Author: News Room

Google Research suggests AI models like DeepSeek exhibit collective intelligence patterns

It turns out that when the smartest AI models “think,” they might actually be hosting a heated internal debate. A fascinating new study co-authored by researchers at Google has thrown a wrench into how we traditionally understand artificial intelligence. It suggests that advanced reasoning models – specifically DeepSeek-R1 and Alibaba’s QwQ-32B – aren’t just crunching numbers in a straight, logical line. Instead, they appear to be behaving surprisingly like a group of humans trying to solve a puzzle together. The paper, published on arXiv with the evocative title Reasoning Models Generate Societies of Thought, posits that these models don’t merely…

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You can now enjoy Substack on a TV, if that’s your idea of fun times

Substack has carved out a massive niche for itself as the “quiet corner” of the internet—the place you go to escape the noise of social media and actually read. It is where you sip your morning coffee while scrolling through a thoughtful newsletter from your favourite writer. But with the surprise launch of its new beta TV app, the platform is making a bold play to leave your inbox and claim a spot in your living room, right next to the titans like Netflix, Hulu, and YouTube. The app, which has just rolled out for Apple TV and Google TV,…

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Tesla kills Autopilot for good and Musk warns of FSD price hikes

It feels like the end of an era for Tesla buyers in North America. The company has officially pulled the plug on “Autopilot” as a standard inclusion, signaling a massive shift toward a pay-to-play future. If you order a new Model 3 or Model Y today, it won’t come with the lane-keeping tech that used to be a hallmark of the brand. Instead, you are left with basic cruise control – pretty much the same “dumb” system you’d find on an economy car from a decade ago – unless you are willing to sign up for a monthly subscription. This…

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Your cheap Chevrolet EV might not be cheap for Long

General Motors’ effort to bring back the Chevrolet Bolt EV as an affordable electric vehicle is already facing a roadblock. Although the refreshed 2027 Chevy Bolt EV has just started arriving at U.S. dealerships with a sub-$30,000 price tag, Bloomberg reports that GM officials now say the new model will be in production for only about 18 months before the line winds down around mid-2027. This shift comes as GM continues reshuffling its manufacturing footprint, with its Fairfax Assembly plant in Kansas City, Kansas, set to switch from Bolt EV output to other vehicles, including gas-powered models and a relocated…

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Talk to AI every day? New research says it might signal depression

Spending time chatting with AI assistants like ChatGPT, Google Gemini, Microsoft Copilot, or similar systems might be more than just a tech habit. A new study published in JAMA Network Open suggests that people who use AI chatbots daily are more likely to report moderate depressive symptoms compared with those who interact with them less frequently. Researchers found a roughly 30% higher odds of at least moderate depression among regular users, though they are careful to emphasize that this link is an association, not proof that chatbot use causes depression. This finding comes from a national survey of nearly 21,000…

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Microsoft tells you to uninstall the latest Windows 11 update

Microsoft has issued an unusual public advisory telling users to uninstall the Windows 11 January 2026 security update (KB5074109) after widespread reports that it is causing serious system and application issues. The update, which began rolling out automatically on January 13 and advances affected systems to OS Build 26200.7623 or similar releases, has been linked to problems including Outlook Classic freezing, black screens, and app crashes. Outlook is not working.KB5074109 This is the cause.Microsoft, do something about it.#Microsoft— 喘息登山者 (@hapico0109) January 20, 2026 The hardest hit appear to be users of Outlook Classic who rely on POP email accounts or…

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What’s Going On With Ubisoft? | The Game Informer Show

It’s a news-heavy week on The Game Informer Show, as Ubisoft announced some major changes to its roadmap over the coming years amid numerous delays and game cancellations. Alex, Marcus, and Eric get together to break all that down in the last half of the show, and try to make light of how the Far Cry and Assassin’s Creed publisher got here.Before that, though, the crew talks about two fascinating new indie games they’ve been playing. Marcus dives into MIO: Memories In Orbit, a new Metroidvania that might be Hollow Knight-levels of difficult. Eric, meanwhile, has been testing his mental…

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Nintendo’s latest product wants to cheer you up with random quips

Nintendo is back with another delightfully wacky product for your home. While not nearly as practical as Alarmo, the $100 alarm clock loaded with five Nintendo-themed alarm packs, the new Talking Flower aims to win you over in a different way, by cheering you up with a steady stream of quirky, Mario-inspired quips. Nintendo first teased the Talking Flower during a Nintendo Direct showcase last September. The company has now shared more details about the product, and confirmed when it will officially go on sale. Based on the flowers in the Super Mario Bros. Wonder game, the Talking Flower is…

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Don’t let a messy tech stack slow your growth in 2026

This post is brought to you in paid partnership with Apollo.io January is the season for audits. We audit our finances, our habits, and our wardrobes. But for anyone running a revenue team, the most critical audit you can perform right now is on your software stack. Most sales operations are messy. You have one tool for data, another for email sequencing, a third for call recording, and a CRM that holds it all together. It is expensive, inefficient, and creates friction where there should be flow. Apollo.io offers the antidote: a single, all-in-one Go-To-Market (GTM) platform that allows you…

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You could see faster AMD Ryzen AI Max chips soon

AMD appears to be working on a refreshed version of its Ryzen AI MAX 400 family, codenamed “Gorgon Halo”. According to recent leaks by VideoCardz, this next-gen refresh targets faster performance for Ryzen-powered machines, especially those focused on AI workloads and integrated graphics. The rumored Gorgon Halo series would essentially be a clock-bumped iteration of the current Strix Halo-branded processors, with the same core counts but higher boost speeds on both the CPU and Radeon iGPU sides. Additionally, it’ll also add support for faster LPDDR5X-8533 memory to further improve responsiveness and performance under AI-heavy workloads. What the Gorgon Halo refresh…

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