Key tech news of the week:
1. Google went all-in on AI at I/O 2026: new Gemini 3.5 models, Gemini Omni, AI-powered Search upgrades, Antigravity for developers, and a stronger push into agents.
2. Nvidia posted another record quarter: $81.6B in revenue, with data centers still driving most of the growth. The AI infrastructure boom clearly isnβt slowing down yet.
3. OpenAI keeps expanding Codex, moving it closer to a real AI development environment rather than just a coding assistant.
4. Anthropic is reportedly in talks to use Microsoftβs Maia AI chips. If this moves forward, itβs another signal that major AI companies want more alternatives to Nvidia.
5. Apple confirmed WWDC26 for June 8β12. The main question now: will Apple finally make Siri and Apple Intelligence feel truly competitive?
The overall trend is clear: tech is moving from βAI chatbotsβ to AI agents, infrastructure, and real workflow automation. The next race wonβt just be about who has the smartest model, but who can actually plug AI into everyday products and make the economics work.
1. Google went all-in on AI at I/O 2026: new Gemini 3.5 models, Gemini Omni, AI-powered Search upgrades, Antigravity for developers, and a stronger push into agents.
2. Nvidia posted another record quarter: $81.6B in revenue, with data centers still driving most of the growth. The AI infrastructure boom clearly isnβt slowing down yet.
3. OpenAI keeps expanding Codex, moving it closer to a real AI development environment rather than just a coding assistant.
4. Anthropic is reportedly in talks to use Microsoftβs Maia AI chips. If this moves forward, itβs another signal that major AI companies want more alternatives to Nvidia.
5. Apple confirmed WWDC26 for June 8β12. The main question now: will Apple finally make Siri and Apple Intelligence feel truly competitive?
The overall trend is clear: tech is moving from βAI chatbotsβ to AI agents, infrastructure, and real workflow automation. The next race wonβt just be about who has the smartest model, but who can actually plug AI into everyday products and make the economics work.
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This is a place for short, clear updates on whatβs happening in tech, AI, startups and digital products.
No endless noise, no complicated breakdowns. Just the key things worth knowing, filtered into simple weekly posts.
The content here is created with the help of AI, but the goal is very human: to save your time, keep you updated, and help you understand where technology is moving next.
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This is a place for short, clear updates on whatβs happening in tech, AI, startups and digital products.
No endless noise, no complicated breakdowns. Just the key things worth knowing, filtered into simple weekly posts.
The content here is created with the help of AI, but the goal is very human: to save your time, keep you updated, and help you understand where technology is moving next.
If you want to follow the future without reading dozens of sources every week, subscribe and stay tuned.
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Monako showed glasses for developers with Linux and AI on board.
This isn't a device for shooting Reels: it runs a simplified Linux system called MonoOS. It's optimized for quickly launching Claude Code and Codex, so you can vibe-code apps literally anywhere.
The glasses weigh 48 grams, have a screen, camera, earpiece, and microphone. They connect to computers and cloud services via Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, turning everything into one unified workspace.
Release β June 2, 2026 for $399.
This isn't a device for shooting Reels: it runs a simplified Linux system called MonoOS. It's optimized for quickly launching Claude Code and Codex, so you can vibe-code apps literally anywhere.
The glasses weigh 48 grams, have a screen, camera, earpiece, and microphone. They connect to computers and cloud services via Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, turning everything into one unified workspace.
Release β June 2, 2026 for $399.
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