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Total 193 articles

Google Killed Chromebook. Nobody Knows What Comes Next.
TechEN
Google Killed Chromebook. Nobody Knows What Comes Next.

Google unveiled the 'Googlebook' platform to replace Chromebook and ChromeOS—but revealed zero hardware specs. What's the strategy, and what does it mean for users, manufacturers, and the education market?

Google Wants Gemini to Run Your Phone, Not Just Answer It
EconomyEN
Google Wants Gemini to Run Your Phone, Not Just Answer It

Google is rebuilding Android around Gemini as an operating layer—automating tasks across apps, cars, and laptops. Samsung Galaxy users get it first. Here's what it means for your device, your data, and Apple.

The Green Bubble Finally Gets a Lock
TechEN
The Green Bubble Finally Gets a Lock

After 15 years of fragmented mobile messaging, Apple and Google are rolling out end-to-end encrypted RCS messaging between iPhones and Android devices. Here's what changed, why it took so long, and what it means for your privacy.

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PRISM Weekly Digest: First Week of May 2026
DigestEN
PRISM Weekly Digest: First Week of May 2026

A closed Hormuz arrives at the kitchen table, Musk vs. Altman puts a trillion dollars on trial, the Big Four bet $650 billion on AI, and Trump sends 25% tariff invoices to long-time allies. K-pop's seventeen-year slave-contract era closes with a standard-contract reform.

Gemini Gets Behind the Wheel — And It's Not Just for New Cars
TechEN
Gemini Gets Behind the Wheel — And It's Not Just for New Cars

Google is replacing Assistant with Gemini in cars with Google built-in, starting in the U.S. GM's 4 million vehicles are first. But the real story is what happens when your car becomes a Google device.

PRISM Weekly Digest: Fourth Week of April 2026
DigestEN
PRISM Weekly Digest: Fourth Week of April 2026

Tim Cook's 25-year goodbye, $40 billion poured into Anthropic, shots near the White House dinner, and TXT's first Grand Slam — a week of power handed over and crises distributed.

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Jeong Jin LeeJeong Jin Lee
Google Doubles Down on Anthropic — But Who's Really Winning?
EconomyEN
Google Doubles Down on Anthropic — But Who's Really Winning?

Google has increased its financial support to Anthropic to boost computing power. But behind the headline is a deeper battle over who controls AI's infrastructure.

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SP
Seoyeon Park
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Google Bets Up to $40B on Anthropic — Days After Amazon Did the Same
TechEN
Google Bets Up to $40B on Anthropic — Days After Amazon Did the Same

Google is investing at least $10 billion in Anthropic, potentially up to $40 billion. With Amazon's $5B deal just days earlier, two tech giants are now backing the same AI startup — valued at $350 billion.

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DH
Doyun Han
Google Is Funding Its Own Rival — On Purpose
TechEN
Google Is Funding Its Own Rival — On Purpose

Google is committing up to $40 billion to Anthropic, a direct AI competitor. The deal reveals how the real AI arms race isn't about models — it's about who controls the infrastructure beneath them.

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DH
Doyun Han
Google Wants Gucci to Solve What Tech Never Could
TechEN
Google Wants Gucci to Solve What Tech Never Could

Google is partnering with Gucci to make AI smart glasses people actually want to wear. But can luxury branding fix the social stigma that killed Google Glass a decade ago?

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DH
Doyun Han
PRISM Weekly Digest: Second Week of April 2026
DigestEN
PRISM Weekly Digest: Second Week of April 2026

Trump's Liberation Day tariff shock and the 90-day pause — markets went on the wildest ride in years. China excluded, 145% vs. 125% tariff war, and what it means for the new trade order.

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Jeong Jin LeeJeong Jin Lee
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Google's Quiet App That Works Without Wi-Fi
TechEN
Google's Quiet App That Works Without Wi-Fi

Google quietly launched an offline-first AI dictation app called Eloquent on iOS. Built on Gemma, it cleans up your speech on-device — no internet required. Here's what it signals.

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DH
Doyun Han
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