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Mac RumorsMay 19, 2026
Apple Still Developing Liquid Metal for Future iPhone Pro Frames
Apple allegedly wants to switch away from aluminum for future iPhones, with two materials being considered for their greater balance between weight and heat dissipation.


Gizmag Emerging TechMay 18, 2026
Dissimilar robots can 'learn' to perform tasks without needing new code
It's fairly easy for people to learn from other people - we've been doing it for around 300,000 years - because we can observe, copy, and modify what they're doing. It's less easy for us to learn from other animals that way, because the less our cognition and bodies are alike, the harder it is to copy and modify what they do. Learning about plants, fungi, protozoa, and bacteria is easy e

ResearchBuzzMay 12, 2026
Search Engine for Subreddits, South Africa Constitutional Rights Cases, Digital History at U of Houston, More: Tuesday ResearchBuzz, May 11, 2026
AI stories were taking over this newsletter which I found irritating. I have moved the minor ones to a separate newsletter that will publish every time I have 12 items, probably daily […]

PC World Latest NewsOct 09, 2025
Broadcasters bungled free antenna TV. Now they want a bailout?

Also known as NextGen TV, the new broadcast standard promised to revolutionize free over-the-air TV with features like 4K HDR video, time-shifting, on-demand viewing, and interactive programming. For cord-cutters who get free local channels with an antenna, this was a genuinely exciting technology when it began rolling out way back in 2019.

Six years later, that excitement has evaporated thanks to restrictive digital rights management (DRM) and high adoption costs. While the broadcast TV industry has failed to make ATSC 3.0 stick, they've succeeded in getting tech enthusiasts, consumer advocates, and even some individual broadcasters to fear and despise it.

Now, broadcasters are hoping for a bailout from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), which announced this week that it will consider their wishes to wind down the existing ATSC 1.0 standard and mandate ATSC 3.0 adoption. If that happens, most antenna users will need a new TV or tuner box by 2030 at the latest. Having failed in the marketplace, broadcasters now want the government to help foist ATSC 3.0 upon people instead.

Sadly, it didn't have to be this way.

What's happening with ATSC 3.0? NextGen TV broadcasts are available in more than 90 U.S. markets, covering 70 percent of the population, but accessing these broadcasts requires an ATSC 3.0 tuner, and most TVs don't have one.


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