
Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 Review: AI Everywhere in a Polarizing Design
With its $350 Galaxy Watch 8, available July 25, Samsung is leaning heavily on artificial intelligence and a divisive design to stand out. The company is also rolling out a $500 Galaxy Watch 8 classic — and both smartwatches are the first to hit the market with Google's Wear OS 6 operating system, which has the search giant's Gemini AI chatbot built in. This allows you to do things like ask for the name of the new coffee shop your friend recommended without needing to pull out your phone.
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Yahoo
11 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Nvidia Faces China Security Pressure, Shares Slip
Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) crept lower as Chinese pressure over chip security ramped up, sending the stock down about 2% amid growing friction and a very public demand for convincing security proofs. State-run commentary and a summon from the Cyberspace Administration of China over alleged backdoor risks in H20 chips injected new uncertainty, even as Nvidia pushed back, telling Reuters it has no backdoors and stressing that cybersecurity is critically important. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 5 Warning Signs with NVDA. Company reps have already been interviewed by regulators, and the broad tone is tense: China frames the probe as protecting user data, while Nvidia is trying to keep its access to a key revenue market intact. The timing matters. Nvidia had just signaled potential resumption of H20 AI chip sales in China after earlier U.S. export limits, a restriction it said cost roughly $15 billion in lost sales. The firm has also rolled out a new Blackwell-based AI chip tailored for Chinese factory automation and logistics, trying to thread the needle between compliance and demand. If those security concerns stick or expand, it could bleed into sentiment on a stock that's otherwise been riding strong performance this year. Why it matters? the showdown makes China both a critical upside and a political risk; investors will be watching whether the probe leads to renewed export friction, independent security validation, or a de-escalation that keeps Chinese demand intact. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Sign in to access your portfolio
Yahoo
11 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Apple and Amazon earnings should end tech stock bubble fears: Opening Bid top takeaway
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Engadget
12 minutes ago
- Engadget
Some goo.gl URLs will live to fight another day
Google's shortened URLs are the horror movie monster of the Google Graveyard: They keep finding a way to stay alive. On Friday, the company said links that don't show the above warning will work for the foreseeable future. In 2018, Google cut off the ability to create new shortened links. But it kept existing URLs active as a courtesy to those who relied on them. Then, a year ago, the company said its rival would shut down completely on August 25, 2025. That appeared to be the final nail in the coffin. Not so fast. That brings us to Google's change of heart today. "We understand these links are embedded in countless documents, videos, posts and more, and we appreciate the input received," the company explained. You'll know yours is shutting down if it currently shows a warning message. ("This link will no longer work in the near future.") If it redirects to the destination without that detour, it will live to fight another day. Google says the survivors were chosen based on whether they showed activity in late 2024.