China Clamps Down on High-Speed Traders, Removing Servers

An anonymous reader shares a report: China is pulling the plug on a key advantage held by high-frequency traders, removing servers dedicated to those firms out of local exchanges’ data centers, according to people familiar with the matter.

Commodities futures exchanges in Shanghai and Guangzhou are among those that have ordered local brokers to shift servers for their clients out of data centers run by the bourses, according to the people, who said the move was led by regulators. The change doesn’t only affect high-frequency firms but they are likely to feel the biggest impact. The Shanghai Futures Exchange has told brokers they need to get equipment for high-speed clients out by the end of next month, while other clients need to do so by April 30, the people said.

The clampdown will hit China’s army of domestic high-frequency firms but will also impact a swathe of global firms that are active in the country. Citadel Securities, Jane Street Group and Jump Trading are among the foreign firms whose access to servers is being affected, the people said, asking not to be named as the matter is private.


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Ferrari doing what it does best: The 12Cilindri review

It has been nearly 80 years since Ferrari unleashed its first V12-powered sports car upon the world with the 125 S. In 1947, its debut year, the 125 S secured Ferrari’s first-ever race victory for the automaker, along with five other wins in the 14 events it competed in that season.

Although it was soon replaced by the 159 S, the success of the 125 S kickstarted Ferrari’s storied history of producing some of the most desirable 12-cylinder performance cars known to man. And while the Italian automaker has come to embrace forced induction and electrification in recent years, its legacy of building stunning front-engine, rear-wheel drive machines with spectacular V12s stuffed into their engine bays continues with the 12Cilindri Spider.

Ferrari hasn’t shied away from leveraging cutting-edge technology in the development of its latest models, but the company also understands the value of a good throwback. As the successor to the 812 Superfast, the 12Cilindri boasts clever performance technologies, like a sophisticated active aero system and a four-wheel steering system that can manage each corner independently to enhance response, but it’s ultimately an homage to the heady days of late ’60s luxury grand touring. The exterior styling takes obvious inspiration from the 365 GTB Daytona, while its lack of all-wheel drive, turbocharging, and electric assistance bucks trends that have become nearly inescapable in modern performance cars.

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Engadget Podcast: Why did Apple choose Gemini for next-gen Siri?

Apple’s next-gen Siri is still far off, but this week the company announced that it’ll be using Google’s Gemini AI for its new foundation models. In this episode, Devindra and Engadget’s Igor Bonifacic discuss why Apple teamed up with Google again, instead of OpenAI or Anthropic. Also, they chat about Meta’s Reality Lab layoffs, which is refocusing the company on AI hardware like its smart glasses.

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Topics

  • Meta announces 1000+ layoffs, closes 3 VR studios as it shifts focus to AI hardware – 2:12

  • Gemini can now pull context from the rest of your Google apps including photos and Youtube history – 12:31

  • Framework raises the price of its desktop by $460 because of the global RAM shortage – 18:36

  • NVIDIA may revive the RTX 3060 and kill off 5070 Ti due to its VRAM demands – 21:57

  • Apple creates a subscription bundle for Pro creative apps like Final Cut Pro, Logic, and others – 23:00

  • Tesla’s Full Self Driving is also going subscription only, a year costs $999 – 29:15

  • Matthew McConaughey trademarks himself to fight unauthorized AI likenesses – 33:27

  • Apple announces that its long delayed ’smarter Siri’ will be powered by Google Gemini – 35:15

  • X finally responds to Grok’s CSAM and nudity generation with limits – 51:46

  • Cursor claims their AI agents wrote 1M+ lines of code to make a web browser from scratch, are developers cooked? – 57:52   

Credits

Host: Devindra Hardawar
Guest: Igor Bonafacic
Producer: Ben Ellman
Music: Dale North and Terrence O’Brien

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/engadget-podcast-why-did-apple-choose-gemini-for-next-gen-siri-150000993.html?src=rss

Android 16 Makes Split Screen Easier on Smaller Screens

Stock Android added the concept of App Pairs back in Android 15. You choose two apps to use in split screen mode, add a shortcut to the paired apps to the home screen, and it’s now trivially easy to trigger split screen multitasking (instead of having to perform multiple tap and drag gestures).

It sounds neat, but I never really used it, because on my small Pixel 9a, using apps in 50:50 split-screen mode is hardly user-friendly. There’s just not enough room on the screen for each app to take up half of it and still be usable. But that changed with Android 16, thanks to a small update to how split screen works.

In Android 16, the split screen ratios for app pairs are much more flexible. You can have two apps in 70:30, or even 90:10. And once you get used to the idea of 90:10 split screen multitasking, things really start to flow.

For example, I have an app pair for my Chrome and Gemini apps. Chrome for browsing, and Gemini for research.

90:10 split screen multitasking on Andorid

Credit: Khamosh Pathak

Chrome is usually my maximized app, taking up 90% of my screen space, while Gemini is docked at the bottom, minimized. But with one tap, Gemini comes to the front and Chrome takes a back seat. And I can keep switching between the two just as easily. This is much faster than using Android’s multitasking menu.

How to set up App Pairs with 90:10 split screen multitasking

To set up an App Pair and try this out for yourself, you’ll first need to create a split screen pair. Open the two apps that you want to pair, and then go to the multitasking view (swipe up from the Home bar and hold for a second). Tap the name of the first app you want to open and choose the Split screen option. Then choose another app to pair it with. You’ll now enter a 50:50 split screen view. Grab the handle in between the two apps and drag it all the way up or all the way down to trigger the 90:10 split. Alternatively, you can also set up a 70:30 split by leaving some extra space on your second app.

Triggering split screen feature for Android.

Credit: Khamosh Pathak

Now, go back to the multitasking view, tap on one of the app names, and choose the Save app pair option.

Saving app pairs on Android.

Credit: Khamosh Pathak

After that, you’ll find the app pair as a shortcut on your home screen. Tap on it to launch your pre-configured app combo. And yes, it does remember your last used split screen ratio, saving you some valuable setup time.

Rapha reveals first kit collection with USA Cycling

Rapha has released its first designs for USA Cycling, with the new kit collection spanning road, track, mountain and BMX.

The brand will be the kit provider for the USA’s cycling athletes from 2026 through to the end of 2029, which will see it supply the home nation at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.

Rapha says the kit “evokes the lightness and grace of a rider in full flight” and “mirrors the explosive energy of a new generation of American talent”.

The collection is said to draw inspiration from the 1984 Games, which the brand calls a watershed moment for American cycling – the home nation took nine medals in Los Angeles.

BMX racer Ava Corley wearing Rapha USA Kit
The partnership is taking Rapha into new disciplines, such as track, BMX racing and BMX freestyle. Rapha

Recognisable elements from the Stars and Stripes are blended with a sense of movement.

Rapha says a lightspeed pattern is at the centre of the designs, adding to a long tradition of using patterns to express motion and speed in sportswear.

Aesthetics are matched with functional performance, with the pattern said to be a response to a specific request from USA Cycling athletes for a lighter-coloured kit suited to hot conditions. 

MTB racer Kate Courtney wearing Rapha USA Kit
Kate Courtney will be looking to take Gold on home soil. Rapha

Stars and Stripes detail features on the sleeves of the Rapha USA Cycling jerseys, with the left arm showcasing a navy Rapha armband and script logo.

Five unique ‘story labels’ are part of the collection, celebrating the full range of USA Cycling disciplines.

Clara Brown, track and road para cyclist wearing Rapha USA Kit
Rapha and USA Cycling are plotting to take success in this graph-paper-esque design. Rapha

Fran Millar, Rapha CEO, says: “This kit represents over a decade of world-class competition and innovation. We’ve left no stone unturned so that when USA Cycling athletes show up for their country, they can stand on the start line with total confidence.”

Hard Drive Prices Have Surged By an Average of 46% Since September

Tom’s Hardware: Extensive research into the pricing of some of the best hard drives on the market for large capacity, economical storage indicates that prices are beginning to increase sharply, with some of the most popular models on the market seeing increases upwards of 60%. According to research from ComputerBase, pricing analysis on 12 of the most popular mainstream drives on the market indicates an average price increase of 46% over the last 4 months.

While the research and price checks on these drives track movement based on European prices (ComputerBase is a German outlet), Tom’s Hardware checks on similar or identical SKUs in the U.S. indicate that the trends are indeed replicated, or perhaps worse, on the other side of the pond. CB reports that various drives like Seagate’s IronWolf NAS line, Toshiba’s Cloud Scale Capacity Drives, Western Digital’s WD Red, and Seagate’s BarraCuda lines are all showing price increases of between 23% and 66%. As noted, the average price increases clock in at 46% since September 2025.


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What People Are Getting Wrong This Week: Is Gravity Ending?

There is a rumor going around online—on Reddit, Facebook, TikTok, and (I assume) Friendster—that gravity will stop working for seven seconds on August 12. Here is part of the warning posted online:

In November 2024, a secret NASA document titled “Project Anchor” leaked online. The project’s budget is $89 billion, and its goal is to survive a 7-second gravitational anomaly expected on August 12, 2026, at 14:33 UTC

Key facts:• Duration: 7.3 seconds.• Expected casualties: 40-60 million.

What will happen: 1-2 seconds: Everything not secured will rise (people, vehicles, animals).3-4 seconds: Objects will continue to rise to 15-20 meters.5-6 seconds: Panic and chaos will ensue as people hit ceilings.7 seconds: Gravity returns, and everything falls from height.

Expected consequences:• 40 million deaths from falls.• Infrastructure destruction.• Economic collapse lasting over 10 years.• Mass panic.

This is a shockingly irresponsible prediction filled with misinformation. In a theoretical world where gravity was optional, the death toll would ultimately be much greater, but it would come from earthquakes and tidal waves, not fall damage.

What would happen if gravity stopped working for seven seconds?

We’ll have to wait until August for observational data about the Great Gravity Switch-Off, but I wanted to be prepared, so I asked Joel Meyers, a theoretical cosmologist and professor at Southern Methodist University, what we can expect on August 12. He said that most of us would survive the initial period of weightlessness without injury, and there’s no reason to tie yourself to the sofa. “It depends on where you are in terms of latitude, but for somebody in, say, New York City, in seven seconds with no gravity, you’d expect to sort of slowly drift upward by about two feet off the surface of the Earth.”

So, shockingly, conspiracy theorists on the internet are wrong: you wouldn’t “rise to 15-20 meters;” you wouldn’t even hit your head on the ceiling. You’d just float—unless you leapt into the air at the right moment. “An average person who could jump about a foot and a half would actually end up jumping about 64 feet in the air without gravity,” Meyers said.

Gravity fears assuaged

Before I spoke to a patient theoretical cosmologist, I was concerned that the lack of gravity inside my body might cause my atoms to detach from one another and I’d dissolve into dust, which I am generally not in favor of. “Gravity itself doesn’t play a role in holding us together,” Meyers said. “The structure of our bodies are not gravitational, but electromagnetic.”

Another personal gravity fear involves breathing. Since gravity holds the atmosphere to earth, wouldn’t all the air be instantly ejected into space instead of staying in my lungs where it belongs? Nope. Decompression would happen, but it would take time. “The upper layers of the atmosphere would start to float out into space, being pushed away by the layers of atmosphere below them,” Meyers said, “But a few seconds wouldn’t be long enough for us to lose all of the atmosphere around the Earth.”

When the gravity turns back on, though, it would create a air pressure wave that would disrupt weather patterns in ways we couldn’t possibly predict. Worse than that would be the effect of sudden gravity loss on the planet itself. “This is where things get a little more catastrophic,” Meyers said. “In the absence of gravity, there’s nothing to fight against that pressure that exists in the core of the Earth or the mantle or the crust. The Earth wouldn’t instantaneously explode—it takes time for the mass to move in response to the pressure and to the forces—but there would certainly be a lot of tectonic activity.”

But it gets worse. After seven seconds, the Earth would clump back together, which “would create an impulse that would spread throughout the world in terms of global earthquakes in ways that are really difficult to predict in detail,” Meyers said.

The best vehicles to be in when the gravity goes off

If you’re going anywhere on August 12, make sure you’re not traveling by car. The lack of gravity means your wheels would leave the road, so your ability to steer or brake would be gone. “You would effectively just be continuing in a straight line at whatever speed you were traveling just before gravity turned off,” Meyers said, so expect traffic delays on the 405 as every car crashes into every other car, tree, and barrier. Airplanes and submarines would be safe, though, which brings me to my personal plan for August 12.

How I’ll survive gravity-free day

Since I am not on NASA’s list of chosen people, I am going to ride this thing out inside the metal womb of a deep sea submersible. The submersible is a closed system designed to withstand changes in external pressure, negating any atmospheric effect. The turmoil of the ocean rising then falling would likely cause massive tidal waves, but not where I am, under the sea.

While the rest of you suckers are dealing with the aftereffects of unimaginable global earthquakes and magma flows, I’ll be chilling in my submarine, playing Angry Birds. When the time is right, I’ll return triumphantly to the surface to rule over the ruined planet. “I think that’s a very solid plan; [it] really does cover a lot of the bases,” Meyers said.

The bottom line: Is gravity going to turn off on August 12?

I felt dumb doing it, but I asked Meyers point-blank what the chances are that the internet is right about gravity ending on August 12. He said, “it is very far outside the realm of possibility.”

There is no secret NASA document titled “Project Anchor,” and there’s no way to turn off gravity. “Gravity is an inherent property of space-time,” Meyers explained, closing the book on one the year’s dumbest conspiracy theories.

Linux 7.0 Looks To Enable Intel TSX By Default On Capable CPUs For Better Performance

A patch queued up into tip/tip.git’s x86/cpu Git branch ahead of the upcoming Linux 6.20~7.0 kernel cycle enables the Intel Transactional Synchronization Extensions (TSX) functionality by default on the mainline kernel for capable CPUs and those not affected by side-channel attacks due to TSX Async Abort (TAA) and similar vulnerabilities. For newer Intel CPUs with safe TSX support, this change can mean better performance with the kernel defaults…

ASUS, Gigabyte And NVIDIA Clarify GeForce RTX 5070 Ti And 5060 Ti 16GB Availability

ASUS, Gigabyte And NVIDIA Clarify GeForce RTX 5070 Ti And 5060 Ti 16GB Availability
No, ASUS is not designating its GeForce RTX 5070 Ti or the 16GB version of its GeForce RTX 5060 Ti graphics cards as end of life, despite reports to the contrary. In a statement issued this morning, ASUS clarified where things stand in regards to its GeForce RTX 50 series models with 16GB of VRAM and blamed apparent erroneous reports on media

Mother of one of Elon Musk’s offspring sues xAI over sexualized deepfakes

Ashley St Clair, the influencer and mother of one of Elon Musk’s children, has sued the billionaire’s AI company, accusing its Grok chatbot of creating fake sexual imagery of her without her consent.

In the lawsuit, filed in New York state court, St Clair alleged that xAI’s Grok first created an AI-generated or altered image of her in a bikini earlier this month.

St Clair claims she made a request to xAI that no further such images be made, but nevertheless “countless sexually abusive, intimate, and degrading deepfake content of St. Clair [were] produced and distributed publicly by Grok.”

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Netflix will give WBD movies 45-day theater exclusivity if deal goes through

The fate of Warner Bros. Discovery remains the biggest story in Hollywood, with Paramount Skydance refusing to back down from its rival bid to the proposed Netflix acquisition of the company. If the Netflix deal does go through, the company’s co-chief executive, Ted Sarandos, has attempted to ease concerns around what that could mean for theaters.

In an interview with The New York Times, Sarandos responded to a question about his company’s commitment to the theatrical business by insisting that he has no interest in bringing a swift end to it. “We will run that business largely like it is today, with 45-day windows,” he said. “I’m giving you a hard number. If we’re going to be in the theatrical business, and we are, we’re competitive people — we want to win. I want to win opening weekend. I want to win box office.”

Prior to this new NYT interview’s publication, Deadline reported that it had been told by sources that Netflix was supportive of a 17-day window, which would obviously be far more damaging to theaters. This came after the Stranger Things finale reportedly banked north of $25m during its brief theatrical run over New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day.

Sarandos was also asked if he regretted saying the theatrical business as we know it today is an “outmoded” idea. He told the NYT: “You have to listen to that quote again. I said ‘outmoded for some.’ I mean, like the town that ‘Sinners’ is supposed to be set in does not have a movie theater there. For those folks, it’s certainly outmoded. You’re not going to get in the car and go to the next town to go see a movie.” (Movies are actually nascent technology in Sinners, which is set in the 1930s. Bad example, Ted!) He went on to explain that for someone like his daughter, who lives in Manhattan and has a number of theaters within walking distance of her home, the term does not apply in the same way.

The Netflix co-chief exec’s latest comments seem to be designed to appease theater owners as much as the movie-going public, after a number of chains opposed the proposed WBD sale. “Such an acquisition will further consolidate control over production and distribution of motion pictures in the hands of a single, dominant, global streaming platform in a market that is already highly concentrated,” said trade organization Cinema United in a statement to Congress.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/tv-movies/netflix-will-give-wbd-movies-45-day-theater-exclusivity-if-deal-goes-through-141223786.html?src=rss

‘RageCheck’ Points Out Manipulative Language in News Articles

If you don’t like how the internet makes you feel right now, you’re not alone. The entire ecosystem seemingly exists to manipulate you, which can make finding clarity hard. I’ve written about how to avoid anxiety bait, which can be an important step toward healthy and productive engagement, but an important step is recognizing when you’re being manipulated. RageCheck is a potentially useful tool here.

Built using concepts from social science research, this website can analyze any link or screenshot. It points out examples of potentially manipulative language, from us-versus-them framing to emotionally loaded phrasing. “The system analyzes text for linguistic patterns commonly associated with manipulative framing—language optimized to provoke high-arousal reactions over understanding,” says the methodology page. “It does not assess factual accuracy or political bias.”

Using the site is simple: just paste a link to an article and hit Enter. After a few moments, you’ll see a statistical breakdown of the potentially manipulative language in the piece across five categories—emotional heat, us versus them, moral outrage, black-and-white thinking, and fight picking. The article is excerpted below, with examples of these tactics highlighted. In the left panel you’ll see a “Bait Score,” which is an attempt to calculate how manipulative the article is being. Below that, you’ll see a list of the potentially manipulative techniques employed in the article.

None of this is intended to be used as an alternative to fact checking or serve as some kind of truth-detecting machine. “A high score means content uses manipulative framing—it doesn’t mean the underlying claims are false,” says the about page. “Conversely, a low score doesn’t mean content is true.”

It’s worth pointing out that the techniques this tool detects also aren’t necessarily bad. Some news stories really should inspire moral outrage, especially in the context of an opinion piece or editorial. Regardless, there’s still value in identifying those techniques.

Basically, this is a tool that can help you think critically about the media you’re consuming, not do that critical thinking for you. Use it if you want to learn a little bit about the kinds of rhetorical tricks you might be vulnerable to.

Code.org: Use AI In an Interview Without Our OK and You’re Dead To Us

theodp writes: Code.org, the nonprofit backed by AI giants Microsoft, Google and Amazon and whose Hour of AI and free AI curriculum aim to make world’s K-12 schoolchildren AI literate, points job seekers to its AI Use Policy in Hiring, which promises dire consequences for those who use AI during interviews or take home assignments without its OK.

Explaining “What’s Not Okay,” Code.org writes: “While we support thoughtful use of AI, certain uses undermine fairness and honesty in the hiring process. We ask that candidates do not […] use AI during interviews and take-home assignments without explicit consent from the interview team. Such use goes against our values of integrity and transparency and will result in disqualification from the hiring process.”

Interestingly, Code.org CEO Partovi last year faced some blowback from educators over his LinkedIn post that painted schools that police AI use by students as dinosaurs. Partovi wrote, “Schools of the past define AI use as ‘cheating.’ Schools of the future define AI skills as the new literacy. Every desk-job employer is looking to hire workers who are adept at AI. Employers want the students who are best at this new form of ‘cheating.'”


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Meta is closing down its VR meeting rooms as part of its wider cull

Meta is killing the standalone Workrooms app on February 16, 2026. The company presented Workrooms as a virtual reality space where teams can meet and collaborate in an immersive environment when it launched the product. Now Meta says its Horizon platform has evolved enough to support “a wide range of productivity apps and tools,” so it “made the decision to discontinue Workrooms as a standalone app.”

The company recently slashed its spending on the metaverse and started the process to lay off more than 1,000 employees from its Reality Labs division. Due to those layoffs and organizational changes, it closed three of its VR studios. Reality Labs had lost more than $70 billion since 2021, and Meta told Engadget that it had decided to shift some of its investments from the metaverse towards wearables, such as its AI-powered Ray-Ban smart glasses. The company is also discontinuing Horizon managed services, its subscription service that helps organizations manage their Quest headsets, in February.

Users will no longer be able to access the Workrooms app or any of their data in it starting on February 16. Meta is allowing people to download their data if they need it until that date.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/meta-is-closing-down-its-vr-meeting-rooms-as-part-of-its-wider-cull-140000422.html?src=rss

New Schwalbe Pro One Allroad combines road-tyre speed with gravel toughness for “extreme conditions of Paris–Roubaix”

Schwalbe has unveiled the new Pro One Allroad tyre, which is said to combine road-race performance with the toughness of gravel tyres for the extreme conditions of races such as Paris–Roubaix.

Launched at the Velofollies trade show, Schwalbe says it began developing a tyre that excels in wet and rough road bike races a decade ago, with the S-One road tyre that was raced by Martin Elmiger at the 2015 Paris–Roubaix.

Elmiger finished the race in fifth, having suffered no punctures – and with a tubeless setup, which was unusual for road bikes at the time. 

Pro One Allroad details

Schwalbe Pro One Allroad tyres tread pattern.
The tyre is said to excel in the wet, rough conditions you find at races such as Paris–Roubaix and Strade Bianche. Stan Portus / Our Media

The new Pro One Allroad is said to use the same tread as the S-One, which is suited to all-road riding. But the rest of the tyre has come on some way since the model raced by Elmiger. 

The road bike tyre uses Schwalbe’s Race Pro construction. This has three carcass layers at the sidewall to minimise the risk of flats, while the V-Guard puncture belt adds further protection under the tread. By optimising the carcass construction, Schwalbe says it could also reduce rolling resistance.

The Pro One Allroad has Schwalbe’s Addix Race compound. This is used across the brand’s Pro Race tyres, but it has been fine-tuned for the Allroad tyre to help it deliver “noticeably better puncture protection, precise wet grip, and the race performance that ambitious riders expect”. 

Elsewhere, the road bike tyre is manufactured with fair trade rubber and uses recycled carbon black from Schwalbe’s recycling facilities. This is part of Schwalbe’s steps towards “greater circularity” and better use of resources. 

The Schwalbe Pro One Allroad is compatible with hookless rims and is available in three sizes: 30mm, 35mm and 40mm. 

Schwalbe’s product manager for drop-bar bikes, Oscar Fronhoff, says this range of widths means, “Even a gravel bike can be converted to a race bike”. 

Schwalbe is yet to confirm pricing. 

New gravel tyres

Schwalbe has also announced its new G-One gravel tyres, the RS, R and RX. These tyres use the same tread patterns as the Pro version, but with Schwalbe’s Race carcass as opposed to Race Pro. 

They also have the brand’s RaceGuard puncture protection rather than the top-spec V-Guard belt, and use the Addix Green compound. 

While the Addix Race and Addix Green compounds are both said to aid Schwalbe’s sustainability goals, it says the Green version is “even more resource efficient”. 

The G-One gravel tyres cost €49.90, around €35 less than its Pro gravel tyres. 

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