Commercial space stations
The first commercial orbital outpost is scheduled to launch this May.
For more than 20 years, the International Space Station has been humanity’s home in orbit. But with the ISS expected to retire in 2031, a new era is taking shape—one led by private companies.
NASA has invested over $500 million in commercial space stations, alongside projects funded independently. The first to launch is Vast Space’s Haven-1, planned for May 2026 aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9. The compact station will host crews of four for short 10-day missions, allowing paying customers to experience microgravity and carry out research.
More stations are on the way. Axiom Space plans its hotel-style Axiom Station for 2028, alongside Voyager Space’s Starlab, with Blue Origin’s Orbital Reef following around 2030. While early tickets will cost millions, these stations could open space to more people and push human life beyond Earth closer to reality.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
The first commercial orbital outpost is scheduled to launch this May.
For more than 20 years, the International Space Station has been humanity’s home in orbit. But with the ISS expected to retire in 2031, a new era is taking shape—one led by private companies.
NASA has invested over $500 million in commercial space stations, alongside projects funded independently. The first to launch is Vast Space’s Haven-1, planned for May 2026 aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9. The compact station will host crews of four for short 10-day missions, allowing paying customers to experience microgravity and carry out research.
More stations are on the way. Axiom Space plans its hotel-style Axiom Station for 2028, alongside Voyager Space’s Starlab, with Blue Origin’s Orbital Reef following around 2030. While early tickets will cost millions, these stations could open space to more people and push human life beyond Earth closer to reality.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
❤6
Sony Hands Control of Bravia TVs to TCL
Sony is selling a majority 51% stake of its TV business to China’s TCL, forming a new joint venture that will continue using the Sony and Bravia brands. The partnership, expected to start in April 2027 pending regulatory approvals, combines Sony’s high-quality picture, audio, and supply chain expertise with TCL’s advanced display technology, global reach, and cost-efficient manufacturing.
The deal marks the end of an era for Sony TVs, but could bring more affordable Bravia models blending Sony’s renowned image processing and sound with TCL’s innovation. Sony CEO Kimio Maki says the venture will create new value for customers, while TCL chair DU Juan expects it to boost brand value, scale, and optimize the supply chain.
Once a pioneer in LED, quantum dot, and OLED TVs, Sony now faces fierce competition in a low-margin market dominated by Samsung, LG, TCL, and others, making this strategic move a major shift in home entertainment.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
Sony is selling a majority 51% stake of its TV business to China’s TCL, forming a new joint venture that will continue using the Sony and Bravia brands. The partnership, expected to start in April 2027 pending regulatory approvals, combines Sony’s high-quality picture, audio, and supply chain expertise with TCL’s advanced display technology, global reach, and cost-efficient manufacturing.
The deal marks the end of an era for Sony TVs, but could bring more affordable Bravia models blending Sony’s renowned image processing and sound with TCL’s innovation. Sony CEO Kimio Maki says the venture will create new value for customers, while TCL chair DU Juan expects it to boost brand value, scale, and optimize the supply chain.
Once a pioneer in LED, quantum dot, and OLED TVs, Sony now faces fierce competition in a low-margin market dominated by Samsung, LG, TCL, and others, making this strategic move a major shift in home entertainment.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
❤4
Your heating may soon come from a data center
Data centers consume huge amounts of electricity—and almost all of it turns into heat. Until recently, that heat was wasted. Now, operators are starting to reuse it to warm homes, power district heating networks, and even heat greenhouses and fish farms.
Across Europe, new rules and incentives are pushing data centers to feed waste heat back into cities. In places like Stockholm and Helsinki, server heat already warms thousands of apartments. The benefits go both ways: lower cooling costs for data centers, cheaper heating for communities, and fewer emissions overall.
In cold regions, reusing waste heat can cut a data center’s power demand by 10–30% and sometimes even generate new revenue. From Nordic cities to university campuses, server rooms are quietly becoming neighborhood boilers—turning digital infrastructure into a local energy source.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
Data centers consume huge amounts of electricity—and almost all of it turns into heat. Until recently, that heat was wasted. Now, operators are starting to reuse it to warm homes, power district heating networks, and even heat greenhouses and fish farms.
Across Europe, new rules and incentives are pushing data centers to feed waste heat back into cities. In places like Stockholm and Helsinki, server heat already warms thousands of apartments. The benefits go both ways: lower cooling costs for data centers, cheaper heating for communities, and fewer emissions overall.
In cold regions, reusing waste heat can cut a data center’s power demand by 10–30% and sometimes even generate new revenue. From Nordic cities to university campuses, server rooms are quietly becoming neighborhood boilers—turning digital infrastructure into a local energy source.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
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Official statement from OnePlus regarding rumours claiming OnePlus is shutting down
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
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Scientists Create Living Computers Powered by Mushrooms
Researchers at The Ohio State University have shown that common edible mushrooms like shiitake can be grown and trained to work as organic computer memory. In the study, the fungi acted as memristors, electronic components that process and store data by remembering past electrical signals.
After being grown, dehydrated, and connected to electronic circuits, the mushroom-based devices behaved similarly to traditional chips. When used as RAM, they were able to switch electrical states at up to 5,850 signals per second with about 90% accuracy. Like a real brain, performance improved when more mushrooms were added to the circuit.
Because fungi are biodegradable, inexpensive to grow, and don’t depend on rare earth materials, researchers say mushroom-powered electronics could offer a low-energy, environmentally friendly path for future computing.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
Researchers at The Ohio State University have shown that common edible mushrooms like shiitake can be grown and trained to work as organic computer memory. In the study, the fungi acted as memristors, electronic components that process and store data by remembering past electrical signals.
After being grown, dehydrated, and connected to electronic circuits, the mushroom-based devices behaved similarly to traditional chips. When used as RAM, they were able to switch electrical states at up to 5,850 signals per second with about 90% accuracy. Like a real brain, performance improved when more mushrooms were added to the circuit.
Because fungi are biodegradable, inexpensive to grow, and don’t depend on rare earth materials, researchers say mushroom-powered electronics could offer a low-energy, environmentally friendly path for future computing.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
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The retrofit renaissance: reviving bridges and railways
High-tech diagnostics and discreet upgrades are helping engineers extend the life of aging bridges and rail corridors without rebuilding them.
Historic bridges and rail stations—many over a century old—are being carefully strengthened rather than replaced. Retrofitting is often more sustainable and economical, reducing emissions, saving materials, and preserving landmarks that shape local identity. Engineers now use 3D scans, digital twins, and sensors to map structures in detail and plan precise interventions. Much of the work is invisible: steel ties hidden inside masonry, carbon-fiber wraps applied out of sight, waterproofing beneath decks, or seismic systems installed below ground. From viaducts in the UK to stations in Istanbul, this approach upgrades safety and resilience while keeping the original character, proving that infrastructure can serve the present without erasing the past.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
High-tech diagnostics and discreet upgrades are helping engineers extend the life of aging bridges and rail corridors without rebuilding them.
Historic bridges and rail stations—many over a century old—are being carefully strengthened rather than replaced. Retrofitting is often more sustainable and economical, reducing emissions, saving materials, and preserving landmarks that shape local identity. Engineers now use 3D scans, digital twins, and sensors to map structures in detail and plan precise interventions. Much of the work is invisible: steel ties hidden inside masonry, carbon-fiber wraps applied out of sight, waterproofing beneath decks, or seismic systems installed below ground. From viaducts in the UK to stations in Istanbul, this approach upgrades safety and resilience while keeping the original character, proving that infrastructure can serve the present without erasing the past.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
❤1
Electric motors are weaning off rare earths
Once prized for performance, rare-earth magnets are becoming a strategic risk—forcing electric motor designers to rethink everything from torque to cooling.
The electric motor industry is hitting a supply-chain wake-up call. Around 95 percent of new EV motors still rely on rare-earth magnets, largely sourced from China. Export controls, price swings, and environmental concerns are turning that reliance into a growing risk.
Automakers and suppliers are now pushing rare-earth-free alternatives, including induction, wound-field, and switched-reluctance motors. BMW already uses magnet-free designs in production EVs, with Renault, Valeo, GM, and others following.
The shift brings trade-offs in size, heat, and torque density, but improved cooling and smarter designs are closing the gap. What’s emerging is a long-term pivot toward cost stability, supply security, and more resilient motor architectures.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
Once prized for performance, rare-earth magnets are becoming a strategic risk—forcing electric motor designers to rethink everything from torque to cooling.
The electric motor industry is hitting a supply-chain wake-up call. Around 95 percent of new EV motors still rely on rare-earth magnets, largely sourced from China. Export controls, price swings, and environmental concerns are turning that reliance into a growing risk.
Automakers and suppliers are now pushing rare-earth-free alternatives, including induction, wound-field, and switched-reluctance motors. BMW already uses magnet-free designs in production EVs, with Renault, Valeo, GM, and others following.
The shift brings trade-offs in size, heat, and torque density, but improved cooling and smarter designs are closing the gap. What’s emerging is a long-term pivot toward cost stability, supply security, and more resilient motor architectures.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
❤5
“Dr. Google” had its issues. Can ChatGPT Health do better?
OpenAI’s newest product is no replacement for a doctor. But it might be better than searching the web for your symptoms.
For years, people turned to Google to decode medical symptoms, often fueling anxiety and misinformation. Now many are asking ChatGPT instead. OpenAI says about 230 million users pose health-related questions each week, prompting the launch of ChatGPT Health.
The tool adds health-specific guardrails but is not a new model, and OpenAI stresses it should support—not replace—doctors. Early studies suggest LLMs can outperform web searches for basic medical questions, helping users understand symptoms with less alarm. Still, risks like hallucinations and overtrust remain, making human medical judgment essential.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
OpenAI’s newest product is no replacement for a doctor. But it might be better than searching the web for your symptoms.
For years, people turned to Google to decode medical symptoms, often fueling anxiety and misinformation. Now many are asking ChatGPT instead. OpenAI says about 230 million users pose health-related questions each week, prompting the launch of ChatGPT Health.
The tool adds health-specific guardrails but is not a new model, and OpenAI stresses it should support—not replace—doctors. Early studies suggest LLMs can outperform web searches for basic medical questions, helping users understand symptoms with less alarm. Still, risks like hallucinations and overtrust remain, making human medical judgment essential.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
❤4
The space-based heat maps changing how engineers fix cities
Satellites reveal the hottest city blocks, and engineers use that data to cool streets with reflective pavement, trees, and smarter design.
Cities around the world are finally seeing their urban heat islands from space. Satellite thermal sensors show which blocks stay hottest long after sunset, with asphalt roads, parking lots, and rooftops glowing red on heat maps. Engineers are using this data to reprioritize projects and focus on the worst hotspots first.
In Los Angeles, Chicago, and Philadelphia, satellite maps are being combined with street-level sensors to guide reflective pavement, cool roofs, and large-scale tree planting. Some treated streets are already measuring about 10°F cooler than untreated ones. With new NASA instruments and commercial satellites coming online, space-based heat maps are quickly turning into real-world solutions for cooler, safer neighborhoods.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
Satellites reveal the hottest city blocks, and engineers use that data to cool streets with reflective pavement, trees, and smarter design.
Cities around the world are finally seeing their urban heat islands from space. Satellite thermal sensors show which blocks stay hottest long after sunset, with asphalt roads, parking lots, and rooftops glowing red on heat maps. Engineers are using this data to reprioritize projects and focus on the worst hotspots first.
In Los Angeles, Chicago, and Philadelphia, satellite maps are being combined with street-level sensors to guide reflective pavement, cool roofs, and large-scale tree planting. Some treated streets are already measuring about 10°F cooler than untreated ones. With new NASA instruments and commercial satellites coming online, space-based heat maps are quickly turning into real-world solutions for cooler, safer neighborhoods.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
❤5👍5
Scientists have created an early prototype called Pulse-Fi that can estimate a person’s heart rate using Wi-Fi signals, without wearables or physical contact. The system uses AI and low-cost, off-the-shelf hardware to analyze tiny changes in Wi-Fi signals caused by chest movement during breathing and heartbeats.
In tests, Pulse-Fi remained accurate across different distances (up to 3 meters), body positions, and light activities. Average error stayed below half a beat per minute, and in some cases was as low as 0.2 BPM. The setup relies on two simple Wi-Fi devices acting as a sender and receiver, extracting heart rate data from channel state information.
Researchers say this contact-free approach could one day be a cheaper alternative to smartwatches, though experts note the technology is still experimental and likely 5–10 years away from real-world use.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
In tests, Pulse-Fi remained accurate across different distances (up to 3 meters), body positions, and light activities. Average error stayed below half a beat per minute, and in some cases was as low as 0.2 BPM. The setup relies on two simple Wi-Fi devices acting as a sender and receiver, extracting heart rate data from channel state information.
Researchers say this contact-free approach could one day be a cheaper alternative to smartwatches, though experts note the technology is still experimental and likely 5–10 years away from real-world use.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
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Gene resurrection
It’s not a dire wolf—yeah, we know. In early 2025, Colossal Biosciences made headlines with a snow-white wolf said to revive a species extinct for 10,000 years. Scientists pushed back: it’s still a gray wolf, just one engineered with about 20 DNA traits taken from ancient dire wolf bones.
But the science behind it is real. Thanks to gene editing, cloning, and ancient DNA research, scientists can study genetic material from extinct species and reintroduce parts of it into living ones. That could help protect endangered animals, create climate-resilient plants, and even lead to new medicines.
This kind of genetic “time travel” relies on growing DNA libraries—from dodos and woolly mammoths to ancient humans. It’s already being used, including efforts to restore lost genes linked to disease and to revive genetic diversity in endangered species like the black-footed ferret.
Extinction may be permanent. DNA doesn’t have to be.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
It’s not a dire wolf—yeah, we know. In early 2025, Colossal Biosciences made headlines with a snow-white wolf said to revive a species extinct for 10,000 years. Scientists pushed back: it’s still a gray wolf, just one engineered with about 20 DNA traits taken from ancient dire wolf bones.
But the science behind it is real. Thanks to gene editing, cloning, and ancient DNA research, scientists can study genetic material from extinct species and reintroduce parts of it into living ones. That could help protect endangered animals, create climate-resilient plants, and even lead to new medicines.
This kind of genetic “time travel” relies on growing DNA libraries—from dodos and woolly mammoths to ancient humans. It’s already being used, including efforts to restore lost genes linked to disease and to revive genetic diversity in endangered species like the black-footed ferret.
Extinction may be permanent. DNA doesn’t have to be.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
❤7🤔1
Sodium-ion batteries
A cheaper, safer, and more abundant alternative to lithium is reaching cars and power grids.
For decades, lithium-ion batteries have powered phones, laptops, and EVs. But lithium’s limited supply and volatile prices have pushed the industry to seek alternatives. Sodium-ion batteries work similarly, moving ions between electrodes, but sodium is cheap and widely available. While not yet much cheaper, costs are expected to drop as production scales.
China is leading adoption. CATL launched its Naxtra sodium-ion line in 2025 and began large-scale manufacturing. BYD is building a major production facility. JMEV offers its EV3 with a sodium-ion battery, and HiNa Battery supplies low-speed EVs.
The biggest impact may be on power grids. Sodium-ion batteries are low-cost, thermally stable, and long-lasting. Energy density is lower than lithium-ion cells but improving, already enough for small cars, logistics vehicles, and two-wheelers.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
A cheaper, safer, and more abundant alternative to lithium is reaching cars and power grids.
For decades, lithium-ion batteries have powered phones, laptops, and EVs. But lithium’s limited supply and volatile prices have pushed the industry to seek alternatives. Sodium-ion batteries work similarly, moving ions between electrodes, but sodium is cheap and widely available. While not yet much cheaper, costs are expected to drop as production scales.
China is leading adoption. CATL launched its Naxtra sodium-ion line in 2025 and began large-scale manufacturing. BYD is building a major production facility. JMEV offers its EV3 with a sodium-ion battery, and HiNa Battery supplies low-speed EVs.
The biggest impact may be on power grids. Sodium-ion batteries are low-cost, thermally stable, and long-lasting. Energy density is lower than lithium-ion cells but improving, already enough for small cars, logistics vehicles, and two-wheelers.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
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Sustained Global Brightness Test
Measured after 20 minutes:
iQOO 15 (SDC M14 + Pol-less depolarization) → 1000 nits
OnePlus 15 (BOE X3) → 600 nits
S25 Ultra (SDC M13) → 330 nits
🔗 PhoneBuff
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
Measured after 20 minutes:
iQOO 15 (SDC M14 + Pol-less depolarization) → 1000 nits
OnePlus 15 (BOE X3) → 600 nits
S25 Ultra (SDC M13) → 330 nits
🔗 PhoneBuff
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
❤13
Kites turn high-altitude wind into predictable power
Tethered kites are emerging as a new way to generate renewable energy by flying hundreds of meters above ground, where winds are stronger and steadier than near the surface. Known as airborne wind energy systems (AWES), they replace towers and concrete with lightweight wings flying in controlled crosswind patterns.
The kite pulls on a tether connected to a ground-based generator, producing electricity with far less material than conventional turbines. Control is key: the system must autonomously handle gusts, tether tension, and flight stability while delivering predictable power.
Pilot projects like Kitepower’s Bangor Erris site in Ireland have logged hundreds of flights, with kites producing up to 100 kW. Across Europe and the US, developers are refining sensors, modular designs, and control systems to make AWES reliable and grid-ready.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
Tethered kites are emerging as a new way to generate renewable energy by flying hundreds of meters above ground, where winds are stronger and steadier than near the surface. Known as airborne wind energy systems (AWES), they replace towers and concrete with lightweight wings flying in controlled crosswind patterns.
The kite pulls on a tether connected to a ground-based generator, producing electricity with far less material than conventional turbines. Control is key: the system must autonomously handle gusts, tether tension, and flight stability while delivering predictable power.
Pilot projects like Kitepower’s Bangor Erris site in Ireland have logged hundreds of flights, with kites producing up to 100 kW. Across Europe and the US, developers are refining sensors, modular designs, and control systems to make AWES reliable and grid-ready.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
❤11
Apple’s Mechanical Aperture Patent: Bringing DSLR-Level Control to iPhone
Apple has patented a true mechanical aperture for ultra-thin smartphones, potentially appearing in a future iPhone, possibly the iPhone 18 Pro. Unlike current fixed-aperture cameras, this system can adjust continuously in real time, even during video, allowing smoother exposure, improved HDR, and real optical depth-of-field.
The design uses aperture blades driven by a compact voice-coil motor with a spring-based current system that reduces size and mechanical complexity. In low light, the aperture opens wider for more light and less noise; in bright conditions, it closes to preserve highlights, sharpen details, and increase depth of field. Multi-camera setups could gain independent aperture control, bringing iPhone photography closer to DSLR-level optical quality.
🔗 Ice Universe
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
Apple has patented a true mechanical aperture for ultra-thin smartphones, potentially appearing in a future iPhone, possibly the iPhone 18 Pro. Unlike current fixed-aperture cameras, this system can adjust continuously in real time, even during video, allowing smoother exposure, improved HDR, and real optical depth-of-field.
The design uses aperture blades driven by a compact voice-coil motor with a spring-based current system that reduces size and mechanical complexity. In low light, the aperture opens wider for more light and less noise; in bright conditions, it closes to preserve highlights, sharpen details, and increase depth of field. Multi-camera setups could gain independent aperture control, bringing iPhone photography closer to DSLR-level optical quality.
🔗 Ice Universe
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
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Google Pixel 10a officially announced
📱 6.3" FHD+ 120Hz AMOLED Display
💾 Tensor G4 SoC
📸 48MP (OIS) + 13MP Rear Cameras
🤳 12MP Front Camera
🔋 5,100mAh Battery
⚡ 20W (Wired) + 7.5W (Wireless) Charging
⚙️ Android 16
🗓️ Pre-order starts on Feb 18
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
📱 6.3" FHD+ 120Hz AMOLED Display
💾 Tensor G4 SoC
📸 48MP (OIS) + 13MP Rear Cameras
🤳 12MP Front Camera
🔋 5,100mAh Battery
⚡ 20W (Wired) + 7.5W (Wireless) Charging
⚙️ Android 16
🗓️ Pre-order starts on Feb 18
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
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How one controversial startup hopes to cool the planet
Stardust Solutions, an Israel-based startup, says it can help cool the Earth by flying aircraft into the stratosphere and releasing engineered particles designed to reflect sunlight back into space. The company claims the particles could counter the warming effects of decades of greenhouse-gas emissions.
Stardust raised $60 million, the largest known funding round in solar geoengineering. Founded by prominent scientists, it says it will only move forward if governments request the work and set clear rules and oversight.
Many researchers are alarmed. They argue the science has not been published, the timelines are unrealistic, and a for-profit company should not have incentives tied to managing global temperatures. Others warn the idea could deepen public mistrust and fuel geopolitical tensions.
Stardust says it is preparing an emergency option as climate impacts worsen.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
Stardust Solutions, an Israel-based startup, says it can help cool the Earth by flying aircraft into the stratosphere and releasing engineered particles designed to reflect sunlight back into space. The company claims the particles could counter the warming effects of decades of greenhouse-gas emissions.
Stardust raised $60 million, the largest known funding round in solar geoengineering. Founded by prominent scientists, it says it will only move forward if governments request the work and set clear rules and oversight.
Many researchers are alarmed. They argue the science has not been published, the timelines are unrealistic, and a for-profit company should not have incentives tied to managing global temperatures. Others warn the idea could deepen public mistrust and fuel geopolitical tensions.
Stardust says it is preparing an emergency option as climate impacts worsen.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
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OPPO and Huawei to adopt square selfie cameras on Android phones
OPPO and Huawei are set to become the first Android brands to use a 1:1 square sensor for the front-facing camera, following an approach popularized by Apple. The new design is expected to debut on OPPO’s upcoming Find X10 series and Huawei’s Nova 16 lineup.
Unlike traditional rectangular sensors, a square selfie camera allows users to take both portrait and landscape selfies without rotating the phone. The camera can simply switch orientation in software, making framing more flexible for photos, video calls, and content creation.
🔗 Digital Chat Station
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
OPPO and Huawei are set to become the first Android brands to use a 1:1 square sensor for the front-facing camera, following an approach popularized by Apple. The new design is expected to debut on OPPO’s upcoming Find X10 series and Huawei’s Nova 16 lineup.
Unlike traditional rectangular sensors, a square selfie camera allows users to take both portrait and landscape selfies without rotating the phone. The camera can simply switch orientation in software, making framing more flexible for photos, video calls, and content creation.
🔗 Digital Chat Station
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
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Samsung Electronics has partnered with South Korean AI firm Nota to develop a new on-device AI feature called EdgeFusion.
The technology allows users to generate images from text prompts directly on their phones in under one second, without relying on cloud servers. By keeping everything local, EdgeFusion delivers faster results while improving privacy and real-time performance.
Samsung is expected to integrate EdgeFusion into its upcoming Galaxy S26 flagship lineup, set to launch later this month. The feature is designed to enhance creative tools and photography by enabling instant image generation on the device itself.
EdgeFusion is part of Samsung’s ongoing effort to strengthen local AI image processing and expand the Galaxy AI ecosystem, further evolving the AI capabilities of the Galaxy S series.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
The technology allows users to generate images from text prompts directly on their phones in under one second, without relying on cloud servers. By keeping everything local, EdgeFusion delivers faster results while improving privacy and real-time performance.
Samsung is expected to integrate EdgeFusion into its upcoming Galaxy S26 flagship lineup, set to launch later this month. The feature is designed to enhance creative tools and photography by enabling instant image generation on the device itself.
EdgeFusion is part of Samsung’s ongoing effort to strengthen local AI image processing and expand the Galaxy AI ecosystem, further evolving the AI capabilities of the Galaxy S series.
🌐📲 @TechnologyBoxs
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