Sony is giving TCL control over its high-end Bravia TVs

TCL is taking majority ownership of Sony’s Bravia series of TVs, the two companies announced today.

The two firms said they have signed a memorandum of understanding and aim to sign binding agreements by the end of March. Pending “relevant regulatory approvals and other conditions,” the joint venture is expected to launch in April 2027.

Under a new joint venture, Huizhou, China-headquartered TCL will own 51 percent of Tokyo, Japan-headquartered Sony’s “home entertainment business,” and Sony will own 49 percent, per an announcement today, adding:

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Akai’s MPC XL groovebox is the most powerful device the company has ever made

Akai just revealed its most powerful standalone groovebox, the MPC XL. For the uninitiated, the MPC has been around since the 1980s and pretty much defined hip hop from that era. The line has continuously iterated to keep up with the times and the XL looks to be the baddest of them all.

First of all, it offers four times the processing power of previous MPCs, which is enough to load up to 32 virtual instruments at the same time. This is assisted by a full 16GB of RAM, which is a whole lot in this era of AI tomfoolery. The XL can handle 16 audio tracks simultaneously. In my experience with previous units, this is more than enough for a full song.

It runs on a proprietary OS and features a 10-inch OLED touchscreen for making adjustments. There are also dozens of knobs and buttons to play with, including 16 knobs that integrate with the display for real-time feedback.

The XL features a step sequencer, but this is an MPC. The real star attraction are those 16 drum pads. These pads can be set to trigger samples and hits, but can also be programmed to initiate effects and do all kinds of other stuff. Each pad has four quadrants, one for each corner, and they are all fully adjustable.

Looking for even more nuanced control? There are two assignable touch-strips and plenty of short-cut keys. It has built-in microphone preamps, phono inputs for sampling, instrument inputs and numerous other connectivity options. This is a true flagship in every sense of the word. It’s also very, very large.

The MPC may have started as a hip hop machine, but newer models are useful for any genre of music. To that end, it comes with an extensive collection of plugins, samples and effects. These even include some plugins made by rival company Native Instruments.

The software can handle stuff like stem separation, time-stretching and more. The workflow has been heavily inspired by modern DAWs, with a full arrangement view available on that OLED.

The MPC XL is a standalone unit, so it doesn’t need a computer or anything like that. The power requirements here, however, don’t allow for batteries. This thing has to be plugged in, much like Native Instruments’ Maschine+. It’s available right now and costs a whopping $2,900. This is a serious machine with a serious price tag, just like Roland’s recently-released TR-1000 drum machine.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/audio/akais-mpc-xl-groovebox-is-the-most-powerful-device-the-company-has-ever-made-183952483.html?src=rss

Palantir CEO Says AI To Make Large-Scale Immigration Obsolete

AI will displace so many jobs that it will eliminate the need for mass immigration, according to Palantir CEO Alex Karp. Bloomberg: “There will be more than enough jobs for the citizens of your nation, especially those with vocational training,” said Karp, speaking at a World Economic Forum panel in Davos, Switzerland on Tuesday. “I do think these trends really do make it hard to imagine why we should have large-scale immigration unless you have a very specialized skill.”

Karp, who holds a PhD in philosophy, used himself as an example of the type of “elite” white-collar worker most at risk of disruption. Vocational workers will be more valuable “if not irreplaceable,” he said, criticizing the idea that higher education is the ultimate benchmark of a person’s talents and employability.


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Earth is having some issues, so let’s enjoy the Webb telescope’s new nebula image

Sometimes, you just need to give your mind a little vacation. And these days, outer space sounds like as good a destination as any. Thankfully, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is here to give us a dazzling new image of the Helix Nebula.

Discovered in the early 19th century, the Helix Nebula resides in the constellation Aquarius. (Cue The 5th Dimension.) At about 655 light-years away, it’s one of Earth’s closest planetary nebulae. When zoomed farther out, it’s easy to see why it’s been nicknamed the Eye of God or Eye of Sauron. This 2004 image from the Hubble telescope illustrates that.

An eye-like nebula in space
A wider view of the same nebula from 2004
NASA / ESA / C.R. O’Dell (Vanderbilt University) / M. Meixner / P. McCullough / G. Bacon ( STSI)

What we’re seeing in the nebula is, in a sense, a moment of death that lays the groundwork for a new birth. The dying star (out of frame in the closer new image) sheds its outer layers. As expelled gas and dust cool, they provide raw material that could someday form new stars and perhaps planetary systems.

The new image from Webb’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera) provides a much closer, higher-resolution view.

Pillar-like reddish knots in the Helix Nebula
Pillar-like reddish knots in the Helix Nebula

Those pillars you see are called cometary knots, and this image is our best view of those to date. “Here, blistering winds of hot gas from the dying star are crashing into colder shells of dust and gas that were shed earlier in its life, sculpting the nebula’s remarkable structure,” the ESA wrote in its press release.

The knots’ colors represent temperature and chemistry. Hints of blue indicate the hottest gas (energized by ultraviolet light). The yellow regions, where hydrogen atoms form molecules, are farther from the nebula’s nucleus (and therefore cooler). On the edges, reddish-orange regions depict the coolest material, where gas thins and dust begins to form.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/science/space/earth-is-having-some-issues-so-lets-enjoy-the-webb-telescopes-new-nebula-image-181049901.html?src=rss

Crypto News Outlet Cointelegraph Loses 80% of Traffic After Google Penalty For Parasitic Blackhat SEO Deal

Cointelegraph, once one of the most-visited cryptocurrency news sites, has seen its monthly traffic plummet from roughly 8 million visits to 1.4 million — an 80% drop in three months — after Google issued a manual penalty in October 2025 for the outlet’s partnership with a blackhat SEO firm that used Cointelegraph’s domain authority to promote affiliate links to offshore casinos and betting platforms.

The CEO, who had no prior media experience, proceeded despite warnings from Google earlier in 2025 and repeated objections from the outlet’s three most senior editorial staff members throughout the year. The penalty removed Cointelegraph from Google News, Discover and search results entirely; a search for “Cointelegraph” now returns CoinDesk as the top result. Jon Rice, the former editor-in-chief, resigned on December 31st and described the situation as an “existential threat to business.”


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AMD Making It Easier To Install vLLM For ROCm

Deploying vLLM for LLM inference and serving on NVIDIA hardware can be as easy as pip3 install vllm. Beautifully simple just as many of the AI/LLM Python libraries can deploy straight-away and typically “just work” on NVIDIA. Running vLLM atop AMD Radeon/Instinct hardware though has traditionally meant either compiling vLLM from source yourself or AMD’s recommended approach of using Docker containers that contain pre-built versions of vLLM. Finally there is now a blessed Python wheel for making it easier to install vLLM without Docker and leveraging ROCm…

Canyon cutting up to 320 jobs in Koblenz and Amsterdam

Canyon announced to staff this morning that it will make up to 320 redundancies from its 1,600-strong workforce at its Koblenz and Amsterdam sites.

Canyon said: “After years of rapid growth, the company is now responding to a fundamentally changed market environment and is strategically adapting its organisational and cost structures to ensure long-term innovation and competitiveness.”

The statement cites the “consolidation” of the cycling industry, along with US tariffs, geopolitical tensions, and subdued economic forecasts, as the reason behind the job losses.

The statement adds: ”Following years of strong growth, particularly during the COVID-19 boom between 2020 and 2023, the company now aims to reduce complexity and simplify processes.”

‘We’ve become a bit bureaucratic’

Canyon Spectral:ON
Canyon was hit by a massive recall in late 2024. Canyon

In the statement, Roman Arnold, founder and newly re-appointed executive chairman of Canyon, said: “We are now laying the foundation to regain our operational power and strengthen our position at the top of the bicycle industry.

“Canyon is a close-knit community, united by a passion for cycling. It is therefore particularly painful that we have to part ways with valued colleagues. That makes it all the more important to me to navigate this process as responsibly as possible.”

Canyon says the “realignment is linked to sharpening Canyon’s DNA”, and that the brand will focus on “strategic growth areas”, including e-bikes.

Financial Times reported earlier this month that Arnold claimed he could raise annual revenue to €1bn, adding that the company had lost its direction due to changes in culture.

Speaking to the FT, Arnold said: “Here and there, internal silos have . . . developed, and we’ve become a bit bureaucratic.” 

The fresh round of redundancies follows lay-offs in the US in April 2025. Bicycle Retailer reported at the time that the job losses were part of “an ongoing process” that wasn’t tied to changing tariff policy.

Today’s news follows last week’s re-release of its Spectral:ON and Torque:ON electric bikes, which were recalled in late 2024 due to concerns over battery safety.

My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: The Beats Pill Portable Speaker

We may earn a commission from links on this page. Deal pricing and availability subject to change after time of publication.

Today’s Bluetooth speakers have features that make them better than they were just a few years ago, from USB-C for universal fast charging, to hi-res audio playback, to serving as battery backup for other devices. The Beats Pill speaker has all these features and more, making it a great choice, and it has dropped in price to $99.95 (down from $149.95), matching the lowest price it has reached since its recent release, according to price-tracking tools. For less than a hundred dollars, this speaker is a steal.

I’ve been trying out the Beats Pill speaker since it came out in summer 2024, and it has everything I could want in a portable speaker: stereo sound when connected to another compatible speaker, multi-room mode to play the same music on multiple speakers, the Find My Device feature in case you misplace it during a rager, and Class 1 Bluetooth for extended range.

Apple users will get the most out of the Pill, with seamless iOS compatibility for a smoother experience. (You can read about it in more detail on PCMag’s “excellent” review), but this Beats speaker is not just for Apple users: Android users can also connect to it with a Bluetooth 5.3 connection, but it only supports AAC and SBC codecs, so there are no Android-friendly codec options that will make the audio really pop.

When it comes to battery life, you can expect around 24 hours per charge, depending on your use, which is comparable to other speakers of its size. It has that classic, bright Beats sound signature, balanced yet bass-heavy. It is rated IP67 dust-proof and waterproof, so it can be submerged in water for up to 30 minutes. The biggest downside is that there is no adjustable EQ within the app, but that’s less important when it sounds so great out of the box.

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Mozilla introduces Firefox Nightly RPM package repository

Mozilla has announced
a repository with Firefox
Nightly channel
packages for RPM-based Linux distributions such as CentOS
Stream, Fedora, and openSUSE. Mozilla has provided a Debian repository
since 2023.

Note that this repository only includes the nightly builds of The
firefox-nightly package. Mozilla is not providing stable
builds as RPMs at this time. However, the package will not conflict
with a distribution’s regular firefox package; both packages
can be installed at the same time for those who wish to test the
nightly builds. See the blog post for instructions on setting up the
repository.

He Went To Prison for Gene-Editing Babies. Now He’s Planning To Do It Again

He Jiankui, the Chinese scientist who served three years in prison after creating the world’s first gene-edited babies in 2018, is now preparing for another attempt at germline editing — this time to prevent Alzheimer’s disease. In an interview, He said he has established an independent lab in south Beijing and raised $7 million from private donors to fund research into introducing a protective genetic mutation found in Icelandic populations.

The three girls born from his original experiment are now in primary school and healthy, according to He. Since germline editing remains banned in China, He said he plans to conduct future human trials in South Africa and has already spoken with contacts there. He estimates he needs two more years to complete mouse and monkey studies before seeking regulatory approval abroad. He said his lab is developing techniques to make 12 simultaneous genetic edits in a single embryo, targeting genes associated with cancer, cardiovascular disease, HIV, and other conditions. He is currently working on human cell lines and has not yet begun embryo experiments.


Read more of this story at Slashdot.

LLVM Adopts “Human In The Loop” Policy For AI/Tool-Assisted Contributions

Following recent discussions over AI contributions to the LLVM open-source compiler project, they have come to an agreement on allowing AI/tool-assisted contributions but that there must be a human involved that is first looking over the code before opening any pull request and similar. Strictly AI-driven contributions without any human vetting will not be permitted…

These Browser Extensions You’ve Used For Years May Now Be Spying On You

These Browser Extensions You’ve Used For Years May Now Be Spying On You
A few weeks ago, we covered DarkSpectre, a threat actor responsible for running numerous spyware campaigns that, combined, infected a total of at least 8.8 million Google Chrome, Mozilla FireFox, and Microsoft Edge users. One of the key ways this was done was through malicious extensions, with the caveat that said extensions did have legitimate

Europe Must Invest in Open Source AI or Cede To China, Schmidt Says

An anonymous reader shares a report: Europe must invest in its own open source artificial intelligence labs and address soaring energy prices, or it will quickly find itself dependent on Chinese models, former Google chief executive and tech investor Eric Schmidt said.

“In the US, the companies are largely moving to closed source, which means they’ll be purchased and licensed and so forth. And it is also the case that China is largely open weight, open source in its approach,” Schmidt said at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Tuesday. “Unless Europe is willing to spend lots of money for European models, Europe will end up using the Chinese models. It’s probably not a good outcome for Europe.”


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Roland’s Go:Mixer Studio is an affordable but capable mixer for budding recording engineers

Roland just unveiled the Go:Mixer Studio, a powerful entry in the company’s line of audio interfaces. This one promises to be a portable and affordable way to create high-quality recordings with a smartphone or PC.

The biggest news here are the 12 input channels and six output channels. This means that users can record multiple instruments at once and even run the signal through outboard gear if so desired. There are two XLR inputs on the back with phantom power, an instrument jack, stereo ¼-inch line-in jacks, an aux input, TRS MIDI ins and outs, two headphones jacks and stereo line outs for connecting monitor speakers.

It records up to 24-bit/192kHz audio, which will certainly get the job done. The device comes with built-in effects for mangling audio on the fly. Each audio input also has a dedicated EQ and compressor directly on the channel.

It connects via an app that’s available for iOS, Windows and MacOS. The iOS app actually lets users capture both video and multitrack audio at the same time, which should be a boon for streamers and content creators of all stripes. The Windows and MacOS apps allow for complete control of the mixer remotely.

As for the unit itself, there are several big knobs to adjust parameters and a color display. It’s also really small and light, making it easy to pack away in case of an unexpected recording session. The device can even be mounted on a mic stand.

The Roland Go: Mixer Studio is available right now and costs $300. The Roland Go line of audio products has been around for years, but this one seems like a major step up.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/audio/rolands-gomixer-studio-is-an-affordable-but-capable-mixer-for-budding-recording-engineers-163927262.html?src=rss