Sixunited, a relatively unknown laptop maker from Shanghai, China, has unveiled a new notebook which arrives ahead of Dell and Lenovo in adopting AMD’s latest high-end laptop processor.
The XN77-160M-CS features the AMD Ryzen AI MAX+ 395 APU, also known as Strix Halo, a 16-core chip with integrated Navi 3.5 graphics and a 50 TOPS NPU.
This APU has been rare in the laptop market, with only a handful of models, such as HP’s ZBook Ultra G1a and Asus ROG Flow Z13 announced so far.
Large capacity batterySixunited will offer two thermal configurations, 85W and 120W, both supported by a dual-fan cooling system, and paired with LPDDR5X (non-upgradable) memory running at up to 8000 MT/s.
Storage comes from up to two PCIe 4.0x4 SSDs in M.2 2280 format, allowing for large and fast configurations.
Perhaps the most notable aspects of the new laptop is its 99.9Wh battery, which is the largest capacity allowed for most airlines.
Despite the large battery, the chassis weighs under 1.8kg and is built with aluminum and mylar materials.
The laptop includes a 16-inch display at 2560x1600 resolution with a 165Hz refresh rate and 100% sRGB coverage, with an OLED version also planned for the future.
Videocardz notes the XN77-160M-CS is a barebones design, meaning it may appear under different brand names. Sixunited often acts as an OEM supplier for other companies.
Pricing remains unknown for now, but it’s not likely to be cheap. For comparison, Asus’ AI MAX+ 395 laptop starts at $2099, while HP’s device is priced from $4099.
Sixunited’s move adds another option for those seeking a compact yet powerful laptop with extended battery life.
It also highlights growing interest in AMD’s Strix Halo platform, which to date has mostly appeared in mini-PCs like the GMKTec EVO-X2, Beelink AI Mini and AOOSTAR NEX395.
You might also likeSecurity researchers have found another antivirus-killing tool out there that hackers are using before dropping any additional payloads.
Experts from Trend Micro have uncovered custom variant of the open source tool called RealBlindingEDR.
This tool comes with a hardcoded list of antivirus company names:
Trend Micro
Kaspersky
Sophos
SentinelOne
Malwarebytes
Cynet
McAfee
Bitdefender
Broadcom (Symantec)
Cisco
Fortinet
Acronis
When it is deployed on a device, it looks for these names in driver metadata, and if it finds one, it disables kernel-level hooks/callbacks, essentially blinding detection engines. Trend Micro’s researchers found the hackers are also able to silently uninstall antivirus programs altogether, opening the doors and enabling easy deployment of stage-two malware.
Crypto24The tool was seen in the wild, used by a hacking collective called Crypto24, a nascent ransomware group first spotted in September 2024.
However, the researchers believe the group consists of former members of other, defunct hacking collectives, since its members are highly skilled and experienced.
When it gains initial access, establishes persistence, and removes antivirus roadblocks, the group usually deploys two pieces of malware - a keylogger, and an encryptor. All of the stolen secrets are exfiltrated into a Google Drive using a custom tool.
The identity, or location, of Crypto24 is currently unknown. However, researchers are saying that in its short lifespan, the group successfully hit a number of large organizations in the United States, Europe, and Asia. Most of their targets are in finance, manufacturing, tech, and entertainment.
There are many ways to protect against attacks looking to disable antivirus protection, including opting for a layered defense strategy.
Companies can use a reputable antivirus with tamper protection, enable real-time protection and firewalls, and use a separate anti-malware tool that can work alongside an AV.
Via BleepingComputer
You might also likeThe next iteration of the Mac Pro might see Apple powering the computer with an M4 Ultra chip, we've heard again.
It's been a couple of years since the last incarnation of the Mac Pro, which used the M2 Ultra, so it would be a considerable leap in performance to upgrade to a theoretical M4 Ultra – but Macworld reports that this is what's in the cards.
This is based on Apple's internal code that Macworld caught a glimpse of somehow, which contained the identifier 't8152' – and we're told this suggests the use of the M4 Ultra, codenamed 'Hidra' (a name that's previously been aired on the rumor mill via Bloomberg).
There's not much else to this rumor, and Macworld doesn't have any details on the spec, although it theorizes that the M4 Ultra could run with a 32-core CPU and an 80-core GPU.
As ever with this kind of leak, it could be genuine and yet never come to fruition. It might just show us that Apple has been testing a Mac Pro configuration along these lines – but it's possible that this machine may never see the light of day, ending up canned at some point in prototyping.
(Image credit: Brittany Hosea-Small/ AFP/ Getty Images)Analysis: M4 or wait for M5?This leak tells us a couple of things. Firstly, that Apple staff can't spell 'Hydra' (well, okay, alternatively let's say Apple engineers can't think up decent codenames). And, being serious, that it does appear increasingly likely that a new Mac Pro design is going to pitch up later this year.
Indeed, the Mac Pro coming out later in 2025, complete with M4 Ultra, was suggested over a year ago now, so this latest nugget of speculation backs up the previous buzz on the grapevine.
On top of the weight of rumors starting to add up, there's also the fact that for Apple, the Mac Pro is in something of an odd predicament right now. This is due to the M4 Pro flexing some considerable performance muscles, and outgunning the Mac Pro's M2 Ultra. The upshot is you can buy a Mac mini (with M4 Pro) and get better performance – at least in terms of raw CPU power – than the Mac Pro, which isn't a good look for the seriously pricey computer.
Not that the Mac Pro is competing with Apple's compact Mac mini, of course – it's a heavyweight pro-targeted PC that offers a lot of advantages in terms of hefty memory loadouts and PCIe expansion options. It is a very different beast indeed, but still, Apple needs to keep the Mac Pro on a reasonable footing in relative performance terms - again meaning that the rumored refresh with an M4 Ultra seems more likely.
A two-year gap also seems a fair enough timeframe for a refresh, and it feels somewhat unlikely to me that Apple would want to wait until the M5 series before pushing out a new Mac Pro given the above reasons.
That said, there are those who've argued that the M4 Ultra isn't going to happen – due to issues around jamming two M4 Max chips together, which is what the Ultra chips do – and that Apple will indeed wait it out for the M5 series to make another Ultra model.
So, everything's rather up in the air for now – but if an M4 Ultra is going to happen, it will surely be in a new Mac Pro, and we're likely to see more leaks soon enough. If the whispers go quiet over the next couple of months, that'll tell its own story.
You might also like...It is not surprising that climate change is becoming a growing weight on society, with sustainability needing to take priority if we want to protect the future of our planet. To put this into context, over the last few years, the UK alone has been responsible for 1.6 million tons of electronic waste, and it is known to be one of the largest e-waste producers worldwide.
Although these figures are slowly decreasing, sustainability must become a growing business imperative if we want to seriously change the tide. For businesses to truly thrive, more sustainable practices are essential to success in the modern consumer climate.
Beyond both consumers and businesses, governments are also being seen to take note of the importance of increased sustainability and implementing a range of measures to help foster a circular economy. In particular, as part of the EU’s Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR) and its recent Energy Labelling Working Plan announcement, the EU aims to ensure tech companies that place products in the EU marketplace start implementing processes to tackle sustainability first hand.
The regulatory reasoning: The EU’s ESPR and Working PlanUnder its Circular Economy Action Plan (CEAP), the EU has led a series of efforts aimed at pushing businesses toward greater sustainability and circularity. A clear example of this commitment is the ESPR, which came into effect last summer and underscores the European Commission’s drive to build a more circular, resource-efficient economy.
For context, the ESPR aims to boost circularity and the practices that contribute to sustainability by creating a framework that “aims to make sustainable products the norm on the EU market.” In layman's terms, it focuses on the production of items that last longer, use energy and resources more efficiently, are easier to repair and recycle, contain fewer substances of concern and include more recycled content.
The circularity regulation is set to apply to select product groups, including those in the electronics and textiles space, and will apply to all businesses that place products within these groups on the EU marketplace, regardless of where they were produced.
As part of this, businesses will need to work towards the implementation of Digital Product Passports (DPPs) - a mandatory requirement for products that fit within the identified product categories.
As the ESPR’s first Working Plan was published at the end of April, a document officially listing the sectors due to be prioritized by the regulation, it is more pressing than ever for technology companies to begin their ESPR compliance journey now.
As the Working Plan provides a timeline for the delegated acts - a set of requirements concerning each product group - to be announced , compliance urgency is increasing at speed. Moreover, with the Working Plan outlining a range of upcoming horizontal requirements, such as repairability for consumer electronics and increased use of recycled content, the technology industry has been listed as a key priority.
In simple terms, the Working Plan aims to focus on the ESPR’s ability to have positive environmental impacts, its capacity to deliver, and the need to simplify regulations.
This update in legislation, and its focus on the timeline for the delegated acts to be announced, is only another reminder that the compliance clock is ticking for technology companies across the world that sell in the EU marketplace.
With the timelines for the delegated acts now established—some taking effect as early as 2026 for sectors like steel - businesses face significant changes in the near future. Companies that delay action risk not only non-compliance but also losing their competitive edge.
Where do DPPs fit in? The mandate and fostering eco-productsTo unpack DPPs - a key component of the compliance exercise - they largely act as a digital record of a physical product, securely keeping track of information across its lifecycle. This can include anything from the material used in its production, the environmental impact of its manufacturing, a record of its authenticity, and guidance for end-of-life handling. In most circumstances, this data will be accessible via a data carrier like a QR code or barcode affixed to a product and accessible by scanning with a device such as a smartphone.
DPPs are set to play a key role in advancing the ESPR’s circularity ambitions by offering greater visibility into a product’s entire lifecycle. By embedding DPPs into products, the regulation encourages everyone who interacts with them, from manufacturers to end-users, to adopt more sustainable practices and embrace circular thinking.
For consumers, DPPs provide the information needed to make environmentally conscious purchasing decisions and dispose of products responsibly at end of life. For businesses, this level of transparency opens up opportunities to enhance sustainability across supply chains, from sourcing materials to refining internal processes.
DPPs also prove beneficial to tech industry businesses when considering notions of brand engagement and customer loyalty. For example, they could help businesses to prove the sustainability credentials of their products to the end consumer and can help to avoid accusations of greenwashing.
By potentially even verifying authenticity and keeping a history of any repairs made to a product, technology firms could even utilize the information in DPPs to facilitate take back or resale schemes, encouraging users to recycle their products, turning them back into usable products to be resold - another effort towards the circular economy.
Action point one: Data and DPP solution strategiesAs the ESPR’s Working Plan has just been released, it is very easy for businesses to feel overwhelmed by the upcoming regulation and its DPP mandate. In particular, with the Working Plan establishing the horizontal requirements and its focus on product repairability and recyclability, the technology sector must begin considering its DPP compliance journey now to ensure the products they create meet sustainability standards.
As a first step, businesses should assign an employee or team to be at the forefront of upcoming compliance efforts. By ensuring that an employee or group of employees is staying updated on legislation, businesses can ensure they remain aware of specific industry requirements coming down the pipeline.
As part of this, it would be advisable to reach out to a DPP advisor and gain a deeper understanding of the mandate’s industry-specific impact. By doing so, companies can carve out a coherent and bespoke strategy accordingly.
To stay ahead of the ESPR, businesses should start by mapping where critical product data resides - both within their own operations and throughout their supply chains. It's also essential to evaluate which partners are best equipped to support the rollout of DPPs. Once a solution is in place, piloting becomes the logical next step.
Running a pilot allows companies to test implementation in real-world conditions, identify process gaps, and gather valuable data to better estimate the scale and timing of a full rollout. With this groundwork laid, businesses will be well-positioned to accelerate their efforts as soon as the delegated acts come into effect.
For all tech companies selling into the EU marketplace, the ESPR’s forthcoming DPP mandate represents a range of challenges and opportunities for the industry. As the Working Plan’s recent publication only heightens the need for DPP compliance, this moment represents a critical chance to advance a circular economy.
As companies are faced with an opportunity to advance their sustainability credentials (and subsequent business success), the way they choose to tackle this legislation will determine whether they merely meet compliance standards or accelerate as sustainable brands of the future.
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The current distribution model is broken.
The channel is flooded with innovation: AI, automation, infrastructure, security. Everywhere you turn, another vendor is promising the future. But most of them won’t make it. Not because their tech isn’t good, but because the legacy route-to-market isn’t built to support them.
The traditional distribution model was designed for scale, but the kind that follows success, not the kind that builds it. It’s focused on process over potential. It rewards predictability, not boldness. And for emerging vendors trying to break into the market, that’s a problem.
Growth-stage vendors don’t need a distributor. They need a distribution partner. They need experts in their corner who can recognize early potential, do the heavy lifting to bring it to life, and move quickly when opportunities arise. That’s not the job most distributors were built to do. But it’s the job that needs doing now.
Distribution isn’t deadWhen Pax8 took out a full-page ad in the New York Times to challenge the legacy distribution model, it raised eyebrows across the channel. It was bold, unapologetic, unexpected, and whether you agreed with the tactic or not, it was a conversation starter.
And that’s the point. Distribution is being disrupted; it’s changing. But it’s not dying.
And no, we’re not talking about changes like a move from hardware to SaaS, or from perpetual to subscription. This new age of distribution is about a new set of expectations. Think real-time analytics, partner orchestration, recurring revenue models, and AI-infused everything.
It is also, most importantly, about the human touch. Vendors and partners need to be able to have live conversations with humans that care and can address any challenges they face. The ability to make a call to your main contact at a distributor can’t be underestimated – the contact that knows your business inside out.
To serve this market, distributors need to behave more like GTM strategists and growth consultants – and behave like they have equal skin in the game. They need to know when to push, where to invest, and how to build momentum from zero.
Challenger brands need challenger distributionThe channel loves a leaderboard. Gartner. Forrester. IDC. And more often than not, the attention goes straight to the top-right of Gartner’s Magic Quadrant; to the ‘Leaders’ that already have market share, not necessarily those driving the next wave of innovation.
The problem is that innovation rarely starts at the top.
The most exciting technologies today are being built by vendors you won’t find in glossy analyst reports. These companies are small, focused, and fast. They’re solving problems in new ways. They’re thinking beyond incremental change. And they’re ready to scale, if they can find the right partner.
But most distributors aren’t built to serve them. Their KPIs don’t account for emerging vendor complexity. Their teams aren’t structured for market creation. Their onboarding processes weren’t designed for agility, and most distributors require healthy marketing budgets to get attention. As a result, the most promising solutions often get overlooked.
What challenger vendors need is a distributor that moves differently. One that’s selective, strategic, and unafraid to bet early.
Data-led, outcome-obsessedThe best distributors don’t just move quickly to identify new opportunities. They move with purpose. And that purpose is driven by data.
Emerging vendors don’t have the luxury of guesswork. Every GTM decision and every partnership matters. That’s why the distributors that really add value aren’t the ones offering the broadest line card, they’re the ones doing the best homework.
Before a single contract is signed, the best distribution partners are already elbows-deep in analysis. They’re evaluating financials, scrutinizing product maturity, interrogating GTM plans, and mapping market readiness. This ensures that they’re not dazzled by demos or led by hype. They’re guided by evidence.
And it doesn’t stop at onboarding.
Smart distributors monitor vendor growth signals in real time. They know which channel programs are converting, which partner profiles are selling, and where the real momentum is coming from—not just at the regional or vertical level but at the micro-layer of product features, deal size, and partner behavior.
Data drives every decision here. From which vendors are onboarded, to how they’re launched, developing a marketing plan and to the way pipeline is tracked and optimized over time.
There’s a growing divide between the brands that are truly ready to scale and the ones who just look good on paper. Spotting the difference is hard. That’s why most distributors don’t try. They wait until success is proven, then show up with a cookie-cutter pitch deck.
But that’s not how category leaders are built. Category leaders are backed early, built methodically, and launched with focus, strategy, and a GTM strategy that knows how to win.
The channel is changingIf one thing is certain, it’s that the channel is changing. Subscription-first, AI-led, everything-as-a-service. The challenge is that you can’t brute-force legacy systems into this new way of doing things and expect a different outcome.
What this moment demands is a new kind of distributor. Not just another name on a long list, but one that actually understands how to build traction in a saturated market, create meaningful differentiation, and help emerging vendors move from underdog to industry standard.
Because if growth is the goal, you don’t have time for slow ramp-ups or vague strategies. You need someone who’s ready to run with you.
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Canada’s House of Commons has reportedly suffered a cyberattack which saw it lose sensitive employee data.
A CBC report, citing an internal email that the organization sent to its staff, says the attack saw an unidentified threat actor exploit a “recent Microsoft vulnerability” to access a database with information on employee computers and mobile devices.
Among the data stolen in the attack was employee names, email addresses, job titles, office locations, and information about the devices they use.
SharePoint under the magnifying glassAt the moment, both the House of Commons and Canada’s Communications Security Establishment (CSE) are investigating the issue.
"Attribution of a cyber incident is difficult. Investigating cyber threat activity takes resources and time, and there are many considerations involved in the process of attributing malicious cyber activity," CSE apparently said in a statement.
The organization told its employees to remain vigilant, and be wary of incoming communications.
The details are scarce, but the House of Commons saying the attackers used a “recent Microsoft vulnerability” fueled speculation that it was done through an infamous SharePoint flaw which has been exploited recently.
Canada’s Cyber Centre recently issued a warning about a SharePoint Server flaw called ToolShell, tracked as CVE-2025-53770.
ToolShell was first observed in late July 2025, and has been abused by multiple threat actors, including Chinese state-sponsored groups.
Multiple high-profile organizations have already been compromised this way, including the US National Nuclear Security Administration, Rhode Island General Assembly, and many others.
Via BleepingComputer
You might also likeManaging energy consumption is one of the biggest challenges to turn a nation’s AI vision into reality. AI data centers require vast power resources at a time when the national grids are shifting toward renewables. Another major hurdle is talent. With global competition for AI expertise heating up, countries must invest more in education and training. There should also be more industry collaboration to build the skilled workforce needed for a true independent AI vision.
AI workloads and energy useAI workloads, particularly those associated with large language models (LLMs) and advanced analytics, impose varying energy demands. Training AI models is an extremely computationally intensive process, requiring stable, high-energy inputs over extended periods. It involves feeding large datasets into deep learning models, running complex calculations, and iterating repeatedly to refine accuracy.
This process demands high-performance computing resources and an uninterrupted power supply, making it one of the most energy-consuming aspects of AI.
In contrast, AI inference runs models in real-time to make predictions, classify data, or analyze text, images, and video. Though less demanding than training, inference workloads are dynamic and need efficient and steady energy resource allocation for real-time tasks like chatbots, automation, and edge computing.
So how can we manage the energy consumption from these intensive AI workloads?
Renewable energy: A double-edged swordRenewable energy is central to the UK's AI Action Plan and its ambitions to become a leader in AI data centers. With substantial resources in wind, solar and hydro contributing 36.1% of electricity generation in 2023, the UK can tackle the growing electricity demand in a more environmentally sustainable manner.
The UK's newly established AI Energy Council is expected to explore innovative energy solutions, such as Small Modular Reactors (SMRs), to bridge this gap. With AI-driven energy consumption accelerating, a 160% increase in data center power demand is anticipated.
Despite hardware efficiency gains seen in AI adoption and real-world scenarios, increasing demand for the technology outpaces these improvements. Popular AI-driven solutions, such as ChatGPT, have seen rapid user adoption, surpassing 100 million users in 2025 with approximately 464 million visits per month.
The International Energy Agency reports that a single ChatGPT query requires 2.9 watt-hours of electricity, nearly ten times more than a Google search, which only needs 0.3 watt-hours.
As AI continues to scale, the growing energy consumption raises important concerns about environmental sustainability, highlighting the need for strategic solutions.
Aligning AI workloads with renewable energy and advanced resource managementIt is clear that renewable energy alone is insufficient in meeting the UK’s AI Action Plan’s requirements, which presents a chance for AI data centers to adopt intelligent workload scheduling and resource management strategies. AI workloads should be scheduled to coincide with periods of peak renewable energy generation, such as high-wind periods or midday solar peaks.
This approach allows AI training tasks, which require significant power, to be executed when renewable energy availability is at its highest, reducing reliance on non-renewable backup sources or storage technologies such as batteries.
AI requires high levels of compute resources, typically utilizing specialized hardware like GPUs, which handle high levels of parallel transactions essential for AI models and applications. Multi-tenanted GPU virtualization and graphics virtualization solutions effectively consolidate resource utilization, reducing the need for additional hardware and energy consumption.
GPUs are significantly more energy-efficient than CPUs for AI inference tasks—studies show up to 42x greater efficiency—but their increasing cost and energy intensity make strategic allocation crucial. Given the complexity of GPU scenarios, which vary depending on applications, query types, and user volume, ensuring these powerful resources are fully utilized and not left idle is a top priority for reducing environmental impact and maximizing return on investment.
Effective GPU optimization strategies include dynamic sharing and partitioning techniques, enabling better resource allocation, minimizing wastage, and supporting data centers transitioning to renewable energy sources.
AI schedulers should be designed to scale compute resources up or down based on real-time energy availability. This means distributing (within data proximity requirements) workloads across different geographic locations where renewable energy is abundant at any given time and adjusting processing speeds to match fluctuating renewable energy supplies.
Further boosting energy efficiency in data centers requires innovative solutions, like liquid cooling and AI-driven optimization, with advanced designs and hardware that minimize energy consumption. A diversified energy mix is also key, combining renewables with technologies like SMRs to ensure a stable power supply, supported by data center energy monitoring and allocation modelling.
Government agencies can also drive environmental sustainability by financially incentivizing data centers to run on renewable energy while managing growth to protect the energy grid. These strategies ensure consistent power availability while maximizing the use of renewable energy when conditions are favorable.
Building a future of innovation and environmental sustainabilityThe UK is well-placed to achieve its AI ambitions without overwhelming the energy grid, provided it embraces a portfolio of efficiency levers across workload, hardware and infrastructure layers. Physical virtualization is one of the most immediate and proven techniques. Deployments of advanced virtualization platforms can cut physical servers by 39 % and trim three-year infrastructure cost by 34 %, according to IDC’s 2024 study.
Fewer racks translate directly into a lower baseload on the grid and quicker alignment with renewable-energy contracts. AI acceleration now benefits as well; tests have shown that virtualization solutions with GPU support delivers AI training performance within 1–6 % of bare metal and inference at 94–105 % yet still leave up to 88 % of CPU cores free for other work. Multi-tenant GPU virtualization therefore drives higher AI throughput per watt, deferring additional hardware purchases and the embodied carbon they carry.
Alongside virtualization, emerging technologies such as liquid cooling, AI-driven energy-optimization software and diversified power sources (including small modular reactors) will further curb data-center consumption. While no single solution is a silver bullet, the strategic combination of consolidated, software-defined infrastructure and intelligent energy management positions the UK to set a global example—demonstrating how cutting-edge AI capability and energy security can advance together on a clear trajectory to net-zero.
By prioritizing environmentally sustainable and sovereign approaches, the UK has a unique opportunity to set a global example – demonstrating how cutting-edge AI and energy security can evolve together.
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A new NYT Connections puzzle appears at midnight each day for your time zone – which means that some people are always playing 'today's game' while others are playing 'yesterday's'. If you're looking for Friday's puzzle instead then click here: NYT Connections hints and answers for Friday, August 15 (game #796).
Good morning! Let's play Connections, the NYT's clever word game that challenges you to group answers in various categories. It can be tough, so read on if you need Connections hints.
What should you do once you've finished? Why, play some more word games of course. I've also got daily Strands hints and answers and Quordle hints and answers articles if you need help for those too, while Marc's Wordle today page covers the original viral word game.
SPOILER WARNING: Information about NYT Connections today is below, so don't read on if you don't want to know the answers.
NYT Connections today (game #797) - today's words(Image credit: New York Times)Today's NYT Connections words are…
What are some clues for today's NYT Connections groups?
Need more clues?
We're firmly in spoiler territory now, but read on if you want to know what the four theme answers are for today's NYT Connections puzzles…
NYT Connections today (game #797) - hint #2 - group answersWhat are the answers for today's NYT Connections groups?
Right, the answers are below, so DO NOT SCROLL ANY FURTHER IF YOU DON'T WANT TO SEE THEM.
NYT Connections today (game #797) - the answers(Image credit: New York Times)The answers to today's Connections, game #797, are…
A great puzzle today which got me pondering how we use TOILET paper to sneeze into, blow our noses, or dab them.
TOILET paper works perfectly well for this function because it’s essentially the same product as facial tissue, just in a different format. Yet, despite this, we’d never think of using facial tissue in place of toilet paper. Why is that? We might even use less and save money if we did.
The INTREPIDITY group contained four incredible qualities we should all strive to possess and I suspect those that do possess them don’t have time to ponder the differences between KINDS OF SOFT/LIGHTWEIGHT PAPER.
Yesterday's NYT Connections answers (Friday, August 15, game #796)NYT Connections is one of several increasingly popular word games made by the New York Times. It challenges you to find groups of four items that share something in common, and each group has a different difficulty level: green is easy, yellow a little harder, blue often quite tough and purple usually very difficult.
On the plus side, you don't technically need to solve the final one, as you'll be able to answer that one by a process of elimination. What's more, you can make up to four mistakes, which gives you a little bit of breathing room.
It's a little more involved than something like Wordle, however, and there are plenty of opportunities for the game to trip you up with tricks. For instance, watch out for homophones and other word games that could disguise the answers.
It's playable for free via the NYT Games site on desktop or mobile.
A new Quordle puzzle appears at midnight each day for your time zone – which means that some people are always playing 'today's game' while others are playing 'yesterday's'. If you're looking for Friday's puzzle instead then click here: Quordle hints and answers for Friday, August 15 (game #1299).
Quordle was one of the original Wordle alternatives and is still going strong now more than 1,100 games later. It offers a genuine challenge, though, so read on if you need some Quordle hints today – or scroll down further for the answers.
Enjoy playing word games? You can also check out my NYT Connections today and NYT Strands today pages for hints and answers for those puzzles, while Marc's Wordle today column covers the original viral word game.
SPOILER WARNING: Information about Quordle today is below, so don't read on if you don't want to know the answers.
Quordle today (game #1300) - hint #1 - VowelsHow many different vowels are in Quordle today?• The number of different vowels in Quordle today is 5*.
* Note that by vowel we mean the five standard vowels (A, E, I, O, U), not Y (which is sometimes counted as a vowel too).
Quordle today (game #1300) - hint #2 - repeated lettersDo any of today's Quordle answers contain repeated letters?• The number of Quordle answers containing a repeated letter today is 1.
Quordle today (game #1300) - hint #3 - uncommon lettersDo the letters Q, Z, X or J appear in Quordle today?• Yes. One of Q, Z, X or J appears among today's Quordle answers.
Quordle today (game #1300) - hint #4 - starting letters (1)Do any of today's Quordle puzzles start with the same letter?• The number of today's Quordle answers starting with the same letter is 0.
If you just want to know the answers at this stage, simply scroll down. If you're not ready yet then here's one more clue to make things a lot easier:
Quordle today (game #1300) - hint #5 - starting letters (2)What letters do today's Quordle answers start with?• O
• Q
• S
• E
Right, the answers are below, so DO NOT SCROLL ANY FURTHER IF YOU DON'T WANT TO SEE THEM.
Quordle today (game #1300) - the answers(Image credit: Merriam-Webster)The answers to today's Quordle, game #1300, are…
A very tricky round that could have easily gone sideways.
It took me quite a while before I found a letter containing A,U and E from the letters I had left. I could think of plenty using unavailable letters and came close to entering "usage" just to end the misery. Then I thought of QUAKE and the sweet relief of reaching the end.
Daily Sequence today (game #1300) - the answers(Image credit: Merriam-Webster)The answers to today's Quordle Daily Sequence, game #1300, are…
A new NYT Strands puzzle appears at midnight each day for your time zone – which means that some people are always playing 'today's game' while others are playing 'yesterday's'. If you're looking for Friday's puzzle instead then click here: NYT Strands hints and answers for Friday, August 15 (game #530).
Strands is the NYT's latest word game after the likes of Wordle, Spelling Bee and Connections – and it's great fun. It can be difficult, though, so read on for my Strands hints.
Want more word-based fun? Then check out my NYT Connections today and Quordle today pages for hints and answers for those games, and Marc's Wordle today page for the original viral word game.
SPOILER WARNING: Information about NYT Strands today is below, so don't read on if you don't want to know the answers.
NYT Strands today (game #531) - hint #1 - today's themeWhat is the theme of today's NYT Strands?• Today's NYT Strands theme is… Think on it!
NYT Strands today (game #531) - hint #2 - clue wordsPlay any of these words to unlock the in-game hints system.
• Spangram has 9 letters
NYT Strands today (game #531) - hint #4 - spangram positionWhat are two sides of the board that today's spangram touches?First side: top, 2nd column
Last side: bottom, 1st column
Right, the answers are below, so DO NOT SCROLL ANY FURTHER IF YOU DON'T WANT TO SEE THEM.
NYT Strands today (game #531) - the answers(Image credit: New York Times)The answers to today's Strands, game #531, are…
The theme “Think on it!” could mean anything at all, so I went hunting for non-game words to earn a hint.
I got the word LEFT but completely missed seeing BRAIN, which probably says something about my lack of LOGIC and LEFT BRAIN dexterity.
Anyway, with logic gifted to me I was able to spot the other thinking words including a corkscrewing ANALYSIS and backwards REASON.
A nice work out for the brain, then, but not so taxing an exercise that I actually had to do any proper thinking.
Yesterday's NYT Strands answers (Friday, August 15, game #530)Strands is the NYT's not-so-new-any-more word game, following Wordle and Connections. It's now a fully fledged member of the NYT's games stable that has been running for a year and which can be played on the NYT Games site on desktop or mobile.
I've got a full guide to how to play NYT Strands, complete with tips for solving it, so check that out if you're struggling to beat it each day.
The Trump administration is reportedly in talks over taking a stake in beleagured chipmaker Intel in its latest bid to boost US manufacturing,
Reports from Bloomberg claim after the recent meeting between President Trump and Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan – a relationship that's been threatened after the President called for Tan to resign over alleged ties to China, talks have reportedly been held over a deal.
A potential government investment could include equity stakes, guaranteed purchases, loans and private financing, similar to the Pentagon's recent $400 million stake in MP Materials which recently brought on the provision of a $150 million loan.
US Government could buy a stake in IntelThe news comes after a long period of uncertainty for Intel with multiple quarters of revenue decline.
Things have already slowly started to turn around, though, with Intel seeing flat year-over-year revenue in its last quarter under the guidance of new CEO Lip-Bu Tan.
"We are laser-focused on strengthening our core product portfolio and our AI roadmap to better serve customers. We are also taking the actions needed to build a more financially disciplined foundry," he said.
Intel shares rose more than 7% following the report that the US Government could get involved in Intel's operations, however the deal remains unconfirmed with no agreement reached as yet.
The White House explained, "discussion about hypothetical deals should be regarded as speculation unless officially announced by the administration."
Intel had already signed a deal with AWS in September 2024 to accelerate the development of chip manufacturing in Ohio, but progress has remained slow.
As part of the deal, AWS was going to add $7.8 billion to expand its own data center operations in Central Ohio.
In February 2025, EVP, Chief Global Operations Officer and GM for Intel Foundry Manufacturing, Naga Chandrasekaran, said Intel expects the first of its two Ohio fabs to begin operations between 2030 and 2031, with the second coming online around a year later.
You might also likeSony has teamed up with cult British/Bulgarian fashion brand Chopova Lowena to create a bag for the WH-1000XM6 headphones that "seamlessly blends Chopova Lowena’s distinctive aesthetic with Sony’s cutting-edge technology and functionality".
The Alto bag, available now for £800 (about $1,085 / AU$1,665) including a set of black WH-1000XM6 headphones, is exclusive to Dover Street Market London and doverstreetmarket.com.
Maybe it's because I'm just back from the Edinburgh Festival and its streets of shops selling tourist tat, but looking at the photos of the alto it reminds me very much of the "see you Jimmy" comedy hats available everywhere (and that I've included for illustrative purposes in the gallery below, if you scroll right), or a squashed set of bagpipes. Or maybe a wild haggis that's been smashed with hammers? I don't think that's the intention here, but it's what I see.
Clearly middle-aged sarcastic me isn't the target demographic here, and Sony is very excited about the collaboration, which delivered on their brief to "create something fun, distinctly original and fashion forward."
Image 1 of 2(Image credit: Sony / Chopova Lowena )Image 2 of 2(Image credit: Dover Street Market / Temu)A bag for the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, for sureChopova Lowena are Emma Chopova and Laura Lowena, and according to the press release they're a woman-centered, ethical employer creating "job opportunities for women passionate about rejuvenating cultural heritage through the preservation of traditional techniques. The objective of their design and production of distinctive garments is to usher in a system of ethical consumption with a focus on appreciating skill, craft, time and consideration for impact on the environment."
The duo "see music and fashion as deeply intertwined forms of expression that immerse individuals in their own worlds." The Alto bag is inspired by their own Sofia bag and also incorporates elements of their AW23 Pow Pow bag, creating what Sony says is "a totally unique accessory meant for the music-obsessed".
According to Chopova Lowena: "The Alto bag is here for every mood, every genre, and every tear wept to a playlist listened through your Sony headphones. You’re part of the Sony x Chopova Lowena family so no matter how you’re feeling, you’re never going through it alone.”
The Alto bag is available now. Of course, you can buy the headphones on their own (ie. without this bag) and you'd be making a great purchase if you did, since the WH-1000XM6 are some of the best over-ear headphones we've tested. Yes, we still recommend their older siblings (the excellent WH-1000XM4) as the best pick for most people owing to their incredible value and the excellent sound and feature-set, but if your budget stretches a little bit further, the XM6 are an excellent set of 2025 headphones.
You might also likeThere's a new champion – for now – in the contest to be the fastest AI to complete the original Pokémon Red video game, with ChatGPT-5 completely eclipsing its rivals.
GPT-5, the latest model from OpenAI, took just 6,470 steps to complete the 1998 Game Boy classic, eclipsing the previous record of 18,184 steps by ChatGPT-o3.
If it's hard to comprehend how many steps the main character, Red, had to make to defeat the Elite Four – 6,470 equates to around seven days of gameplay, compared to over 15 days for o3, the next best Pokémon model.
It's a stark contrast to earlier this year, when Gemini 2.5 and Claude 3.7 Sonnet were in a race to even get to the end of the game, let alone do so in a fast time.
Anthropic used Pokémon as a benchmark to showcase the prowess of its latest Claude model, combining it with a YouTube video in which developers discussed why GameFreak's iconic franchise was the perfect way to assess an AI model's problem-solving capabilities.
Now, just a few months later, AI models are able to complete these classic games faster and faster – and they're only going to improve.
All of AI's attempts to complete Pokémon have been livestreamed on platforms like Twitch, where channels like GPT_Plays_Pokemon have regular viewers and subscribers.
Having destroyed the previous record time for completing Pokémon Red, GPT-5 is now going to take on the sequel, Pokémon Crystal. The game, which was released in 2000, has double the amount of content to conquer, as you can venture back to the world of Kanto following your adventure in the Johto region.
GPT-5 Just Finished Pokemon Red! from r/singularityGotta train 'em all!(Image credit: Nintendo)GPT-5's Pokémon Red journey highlights a tactic young kids have used in the game for years: leveling up one Pokémon and neglecting the other five creatures in your party.
In the Reddit thread highlighting the AI model's accomplishment, the top comment from u/Ok_Business84 reads, "Learned that sticking to one Pokémon and hard tanking everybody is the easier way."
After nearly 30 years, I finally feel like my younger self has been validated. Back in 1999, I completed Pokémon Yellow with an overpowered Pikachu, and nothing else to show for it.
It would be cool to see GPT-5 play Pokémon less like 6-year-old me, and more like an accomplished player, building a varied team of creatures that can take on any battle in the game. This run feels like the AI brute-forced its way to victory, and while it achieved the goal it set out to achieve, it's not entirely viable in a regular playthrough.
You might also likeThe head of ChatGPT says OpenAI could implement ads on its products in the future, but only if they are "thoughtful and tasteful."
Speaking to The Verge, Nick Turley, the head of ChatGPT, was quizzed on the possibility of the AI chatbot getting ads in the future. While reluctant to respond, he did give an insight into how he views advertising for ChatGPT, and couldn't rule it out completely.
Turley said, "Look, since you’re really trying to get me to comment on ads, I have become humble enough not to make crazy, extreme, long-term statements on a question like that, because maybe there is a certain market where people aren’t willing to pay us, yet we want to offer the best, latest, and greatest. Maybe that would be a place to consider other indirect forms of monetization."
He added that if the company were to ever implement ads, they would need to do so in a "very, very careful and deliberate because I really think that the thing that makes ChatGPT magical is the fact that you get the best answer for you, and there’s no other stakeholder in the middle."
While that sounds pretty positive for the future of an ad-free ChatGPT experience, Turley couldn't rule it out altogether, instead opting for a more diplomatic approach. He said, "I’m humble enough not to rule it out categorically, but we’d have to be very thoughtful and tasteful about it."
Maybe more positive, however, is that he seems to think that if ads were to appear on OpenAI products, then it's likely to be on other offerings from the company, not the world's most popular AI chatbot with over 700 million weekly users.
He said, "We will build other products, and those other products can have different dimensions to them, and maybe ChatGPT just isn’t an ads-y product because it’s just so deeply accountable to your goals."
ChatGPT is ad free, but subscriptions will likely ramp upWhile Nick Turley's comments leave me feeling hopeful for an ad-free ChatGPT experience for the foreseeable future, I feel less positive about an even more heavily tiered platform that paywalls its best features.
Just yesterday, ChatGPT started to roll out Gmail connectivity, but its best capabilities are paywalled behind ChatGPT Pro, a $200 / £200 a month subscription.
As a ChatGPT Plus subscriber who pays $20 / £20 a month, I've noticed the sheer difference in capabilities between the paid version and the free one, and while I understand OpenAI needs to make money as a business, $240 / £240 a year feels like a steep ask.
I'm worried about the future of AI being paywalled behind premium subscriptions, and I think it's the direction we're heading in. Even companies like Google have offered premium AI subscriptions with the best Pixel smartphones for a year; however, following that initial period, the same Gemini AI capabilities become paid.
If subscriptions and basic free tiers are the way AI companies justify ad-free chatbots, then I'm more pro-ads than I ever thought I'd be. In fact, give me an ad-riddled ChatGPT with full access to the same as a Plus account for free; I'd take that over forking out a hefty amount of money every single month.
You might also likeApple’s best iPhones and iPads have all been imbued with 5G goodness, but MacBooks remain left out in the cold. There are hints now, though, that that could soon change, and I think this could bring with it some serious benefits.
The idea of a 5G MacBook hasn’t been put forward by a dodgy leaker or an industry analyst – no, it comes from Apple itself. According to Macworld, Apple’s macOS Tahoe code contains references to an unreleased Mac codenamed “t6050” that will feature an M5 Pro chip, indicating that it’s going to be part of the next generation of MacBook Pro laptops.
Crucially, the code suggests that this MacBook will come with a “Centauri” chip, Macworld claims. Centauri is the codename for Apple’s 5G modem, which found its way into the iPhone 16e under the C1 name. If Macworld’s report is accurate, that would make the MacBook Pro with M5 Pro chip the first Apple laptop to feature 5G connectivity.
The timing makes sense, as Apple outfitted its iPhone 16e with its first in-house 5G modem last year. With more control over the chip’s features and manufacturing process, Apple might feel that the time is right to bring 5G capabilities to its laptop range.
And with the efficiency of Apple silicon added to the mix, there would be less concern over the chip unduly draining your laptop’s battery.
Connectivity off the grid(Image credit: Apple)On the face of it, adding 5G to a MacBook might seem like a strange idea. After all, no one is about to hold a clunky laptop up to their ear to make a phone call. And when I first heard this rumor, I was pretty unconvinced.
But the idea has been growing on me over the past few months. Far from being an anachronism, 5G could actually bring some pretty upsides to your Apple laptop, both in terms of connectivity and security.
For instance, it could help you stay connected to the internet in places where Wi-Fi is unavailable, such as when you’re traveling or off the grid. As well as that, it would mean you wouldn’t need to connect to free Wi-Fi in bars and restaurants, avoiding what can be a serious security risk to your laptop.
Still, there’s no guarantee that Apple will ever actually release a 5G MacBook. While it has been rumored for many months now, the company could simply be testing the device and ultimately decide not to launch it.
But with the M5-series MacBooks expected to arrive in either late 2025 or early 2026, we might find out relatively soon.
You might also likeWindows 11 just got a new preview release, and there's quite a bit of work with AI here, including a new home page for the Recall ability and a wider deployment of the AI agent in the Settings app.
This is preview build 26100.506,1, which has been pushed out to testers in the Release Preview channel, and as you might guess, much of the fresh introductions on the AI front are for Copilot+ PCs only.
One of the most important moves is that the AI agent in Settings - which works as a natural language search to find the options you want easily - is now rolling out to Copilot+ laptops with AMD and Intel processors.
Previously, this ability was only available to Copilot+ PCs with Snapdragon X (Arm) CPUs, but it's now functioning with all of these devices (though the feature still only works when your primary language is set to English in Windows 11). Sadly, I don't have a Copilot+ device, so I'm more than a bit jealous, as I feel like this is very much an AI feature worth having - and those are a rarity.
Speaking of which, still in Copilot+ PCs territory, the Recall feature - for those who've turned it on, and that won't be everyone, even though it's a core pillar of Microsoft's drive with AI - now has a new home page which is based on your recent activity.
So, this surfaces your most-used apps and websites, and will also present you with the latest snapshots taken so you can quickly get back into tasks you were previously engaged in (assuming you have snapshots set to be saved in Recall, of course). Essentially, it's a bank of useful and personalized shortcuts to get back into what you were doing in a swifter manner.
Along with this, Click to Do (AI-powered context-sensitive suggestions) now comes with a short tutorial (an interactive one, apparently). This shows how it works to offer shortcuts with images or text, a useful touch for those new to the idea.
All of this is for Copilot+ PCs, but there are some fresh AI additions coming to all Windows 11 systems. That includes AI actions in File Explorer, which are shortcuts in a similar vein to Click to Do, based around editing images or summarizing documents.
With images (JPG and PNG formats) in File Explorer - which is the app that displays the folders on your desktop - there are now four AI-related actions. That includes a Visual Search (image search on the web), and the Erase Objects ability, which is AI-powered object removal in the Photos app - plus there's the self-explanatory Blur Background option in that app, too. On top of that, Remove Background will do just that with an image in the Paint app.
In the case of summarizing documents, however, this functionality is restricted - you need a Microsoft 365 subscription to benefit from AI actions here.
Away from AI, there are quite a few other changes with this new preview build, and a whole host of minor tweaks all over the place - check out Microsoft's extensive blog post for the full details.
Other nifty non-AI changes worth noting include Windows 11 users outside of Europe getting the ability to fully customize which widgets appear on the lock screen (previously this was exclusive to the European Economic Area).
Windows Hello - the secure login system - now has a revamped interface, and a bug where facial recognition failed has been fixed (plus fingerprint login now works better after the PC wakes from sleep).
(Image credit: Foxy burrow / Shutterstock / Microsoft)Analysis: The importance of being artificially intelligentThe agent for changing Windows 11 settings is one of the more useful applications for AI that I've seen introduced by Microsoft, so while it's good to see it coming to Copilot+ PCs that don't have an Arm processor, I'm still jealous that I'm missing out. Yes, I get it - you need that powerful NPU to make it work - but still, it doesn't feel great to not be receiving one of the genuinely laudable AI concepts that Microsoft has on the boil.
At any rate, as this is the Release Preview channel, this means the AI agent should hit the finished version of Windows 11 soon enough for those with the necessary hardware.
The rest of us can feel like we're missing out, or maybe you won't even care about this - or the other steps forward Microsoft has taken with AI here. Okay, so it's not that there wasn't anything else for normal (non-Copilot+) Windows 11 machines in this preview, but a fair chunk of the major moves were to do with AI.
And it's likely that the focus on AI features here might elicit some groans from quite a few folks - but despite that, and the relatively niche appeal of Copilot+ devices still, we can expect a lot more of Microsoft pushing this kind of tech.
Recent visions of the future of Windows from a couple of Microsoft executives have underlined the importance of AI (as well as the cloud and voice commands for input), so it's clear that this is a path Microsoft is going to be forging down with even more vigor in the coming years. In short: you'd best get used to this.
You might also likeWe're patiently counting down the days until the big Google Pixel 10 showcase on August 20, and ahead of the launch event there's a rumor that the Pixel 10 Pro Fold will be the first foldable to launch with an IP68 rating for dust and water protection.
This comes from WinFuture, in an article where most of the handset's technical details are presented, and it's the IP68 rating that really stands out. No other foldable on the market can match it, not even the IP48-rated Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7.
An IP68 phone is completely protected against dust getting in, and is watertight too: the exact definition depends on the phone and the manufacturer, but being able to survive for 30 minutes in water at a depth of 1.5 meters (nearly five feet) is typical.
The Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold offers IPX8 protection, like foldables such as the Motorola Razr 50 Ultra: this means a high level of waterproofing, but no guarantee that specks of dust and dirt aren't going to find their way into the housing.
A repeating rumorOf course, a foldable phone with a flexible screen and a hinge presents some very specific challenges when it comes to keeping out dust and water, and it will be quite the feat if Google has managed to get the Pixel 10 Pro Fold up to the required standard.
Given that we heard the same rumor from separate sources in June and in July, it's looking more and more likely that Google has indeed pulled off that feat – and it's going to be one of the major selling points of the handset, on top of whatever other upgrades we get treated to.
Another interesting tidbit from this report is that the storage will be upgraded from UFS 3.1 to UFS 4.0. It won't make a huge difference, but it will mean a speed increase, and should make the foldable phone feel snappier overall.
We will of course be covering the launch of the Pixel 10 Pro Fold and the other handsets in the series live on August 20, and we're expecting Google to provide a livestream of some description, so you'll be able to watch along wherever you are in the world.
You might also likeA cybercriminal has managed to break into the booking system used by numerous hotels in Italy and steal highly sensitive information on thousands of guests, experts have warned.
Recently, a threat actor with the alias mydocs took to underground hacking forums to advertise the sale of roughly 100,000 individual identity documents, including passport scans, ID cards, and more, which they claimed to have stolen it from multiple hotels across Italy.
At first, the claims were met with skepticism from the wider cybersecurity industry, however Italy’s technical agency for digital transformation, AGID, has now confirmed the authenticity of the breach.
Abusing stolen dataAt least ten hotels were struck, with the number possibly increasing in the coming weeks, AGID said, hinting it had “intercepted” an illegal sale of the documents.
"This data, once stolen, can be used for fraudulent purposes: from the creation of false documents to the opening of bank accounts, up to social engineering attacks and digital identity theft, with consequences for victims that can also be serious, both from an economic and legal point of view,” AGID said in a press release (machine translated) posted on its website.
It is possible that mydocs either inflated the numbers, or managed to steal years’ worth of sensitive data, since some of the hotels compromised have just a few dozen rooms. In any case, an official investigation is now under way.
The hospitality industry, given that it handles highly sensitive data, continues to be among the most targeted ones out there. Hotels and lodging, restaurants, event planning agencies, and tourism companies, are frequent victims of ransomware, impersonation, and data theft.
Victims are urged to remain vigilant with incoming communications, especially emails claiming to be coming from Italian hotels.
Via The Register
You might also likePeacemaker season 2 is less than a week from premiering on our screens and, to celebrate its impending release, HBO Max has unveiled one final trailer that's definitely not suitable to watch in public.
Released yesterday (August 14), the red band trailer is full of the gruesome action and raunchy humor we've come to expect from R-rated projects with DC Studios co-CEO James Gunn at the helm. Indeed, from mutilated bodies and numerous swear words, to an orgy that looks like it'll rival The Boys season 3's 'Herogasm' episode for the amount of nudity on show, it's a sizzle reel that's best seen in private. (Warning: viewer discretion is advised).
With Peacemaker season 2 set to arrive on August 21 (North and South America) and August 22 (everywhere else), this is the last piece of footage-based promotional material we're likely to see.
It's full of interesting clips, too. The returning hit show's first two teasers put this season's multiversal elements at the forefront – and, in the process, did little to address DC fans' concerns over its place in Gunn and Peter Safran's rebooted DC Universe (DCU). The adult-oriented TV Original's final trailer doesn't ignore those aspects, either, but it emphasises Rick Flag Sr's pursuit of the titular character – real name Chris Smith – who, spoiler, killed Flag Sr's son in 2021's The Suicide Squad.
References to Gunn's Superman movie, such as Lex Luthor's near-world-ending plan and the threat that metahumans (read: superpowered beings) pose, are also placed front and center. It seems, then, that the plot of Peacemaker's second season will split its time between the dimension known as the DCU and whatever parallel realities its cast discover via the Quantum Unfolding Chamber (QUC) – i.e. the interdimensional storage unit found in the home of Smith's dead father.
Does Peacemaker season 2's final trailer ruin a major plot point ahead of the show's return?Well, this doesn't look good... (Image credit: HBO Max/DC Studios)All in all, the third DCU Chapter One project's final round of footage is getting a lot of love from viewers. However, I think a lot of people have skipped over the fact that Peacemaker 2's latest teaser appears to spoil a huge moment that could have a major impact on its story.
Potentially big spoilers follow for Peacemaker season 2.
The trailer's final clip begins with a four-eyed alien, which appears to be carrying a dead, hairless cast, opening its own interdimensional door to the QUC. As it enters this seemingly infinite realm, it sees Smith and his self-installed bestie Adrian Chase/Vigilante burning... something. Long story short: Smith crudely tells the alien to leave, which sparks a somewhat amusing conversation between Smith and Chase.
...this isn't what it looks like, promise! (Image credit: HBO Max/DC Studios)Now, we don't know what the pair are doing, but I don't think they're having an interdimensional barbeque. In fact, I believe they're destroying evidence that could implicate them in someone's murder.
Think about it. The duo are wearing aprons and hazmat-style gloves covered in blood. As we learned time and again in season 1, Smith only asks for Chase's help when there's some form of dirty work to be done. Furthermore, the official trailer for Peacemaker season 2 showed Smith leading Chase through the QUC as the latter carried equipment that's usually reserved for cleaning, as well as a tense showdown with an alternate reality's Peacemaker.
To me, all of this evidence suggests Smith has accidentally killed someone. My belief is it's not just an ordinary person, either – indeed, I think it's the aforementioned Peacemaker.
Am I reading too much into this single clip? Perhaps but, before you dismiss the idea completely, let me show you part of the official logline for one of the best HBO Max shows' next entry: "In season 2, Peacemaker discovers an alternate world where life is everything he wishes it could be."
As it's implied, this other Smith/Peacemaker's life is markedly better than the DCU's version. The Smith we know could get jealous and, whether accidental or not, kill his multiversal variant, thereby allowing him to take the place of this parallel world's Smith, which is what season 2's various trailers have hinted at.
I guess we'll find out for sure once Peacemaker 2 launches with a two-episode premiere on HBO Max and more of the world's best streaming services in the near future. For now, get the lowdown on the series' return via my dedicated guide to Peacemaker season 2.
You might also likeA single missile can cost millions of dollars and only hit a single critical target. A low-equity, AI-powered cyberattack costs next to nothing and can disrupt entire economies, degrading national power and eroding strategic advantage.
The rules have changed: the future of warfare is a series of asynchronous, covert cyber operations carried out below the threshold of kinetic conflict. Battles will still be fought over land, sea, and sky, but what happens in the cyber domain could have a greater bearing on their outcome than how troops maneuver on the battlefield.
We were always heading in this direction, but AI has proven a dangerous accelerant. The entire military industrial base must become fortified against these risks, and that starts with continuous, autonomous validation of its cyber security defenses.
Today’s adversaries, whether state-sponsored actors or independent cybercrime syndicates, are deploying AI-driven agents to handicap critical systems across the entire military supply chain.
Stop them with our cybersecurity tools now.
The Case for Autonomous ResilienceToday’s adversaries, whether state-sponsored actors or independent cybercrime syndicates, are deploying AI-driven agents to handicap critical systems across the entire military supply chain. These attackers aren’t focused on headline-making digital bombs, but a slow attrition, applying continuous pressure to degrade functionality over time. They’re also working anonymously: AI-enabled cyberattacks are executed by autonomous agents or proxies, making attribution slow or impossible.
Consider a hypothetical attack on the U.S. Navy. The Navy depends on a vast, decentralized web of small and mid-sized suppliers for everything from propulsion components to shipboard software systems. While these systems and suppliers may coalesce into the most technologically advanced Navy in the world, their interdependence is almost akin to human biology, in the way that a hit to one system can thoroughly destabilize another.
An adversary doesn’t need to breach the Navy directly. Instead, they can launch persistent cyberattacks on the long tail of maritime subcontractors, degrading national capability over time instead of in one massive, headline-making blow.
Third-party vendors, which often lack the financial resources to properly patch vulnerabilities, may be riddled with unsewn wounds that attackers can use as an entry point. But major security vulnerabilities aren’t the only way in. AI-driven agents can autonomously compromise outdated email systems, misconfigured cloud services, or exposed remote access portals across hundreds of these suppliers.
The impacts of these attacks can look like “normal” disruptions, the result of human error or some missing piece of code: delayed component deliveries, corrupted design files, and general operational uncertainty. However, the ill effects accumulate over time, delaying shipbuilding schedules and weakening overall fleet readiness.
Emerging threatsThat’s not even accounting for sanctions. If equipment is damaged, and replacement parts or skilled maintenance teams are restricted, one attack has just crippled a nation’s chip manufacturing capacity—potentially for months or years.
These attacks also get smarter over time. AI agents are designed for continuous improvement, and as they sink deeper into a system, they become more adept at uncovering and exploiting weaknesses. The cascading damage limits recovery efforts, further delaying defense production timelines and dragging entire economies backwards.
Despite these emerging threats, most defense and industrial organizations still rely on traditional concepts of deterrents, built around visible threats and proportional response: think static defenses, annual audits, and reactive incident response. Meanwhile, adversaries are running autonomous campaigns that learn, adapt, and evolve faster than human defenders can respond. You cannot deter what you cannot detect, and you cannot retaliate against what you cannot attribute.
Facing such dire stakes, defense contractors must exploit their own environments before attackers do. That means deploying AI-powered agents across critical infrastructure—breaking in, chaining weaknesses, and fixing them—to achieve true resilience. If the window for exploitation narrows, and the cost of action rises. “Low equity” means little against a high chance of failure.
Leveraging AI in Proactive DefenseFighting fire with fire sounds simple enough, but there are serious risks involved. The same AI tools that bolster organizations’ defenses against smarter, more covert attacks can also create new vulnerabilities. Large language models (LLMs) may cache critical weaknesses in their model architecture, and third-party components that contribute to the models’ effectiveness can also introduce new vulnerabilities.
Any AI-powered security tools should undergo a comprehensive vetting process to identify potential risks and weaknesses. Model architecture and history, data pipeline hygiene, and infrastructural requirements–such as digital sovereignty compliance–are all factors to consider when augmenting security with AI-enabled tools.
Even the cleanest, most secure AI program is not a failsafe. Defenders that rely too heavily on AI will find themselves facing many of the same problems that plague their counterparts who use outdated scanners.
A mix of false confidence and alert fatigue from automated risk notifications can lead to missed critical vulnerabilities. In a national security scenario, that can lose a battle. That can lose a war. Real, attack-driven testing makes up for where AI lacks, and when used in tandem with it, creates an ironclad shield against AI-enabled adversaries.
Artificial intelligence is a boon for society and industry—but it is also a weapon, and a dangerous one at that. Fortunately, it’s one that we can wield for ourselves.