. Undress AI and X did not respond to requests for comment.

    Promotions for these apps are extremely easy to locate. Using random keywords, we uncovered promotional posts like the example below:

    (example post placeholder)

    How the posts spread

    The accounts Patane identified avoided blunt descriptions. They employed casual wording and softened references that could steer users toward nudify tools without spelling out every feature.

    Undress AI is also expanding beyond static pictures. Its website advertises a $59 video‑creation option and lets users choose sexualised poses, including undressing and riding. It also offers credits when users recruit friends.

    This dual approach gives the service two growth vectors. Coded posts can direct attention to the site, while referral credits give users an intrinsic incentive to bring more people in.

    Who suffers when the tools spread

    Victims often find themselves chasing damage after an image has already circulated. Reported cases describe fabricated nude images spreading via Snapchat, school hallways, and peer networks, with families trying to erase them while urging schools or police to intervene.

    One student targeted by a group of boys in Iowa said images generated with Undress AI were passed around among classmates, prompting her to switch to online classes.

    The X network magnifies that risk. A single uploaded photo can quickly become a form of social punishment, especially when promotion funnels more users toward tools built for sexualised image manipulation.

    What platforms need to prove now

    X broadly bans activity intended to mislead others, but coordinated nudify promotion creates a tougher enforcement challenge. The posts can dodge obvious keywords while still nudging users toward tools designed for explicit manipulation.

    The next metric to watch is whether platforms can intercept these campaigns before they scale. Users should lock down personal images where possible, report impersonation swiftly, and preserve evidence before posts disappear.

  • Roku, after 20 years of independence, will be bought by Fox for $22 billion

    Roku, after 20 years of independence, will be bought by Fox for $22 billion

    Fox is making its boldest streaming play yet, announcing a deal to acquire Roku for roughly $22 billion. The transaction will combine one of the biggest line‑ups of sports, news and entertainment content with one of the world’s most popular streaming platforms.

    Under the terms, Fox will pay Roku shareholders a mixture of cash and stock, valuing the business at $160 per share. The acquisition is slated to close in the first half of 2027, subject to regulatory clearance and customary closing conditions.

    Why own a show when you own the screen?

    The purchase marks a major pivot for Fox, which has been rebuilding around live programming and ad‑supported streaming ever since it sold much of its entertainment assets to Disney. Its biggest streaming triumph so far has been Tubi, the free‑to‑watch service it bought in 2020 for $440 million, now serving over 100 million monthly users. Adding Roku gives Fox direct entry to a connected‑TV ecosystem that reaches more than 100 million streaming households worldwide, including Roku’s operating system, devices, ad business, viewer‑data capabilities and The Roku Channel.

    Fox has said Roku will stay an open platform, meaning rival services and content partners won’t be shut out. The company also confirmed that Roku founder and CEO Anthony Wood will stay involved after the deal closes and will join Fox’s board.

    One of streaming’s last independents is cashing in

    The acquisition comes at a pivotal moment for Roku. After years of prioritising growth over profit while battling giants such as Amazon, Google, Samsung and Apple, Roku recently reported its first full year of profit, posting a net income of $88.4 million on $4.74 billion of revenue in 2025. That turnaround likely made it a more attractive target. Roku helped shape the streaming‑device category long before smart TVs became ubiquitous, yet it remained independent while much of the media‑tech landscape consolidated.

    Fox believes the combination will markedly boost its standing in the TV market, estimating the merged entity would become the third‑largest TV player in the United States by viewership share. The financial logic is clear: Fox expects hundreds of millions of dollars in annual cost savings, plus new advertising and revenue opportunities from pairing Roku’s platform reach with Fox’s content library. For viewers, nothing should change immediately, but behind the scenes one of streaming’s longest‑running independent successes is gearing up for a new chapter— and Fox is betting billions that the future of television will be built as much on distribution as on content.

  • World’s Leading Battery Producer Slows Down Solid‑State EV Hype

    World’s Leading Battery Producer Slows Down Solid‑State EV Hype

    Solid‑state batteries have been touted as the breakthrough that will revolutionise electric vehicles, offering greater energy density, quicker charging and enhanced safety compared with the lithium‑ion cells that power most cars today. Yet the chairman of the planet’s biggest battery manufacturer warns buyers not to get their hopes up.

    CATL chairman Dr. Robin Zeng told Caijing Magazine (via CarNewsChina) that large‑scale commercial roll‑out of solid‑state batteries is unlikely before 2030. The firm has set a benchmark of one million vehicles to make mass production viable – a target that remains out of reach for the near future. When solid‑state cells finally hit the market, Zeng said they will initially appear only in premium models priced above 250,000 yuan (about $37,000).

    The manufacturing hurdle

    The key difficulty lies at the solid‑state interface inside the cell. CATL presently employs warm isostatic pressing at 6,000 atmospheres to bond components, but materials with differing compaction densities tend to develop structural misalignments under such pressure. These irregularities increase internal resistance and speed up cell degradation, rendering high‑volume production impractical for now. Zeng placed all‑solid‑state chemistry at level four on the nine‑point Technology Readiness Level (TRL), indicating the technology is still in laboratory validation and prototype engineering stages.

    What CATL is doing meanwhile

    While research on solid‑state technology continues, CATL is leaning on conventional liquid‑electrolyte batteries to satisfy current demand. The company is also investigating sodium‑ion chemistry as an alternative platform to lessen reliance on lithium supplies.

    The cautionary note from CATL’s chairman carries weight given the company’s size and its sway over global battery supply chains. Although other manufacturers and research groups keep making bold claims about solid‑state breakthroughs, the firm that would actually have to mass‑produce them is drawing a careful line.

  • Contactless payments are changing the allure of a classic American viewpoint

    Contactless payments are changing the allure of a classic American viewpoint

    We’re all familiar with those hefty, coin‑operated binoculars that sit on virtually every scenic overlook across the United States, from the Empire State Building to the Grand Canyon. Soon, they’ll start accepting tap‑to‑pay transactions. This is convenient – you won’t have to lug a quarter around, and paying with a smartphone is far easier – but the quarter was part of the experience.

    Why upgrade the binoculars now? Tower Optical, the maker of nearly 2,000 of these cast‑iron viewers throughout the U.S. and Canada since 1933, has uncovered a bittersweet insight. Co‑owner Adam Rice explains that people still want to use the binoculars, but they’ve stopped carrying quarters. The rise of contactless and digital payments is to blame (via WSJ).

    A new ownership group is quietly swapping out the old coin slots and timers for battery‑powered tap‑to‑pay terminals. The only outward sign of the change is a small antenna perched on top of the binoculars. The first retrofitted units go live this month, including the iconic viewers atop Rockefeller Center.

    Is this a win for tourists, or does it sap the charm? My honest view: it’s the right business move, especially as more people grow accustomed to paying with their phones. Yet it’s also a little sad, because these viewers have survived nearly a century by staying exactly the same – no app, no screen, just you, a coin, and a view. Tap‑to‑pay keeps them from disappearing, which is good, but it also ties them to the very device – the smartphone – that many use the binoculars to briefly escape from. The irony isn’t lost on anyone who has fumbled for change on a mountaintop only to realize they could have simply tapped their phone.

    Tower Optical’s previous owner Greg Rising experimented with augmented‑reality overlays that never shipped before his death in 2024, the same year new investors took over. Their new strategy is simpler: don’t reinvent the experience, just fix the payment method, while preserving the nostalgic feel that has defined these viewers for decades.

  • Yet another study finds too many kids are seeing harmful content on social media

    Yet another study finds too many kids are seeing harmful content on social media

    A year after the UK’s Online Safety Act came into force, a new study has found that harmful social media content is still reaching teenagers at nearly the same rate as before the law took effect. Research by the Molly Rose Foundation (via The Guardian) found that a third of all UK teenagers and nearly half of all girls encountered suicide, self-harm, depression, or eating disorder content on social media in the span of just one week.

    What the data shows

    The study surveyed 1,825 children aged 13 to 17 across 21 UK schools in April and May 2026. Here’s what it found:

    • Over a third of children (34%) were exposed to high-risk content in the past week. The figure was 37% before the Online Safety Act came into force in July 2025. The researchers say this change is not statistically significant.
    • Girls were disproportionately affected, with nearly half (47%) encountering harmful content in the past week, compared to 23% of boys.
    • The numbers were worse for vulnerable groups. Exposure reached 57% among children with low wellbeing and 40% among those with special education needs and disabilities.
    • Three-quarters of children who saw harmful content saw it on TikTok, more than three times the rate of the next most common platform, Instagram, at 23%.
    • Algorithmic recommendation feeds drove between 59% and 62% of all harmful content exposure.
    • Among children who saw content encouraging or promoting suicide, one in five encountered it 10 or more times on at least one platform within a single week.
  • Over a third of children (34%) were exposed to high-risk content in the past week. The figure was 37% before the Online Safety Act came into force in July 2025. The researchers say this change is not statistically significant.
  • Girls were disproportionately affected, with nearly half (47%) encountering harmful content in the past week, compared to 23% of boys.
  • The numbers were worse for vulnerable groups. Exposure reached 57% among children with low wellbeing and 40% among those with special education needs and disabilities.
  • Three-quarters of children who saw harmful content saw it on TikTok, more than three times the rate of the next most common platform, Instagram, at 23%.
  • Algorithmic recommendation feeds drove between 59% and 62% of all harmful content exposure.
  • Among children who saw content encouraging or promoting suicide, one in five encountered it 10 or more times on at least one platform within a single week.
  • What the law was supposed to do

    The Online Safety Act’s Protection of Children Codes legally require platforms to prevent children from encountering content that promotes suicide, self-harm, or eating disorders. Violations can result in fines of up to £18 million or 10% of a company’s global revenue.

    Despite those requirements, the foundation says exposure has barely moved. It attributes the failure largely to weak enforcement by Ofcom and calls for stricter controls on algorithmic recommendation systems.

    Ian Russell, father of Molly Russell, who died by suicide in 2017 at age 14 after viewing harmful content online, said the findings were “shocking but sadly unsurprising.” UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer is expected to announce next week whether the government will pursue a social media ban for children under 16. The foundation’s own research, however, suggests that a blanket ban is unlikely to work without also targeting the recommendation algorithms that keep pushing harmful content in front of young users.

  • Mental health distress is on the rise, and remote work is a huge factor behind it: Study

    Mental health distress is on the rise, and remote work is a huge factor behind it: Study

    Working from home has become a normal part of life for many employees since the pandemic, as it offers greater flexibility and control over where work gets done. However, new research suggests that this shift may also be playing a role in rising mental health challenges.

    Researchers writing in the journal Science analyzed data from five large surveys covering more than 580,000 U.S. workers between 2011 and 2024. Their findings suggest that the rise of remote work has significantly increased social isolation and may account for roughly one-third of the increase in mental distress observed since the pandemic.

    The study focused on occupations that can be performed remotely, such as software development and office work, and compared them with jobs that require workers to be physically present.

    Remote workers are spending more time alone

    The impact was even greater among people living alone. These workers were significantly more likely to go through a full day without interacting with another person, and they experienced a much larger increase in mental distress than workers living with family members.

    The findings suggest that many conversations about remote work have focused on flexibility, convenience, and productivity while overlooking a more basic question of what happens when millions of people spend much less time around other people every day?

    The hidden downside of workplace flexibility

    For many adults, work is one of the few places where they regularly interact with people outside their households. Casual conversations, team meetings, lunch breaks, and other everyday interactions may seem unimportant, but they can play a meaningful role in maintaining social connections.

    The researchers are not arguing that companies should bring everyone back to the office full time. Instead, the findings suggest that social connection could become a bigger challenge as remote and hybrid work arrangements become more common.

    As more companies embrace flexible work policies, the study raises an important question about how workers can maintain meaningful social connections when their workplace is no longer a place they regularly visit.

  • All the fresh Apple Wallet features arriving with iOS 27

    All the fresh Apple Wallet features arriving with iOS 27

    Apple has spent the last few years expanding what Wallet can hold, from driver’s licenses now live in as many as 14 states in the US to transit cards for cities like Atlanta, reducing the need to carry physical cards and documents.

    The steady expansion has turned Wallet from a simple payment app into a broader digital hub. While Siri AI and Apple Intelligence stole much of the spotlight at WWDC 2026, Apple Wallet quietly received its most substantial upgrade yet with iOS 27.

    More importantly, iOS 27 feels like the moment those individual additions start coming together as a cohesive platform rather than a collection of separate features living inside the same app.

    There’s a lot of ground to cover, so without further ado, here’s everything new coming to Apple Wallet with iOS 27 later this year.

    **Ditch your physical loyalty cards**

    If you’re tired of carrying a stack of cards you never use because you forgot they exist, Apple Wallet has something for you.

    With iOS 27, you’ll be able to point your iPhone (with the Siri mode in the Camera app) at any physical card (with a barcode), and save it as a digital card in Apple Wallet. You can also add a pass manually from within the Wallet itself.

    Once saved, it shows up as a scannable barcode or QR code in the app, ready to go either from your iPhone or Apple Watch. If you’ve been carrying your gym card or library card around for years out of pure habit, iOS 27 will finally give you a reason to clear out your wallet for good.

    **Digital Passes get a major glow‑up**

    With iOS 26, boarding passes in Apple Wallet got a richer redesign with more visuals and integrated travel information. With iOS 27, Apple is extending that same treatment to a variety of digital cards, including loyalty cards, rewards cards, membership cards, and gift cards.

    Passes will gain vibrant background art, custom branding, and information tiles that surface useful context, such as loyalty point balances, event details, and membership perks, right where you’d expect to find them.

    What’s even more interesting is that Apple is leaning into real‑time updates for these passes, and Disney World is first in line. Later this year, Apple Wallet will automatically surface your Disney World ticket as you approach the park’s gates.

    **Smarter hotel keys that double as a concierge**

    Digital hotel keys aren’t new, but iOS 27 gives them a meaningful upgrade.

    Beyond unlocking your room, the new key experience will surface your entire trip details, updates about the activities you’ve booked, and provide access to other amenities and services, all from the same pass, the digital hotel key, in the Apple Wallet app.

    Basically, the app will turn your room key into a mini concierge service that lives in your phone. The catch, however, is that it’s up to hotels to enable the feature for their digital room keys, so don’t expect it to arrive everywhere on day one.

    **Splitting the bill just got a whole lot easier**

    This might be the most useful addition for anyone who’s ever sat at a restaurant table, doing math on a napkin.

    In iOS 27, Apple Wallet will allow you to scan a receipt using Siri mode in the Camera app, use Apple Intelligence to identify each item, let you assign items to different people (if you’re going Dutch), and calculate everyone’s share, including tax and tip. From there, it lets you send Apple Cash requests, directly from within the app.

    You can use the feature in Apple Wallet, Messages, or straight from the Camera app. It’s U.S. only at launch, which is good news for us, and needs an Apple Intelligence‑compatible iPhone.

    So, if you’ve ever been the designated bill‑splitter for a group of six, this particular feature is going to be a lifesaver.

    **A redesigned Apple Pay checkout**

    Apple Pay is also getting a checkout redesign that fixes a longstanding annoyance, something that I’ve also covered as a separate news story.

    Right now, tapping a card on the payment sheet opens the address settings instead of intuitively switching cards. However, with iOS 27, you should be able to swipe between cards on the same screen.

    The checkout interface will also show useful information like rewards balances, account balances, and pay‑later options, before you commit to one payment option.

    **Topping up cards without leaving the app**

    Later this year, Apple Pay will let you add funds to debit and prepaid cards, the eligible ones, either from within Wallet or during checkout. It’s a small addition, but if you’ve ever had a prepaid card decline at checkout, you’ll get why this is a welcome fix.

    **Tap to Share: a faster way to check out in stores**

    Apple Wallet’s Tap to Pay already lets merchants accept payments using an iPhone, but Tap to Share takes things further. By tapping your iPhone to a participating merchant’s iPhone or supported payment systems, you can securely share details like your shipping address, email, or loyalty information, the kind that usually means standing at the register and saying everything out loud.

    You’ll also be able to watch your final basket update, in real time, as the cashier scans the items, then pay right on your phone. This requires an iPhone 12 or later running iOS 27, though, something to keep in mind.

    **More barcodes, more countries**

    Wallet passes now support four more barcode formats: EAN‑13, Code 39, Codabar, and ITF. These are still used at places with relatively older retail systems, ones that haven’t caught up to QR codes yet.

    **Better Wallet integration in Smart Stacks on Apple Watch**

    On compatible Apple Watch models, watchOS 27 surfaces pinned passes, keys, tickets, and transit cards more proactively, based on the time of day and your location.

    The feature wants to make sure that the right pass, depending on where you are and what you’re doing, is only a wrist‑raise away when you need it.

    **A new app for businesses: Pass Designer**

    On the developer side, Apple introduced a new Mac app currently in beta with macOS 27: Pass Designer. It lets businesses build, customize, and preview the new Enhanced Passes.

  • Roku is reportedly exploring a sale, and its 100 million users are the biggest prize

    Roku is reportedly exploring a sale, and its 100 million users are the biggest prize

    Roku may not stay independent for much longer. According to a Reuters report citing people familiar with the matter, the streaming platform company is exploring strategic alternatives that include a full sale, with at least one U.S. media company already involved in preliminary discussions.

    Roku is reportedly weighing a sale amid growing industry interest

    Reuters reports that Roku has held talks with at least one American media company over a possible combination, though no final decision has been made. The company has also explored alternatives such as a private investment in public equity, better known as a PIPE transaction. Roku has not publicly commented on the reports.

    The speculation sent Roku’s stock soaring more than 20%, reflecting investor optimism that a takeover could unlock additional value. With a market capitalization of roughly $19.4 billion, Roku remains one of the biggest names in connected TV, generating much of its revenue through advertising and subscriptions rather than hardware sales.

    One of Roku’s biggest assets is scale. The platform now reaches more than 100 million streaming households and owns a treasure trove of viewing data, making it an attractive target for media, technology, and advertising companies looking to strengthen their position in the increasingly competitive streaming market.

    This might be less about streaming sticks and more about advertising gold

    The funny thing is that nobody is likely to buy Roku just for its little purple boxes. The real value lies in its advertising platform, user data, and ability to sit between viewers and virtually every major streaming service. In today’s connected TV landscape, that kind of influence is incredibly difficult to build from scratch.

    Whether a deal ultimately materializes remains uncertain, and acquisition talks often fall apart before reaching the finish line. Even so, the reports highlight just how valuable Roku’s position has become. In an era where every media company wants a direct relationship with viewers, owning the front door to millions of living rooms could be worth far more than the hardware sitting beneath the TV.

  • Apple Intelligence 2.0: What the New AI Features Actually Mean

    Apple Intelligence 2.0: What the New AI Features Actually Mean

    “Apple Intelligence 2.0” isn’t Apple’s official name, but it’s a useful shorthand for where the company is going. Apple calls it the next generation of Apple Intelligence, with Siri AI as the most visible piece.

    That’s a risky place to put the spotlight because Siri has baggage. For years, it’s been the assistant people use for timers, weather, and arguments with a glowing orb that somehow heard every word except the important one.

    The ideal version is Siri finding the flight code from an email while the airline hold music slowly removes the will to live.

    That’s the version Apple is now trying to sell: AI that doesn’t live in a separate prompt window, but inside the normal behavior of the iPhone.

    Why Siri still carries the whole thing

    Siri AI is the obvious star because Siri has spent years as Apple’s most public AI problem. The new version is supposed to understand context, see what’s on screen, answer tougher questions, and act across apps. Apple says Siri AI can use personal context to search across messages, emails, photos, and more, while also answering onscreen questions and taking broader systemwide actions.

    That is a huge reset, meant to make Siri look like it didn’t sleep through the entire chatbot boom. The funny thing is that this sounds impressive partly because the baseline has been so low. Apple is finally describing the Siri people thought they were getting years ago.

    That doesn’t make the update fake or unimportant. It makes the stakes stranger. Apple is rebuilding trust in a feature many users have already trained themselves to ignore.

    A better Siri doesn’t need to become a charming digital friend. It needs to stop making simple things feel like a scavenger hunt.

    What the new features are really doing

    The new Apple Intelligence features can look scattered at first. Some live in Siri. Others show up in the camera, text fields, calls, photos, and everyday apps. Taken together, they point at one goal: make the phone feel less fragmented.

    Writing help should appear where people are already typing. Visual search should work through the camera. Call Context should surface the right detail during a call, because modern life still requires that specific punishment.

    Apple specifically says Call Context can surface a confirmation code or reservation number during a business call, including finding an airline confirmation code from Mail.

    Photo tools should make editing feel less like a separate errand. Messages and Mail should get smarter without turning every reply into a corporate memo with better punctuation. The camera should understand more of what it sees without demanding that users learn another AI ritual.

    The best version of Apple Intelligence shouldn’t feel like “using AI.” It should feel like the phone understands the task better and removes some of the manual nonsense around it.

    Much of the AI race has trained people to think of AI as a separate destination, and Apple is trying to make it feel like something already under the glass.

    How Apple ended up here

    Apple Intelligence started in 2024 with a smaller first wave of tools. It brought writing help, notification summaries, photo cleanup, and a nicer Siri shell.

    Those tools were useful, though they were not the full version of the idea Apple was selling. The larger promise was always a more personal Siri that could understand what users were doing and act across apps. That’s the stuff that would make it feel less like a voice interface with nicer lighting.

    Because those more ambitious Siri features weren’t part of the first wave, the first version of Apple Intelligence felt oddly incomplete. This update is Apple trying to close that gap.

    Apple can talk about privacy, polish, and ecosystem control, but useful AI also needs raw model strength. Apparently, that meant letting Google into the machinery.

    Why the boring plumbing decides everything

    That hidden machinery may decide whether Apple Intelligence works at all. Siri AI can only become useful if apps expose enough information and actions for the system to understand.

    That’s where things like App Intents and semantic indexing stop being developer jargon and start becoming the product. Apple says App Intents lets developers connect app content and capabilities to Siri AI features like personal context understanding, app actions, and onscreen awareness.

    Most users will never think about any of this. Nobody buys an iPhone because the app plumbing looks healthy. If Siri can’t find the right thing, act on the right screen, or understand what an app can do, the magic trick collapses back into voice-command theater.

    This is the least glamorous part of Apple Intelligence, and probably the most important. A smarter model can answer better questions, but an assistant that can’t interact with the apps people actually use is still trapped behind glass.

    Where the promise gets messy

    Apple’s careful approach creates its own problems. Siri needs enough personal context to help without making the phone feel like it’s reading over someone’s shoulder with a clipboard. It also needs enough app access to act without becoming unpredictable.

    Then there’s the uneven rollout, which will depend on the device, region, language, and whether apps support the deeper hooks.

    Apple says Siri AI will arrive as a beta later this year for supported devices set to English, will not initially be available in the EU on iOS, iPadOS, and watchOS, and will not be available in China while Apple works through regulatory requirements.

    Privacy is Apple’s advantage here, but it’s also a constraint. Too little access, and Siri remains a polite search box with a voice. Too much access, and the iPhone starts to feel like a personal assistant that has been rifling through the drawers.

    What this means for normal iPhone users

    For normal iPhone users, Apple Intelligence comes down to friction. Someone should be able to ask Siri to find the flight code from an email while they’re on a call, instead of playing clipboard gymnastics across three apps.

    That’s a small example, but small examples are where this kind of AI has to prove itself. The real test is whether Siri can understand the thing happening in front of the user, find the right personal detail, use the right app, and avoid turning the whole process into another chore.

    Apple Intelligence shouldn’t ask users to become prompt engineers. It should make the iPhone feel less like a pile of apps pretending to be one device.

    That’s the real promise of Apple Intelligence 2.0, even if Apple would never call it that. Siri is getting a second chance, but the future of Apple AI may depend less on a shiny chatbot moment than on whether it can finally handle ordinary phone work without making a meal of it.

    After all these years, Siri may finally be getting the job it’s been pretending to have.

  • The Biggest PC hardware trends from Computex 2026

    The Biggest PC hardware trends from Computex 2026

    Every Computex has its headline-grabbing announcements. There’s always a faster processor, a shinier graphics card, or a laptop that’s somehow even thinner than last year’s model. But after spending several days wandering the halls of Computex 2026, talking to engineers, trying products, and occasionally getting lost between exhibition booths, I came away with a very different takeaway. That said, this year’s show wasn’t really about individual products. Rather, it was about the direction the industry is heading. Instead of chasing flashy specifications for the sake of marketing slides, manufacturers finally seem focused on solving real problems.

    The MacBook Neo effect is impossible to ignore

    Whether companies admit it or not, Apple’s MacBook Neo shook up the PC industry by proving that a thin, silent, and premium-looking laptop doesn’t have to come with an eye-watering price tag. Its blend of impressive performance, excellent battery life, and aggressive pricing has clearly forced Windows manufacturers to rethink their priorities.

    Products like the refreshed Dell XPS 13 (2026) and Acer Swift 14 AI are no longer trying to outmuscle bulky gaming notebooks. Instead, they’re focused on delivering premium build quality, all-day battery life, cooler thermals, dedicated NPUs, and hardware-level AI acceleration in sleek, highly portable designs while also pushing to make those experiences more accessible to mainstream buyers rather than luxury-only purchases.

    Perhaps the clearest example of this shift is Intel’s Project Firefly, a design initiative centered around building ultra-lightweight AI PCs that maximize day-to-day efficiency instead of brute-force horsepower. The conversation has evolved from asking how much raw performance manufacturers can cram into a chassis to how much performance users actually need before portability, battery life, near-silent acoustics, and affordability become the bigger selling points. As someone who reviews laptops regularly, I genuinely welcome this change. Raw performance still matters, but carrying a power brick the size of a paperback novel everywhere I go doesn’t.

    AI is finally becoming useful

    If there was one buzzword impossible to escape at Computex, it was AI. Thankfully, this year it felt less like marketing jargon and more like something that can genuinely improve everyday workflows.

    The best example was the NVIDIA RTX Spark platform, driven by the flagship NVIDIA N1X superchip. Built around a 20-core Grace CPU co-developed with MediaTek, this ARM-powered platform is designed to execute demanding AI workloads locally instead of constantly reaching for cloud servers. Watching Adobe Photoshop intelligently generate assets from simple visual instructions using directional arrows, or seeing Premiere Pro perform near-instant scene edit detection and one-click asset rotoscoping, demonstrated what happens when software developers and hardware manufacturers actually work together.

    Companies aren’t just shipping raw NPUs anymore; they’re partnering with application developers to integrate AI directly into creative workflows, productivity tools, and editing software where it can quietly remove repetitive tasks instead of getting in the way. Even discussions around agentic AI workloads reflected that shift. Rather than treating AI as another simple chatbot box, manufacturers increasingly see it as an always-available assistant capable of handling routine work autonomously in the background while users focus on more meaningful tasks.

    ARM is taking the fight straight to x86

    For years, ARM-powered Windows laptops have felt like promising experiments searching for the right audience. Computex 2026 made me feel like that phase might finally be ending. Qualcomm continued pushing its vision forward with the Qualcomm Snapdragon C platform, aggressively targeting affordable AI PCs that combine impressive battery life with dedicated local AI capabilities. At the other end of the spectrum sat NVIDIA RTX Spark, proving that ARM systems can also deliver serious enthusiast-grade creative performance while comfortably handling gaming and AI workloads on the same platform.

    Perhaps the biggest surprise wasn’t just how natural these systems felt during hands-on demos, but how NVIDIA has completely changed the conversation around ARM itself. Rather than positioning it as a low-power alternative to x86, RTX Spark presents ARM as the foundation for a scalable AI ecosystem. Built around a 20-core Grace CPU paired with Blackwell RTX graphics and up to 128GB of unified memory, the same architectural philosophy extends beyond laptops into NVIDIA’s broader Grace Blackwell portfolio, including powerful DGX systems designed for AI development and enterprise workloads. It sends a clear message that efficient ARM designs no longer have to stop at thin-and-light notebooks.

    Technologies like DLSS 4.5 Ray Reconstruction, Microsoft’s Prism compatibility layer, and NVIDIA’s work with developers on anti-cheat support also made gaming feel surprisingly polished during the demos I experienced. Will ARM replace x86 overnight? Almost certainly not. But for the first time, it genuinely feels less like a compromise and more like a platform capable of scaling from ultraportable laptops all the way to AI workstations, making it a far more formidable competitor than ever before.

    Current generation hardware isn’t going anywhere

    One of the most unexpected trends from Computex wasn’t brand-new hardware. It was companies refusing to abandon existing platforms. AMD reaffirmed its commitment to the AM5 desktop socket through at least 2029, giving enthusiasts a much longer, consumer-friendly upgrade path than many expected. To combat rising component costs, the company also expanded its mainstream graphics lineup with the new AMD Radeon RX 9070 GRE, reinforcing the idea that existing architectures still have meaningful room to evolve instead of immediately becoming obsolete.

    That philosophy extended well beyond processors and graphics cards. Cooling specialist Noctua showcased the NT-CP1 carbon nanotube thermal pad, a maintenance-free, solid-state alternative to traditional thermal paste that promises consistent long-term performance without drying out over time. The company also previewed its first all-in-one liquid coolers, built around Asetek’s mature platform but enhanced with Noctua’s own acoustic engineering to reduce pump noise and vibrations, highlighting how refinement is becoming just as important as raw performance. GPU manufacturers echoed the same sentiment with increasingly optimized thermal designs and factory tuning aimed at extracting more efficiency from familiar architectures.

    For consumers, that’s excellent news. The message coming out of Computex wasn’t “throw everything away and start over.” It was “make what you already own even better.” Considering how expensive PC components have become lately, that might just be the most consumer-friendly trend of the entire show.

    Gaming monitors are growing up

    Gaming monitors spent years competing in a never-ending numbers race. More hertz. More brightness. More HDR certifications. This year felt refreshingly different. Displays like the Alienware AW3926QW introduced RGB-stripe Tandem OLED technology on a gorgeous 39-inch 5K curved panel, allowing users to switch between pristine 5K clarity at 165Hz for creative work and a lightning-fast 1080p mode at 330Hz, significantly improving brightness and text subpixel clarity along the way. Meanwhile, the MSI MPG OLED 322URDX36 triple-mode monitor demonstrated just how far refresh rates have come, offering a fifth-generation QD-OLED panel with Penta Tandem technology that can scale dynamically across multiple resolution profiles depending on the game genre.

    Even esports displays continued evolution into absolute precision instruments. The ASUS ROG Strix OLED XG259QWPG Ace pushed tournament refresh rates to a blistering 540Hz while retaining TrueBlack Glossy Tandem WOLED image quality. On the hybrid front, the Acer Nitro XV345CKR P showcased how a 5K WUHD resolution, a 1,344-zone Mini-LED backlight, and Dynamic Frequency and Resolution (DFR) modes can seamlessly serve professional creators who also happen to be hardcore gamers. It feels like the era of buying separate displays for work and play may finally be starting to fade.

    Handheld gaming PCs are finally growing up

    Just a couple of years ago, handheld gaming PCs still felt like ambitious experiments trying to squeeze desktop hardware into portable shells. Computex 2026 made them feel much more mature. The biggest story was undoubtedly the Intel Arc G3 Extreme processor, a graphics-first platform based on the Panther Lake architecture and manufactured using the cutting-edge Intel 18A process node. Packing a 14-core CPU configuration alongside 12 next-gen Xe3 Celestial graphics cores, complete with hardware ray tracing and Intel XeSS 3 with Multi Frame Generation, Intel finally looks ready to challenge AMD’s long-standing dominance in the premium handheld market.

    Devices like the MSI Claw 8 EX AI+, the Acer Predator Atlas 8 (PA08-I51), and the ASUS ROG Xbox Ally X20 (20th Anniversary Edition) all reinforced the same message. Better ergonomics, smarter cooling systems (like Acer’s 89-blade metal AeroBlade technology), massive 80Wh batteries, refined full-screen Windows 11 Xbox Mode software experiences, and highly efficient silicon mean manufacturers are no longer trying to prove handheld PCs are viable. They’re competing to build the absolute best one. As someone who’s spent years using devices like the Steam Deck and the original ROG Ally, that’s perhaps the most exciting trend of them all.

    The next big thing is… Practicality?

    Looking back at Computex 2026, I don’t think I’ll remember the show for a single processor, graphics card, or laptop. I’ll remember it for the industry’s changing mindset. For the first time in a while, it felt like companies were exploring how to make PCs better to live with. AI is quietly taking over repetitive tasks instead of demanding attention, ARM is growing into a serious challenger rather than an interesting experiment, gaming monitors are becoming versatile enough to replace multiple displays, and handhelds are finally maturing into products I’d happily recommend without a long list of caveats. If these trends continue, the next generation of PCs won’t just be faster. They’ll be quieter, more efficient, more affordable to upgrade, and a whole lot smarter about how they use their performance.