đź’Ą Read this trending post from TechCrunch đź“– đź“‚ **Category**: AI,Apple,In Brief,siri 📌 **What You’ll Learn**: Apple's long-awaited Siri revamp could turn the smart assistant into a chatbot akin to ChatGPT, according to a report from Bloomberg's Mark Gurman. The Siri chatbot, which will be integrated into iOS 27, could be the focal point of Apple's WWDC presentation in June, his sources say. The Siri chatbot, codenamed “Campos,” will work with both voice and text inputs. Apple senior vice president Craig Federighi previously said he doesn't want Siri to be a chatbot, but rather wants Apple's AI options to be…
✨ Read this awesome post from TechCrunch đź“– đź“‚ **Category**: AI,Apps,productivity,todoist 📌 **What You’ll Learn**: You probably don't need an AI smart ring to keep up with your tasks. Doist, the company behind Todoist, a popular to-do list app that works across multiple devices, is launching a new AI-powered “Voice to To-Do” feature: Todoist Ramble. This feature allows you to describe your tasks using natural language. True to its name, Ramble can take your rambling, disorganized speech and turn it into organized tasks. The app will also capture other details you mention, such as project deadlines, priorities, duration, and assignees.…
✨ Discover this awesome post from TechCrunch đź“– đź“‚ **Category**: Apps,Social,Bluesky,social media,social networks,Twitter,X đź’ˇ **What You’ll Learn**: Bluesky's "Starter Packs," curated lists of suggested users to follow, have proven to be a popular way to help people connect with others on the social network — so popular, in fact, that X is now copying the feature. On Wednesday, X's head of product, Nikita Beer, announced in a post that the Elon Musk-owned app will soon offer its own version of these menus, called "Starterpacks." (How original!) The idea behind the new feature is to help users find accounts that match…
✨ Read this insightful post from TechCrunch đź“– đź“‚ **Category**: AI,Hardware,Ai Pin,AI wearable,Apple,In Brief,OpenAI 📌 **What You’ll Learn**: Apple may be developing its own wearable device with artificial intelligence technology, according to a report published by The Information magazine on Wednesday. The report says that the device will be a pin that users can wear on their clothes, and will come equipped with two cameras and three microphones. If the rumored device comes to market, it will be another sign that the market for AI devices is on the rise. The news follows comments on Monday by Chris Lehane, chief…
đź’Ą Read this insightful post from TechCrunch đź“– đź“‚ **Category**: AI,Venture,Accel,Exclusive,inference optimization,infrastructure software âś… **What You’ll Learn**: Some members of the team responsible for maintaining SGLang, a popular open source tool used by companies like xAI and Cursor to speed up training of AI models, have moved to the recently launched commercial startup. That company, called RadixArk, was announced last August. RadixArk, which originated as SGLang in 2023 inside the UC Berkeley lab of Databricks co-founder Ion Stoica, was recently valued at about $400 million in a round led by Accel, according to two people familiar with the matter. TechCrunch…
✨ Explore this insightful post from TechCrunch đź“– đź“‚ **Category**: AI,Enterprise,Hardware,Anthropic,chips,evergreens,Intel,nvidia,semiconductor,TSMC âś… **What You’ll Learn**: Last year was a tumultuous one for the U.S. semiconductor industry.  From leadership changes at legacy companies to continuously changing dialogue around AI chip export controls, a lot has happened. If the first few weeks of 2026, which saw new chip tariffs and international semiconductor deals, are any indicator — this year will be as unexpected as the last.  But before we get too deep into 2026, here is a final look at everything that happened in the U.S. semiconductor industry in 2025:  December Nvidia finds gold with Groq December 24: Nvidia announced…
✨ Read this must-read post from TechCrunch đź“– đź“‚ **Category**: AI,Startups,GPTZero,hallucinations 📌 **What You’ll Learn**: AI detection startup GPTZero scanned all 4,841 papers accepted at the prestigious Neural Information Processing Systems (NeurIPS) conference, held last month in San Diego. The company found 100 hallucinogenic citations in 51 research papers that it confirmed were fraudulent, the company told TechCrunch. Getting a paper accepted by NeurIPS is an accomplishment worthy of a CV in the world of AI. Given that these are the leading minds in AI research, one would assume they would use the MBA for the disastrously tedious task of…
🚀 Check out this awesome post from TechCrunch đź“– đź“‚ **Category**: TC,Apps,Denmark,Mobile,Trump,greenland âś… **What You’ll Learn**: European consumers are resisting the United States after Trump's threats to control Greenland, which is a Danish territory. As a result, two mobile apps that offer a way to determine whether products are made in America, and then suggest local alternatives, have risen to the top of the Danish App Store in recent days. The Danish App Store serves users in both Greenland and Denmark, and the same applies to Google Play. The increase in downloads comes as Danish consumers organize a popular boycott…
đź’Ą Read this must-read post from TechCrunch đź“– đź“‚ **Category**: Transportation,Venture,drone delivery,Funding 📌 **What You’ll Learn**: US drone delivery and logistics startup Zipline announced on Wednesday that it will begin operations in Houston and Phoenix early this year, as part of an expansion that will be propelled by $600 million in new investments. The round, which values ​​the company at $7.6 billion, will be used to expand into at least four US states in 2026, the company said. Several existing and new investors participated in the funding round, including Fidelity Management & Research Company, Baillie Gifford, Valor Equity Partners and…
✨ Discover this must-read post from TechCrunch đź“– đź“‚ **Category**: Space,Blue Origin,satellite internet,SpaceX 📌 **What You’ll Learn**: Jeff Bezos' space company Blue Origin just announced a satellite internet network called TeraWave that will be able to deliver data speeds of up to 6 terabytes per second, targeted toward enterprises, data centers, and government customers. The TeraWave constellation will use a mix of 5,280 low-Earth orbit satellites and 128 medium-Earth orbit satellites, and Blue Origin plans to deploy the first satellites in late 2027. It's not immediately clear how long Blue Origin expects it will take to build out the entire…
