Samsung apologizes for Galaxy Note 7 debacle. The South Korean smartphone maker took out full-page advertisements in major newspapers including The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal to say it was "truly sorry" for the quality and safety issues with its ill-fated product. (Fortune) Here's how Intel is making its data center products even faster. The giant chipmaker is using embedded lasers and fiber optics technology to help its chips to communicate data to each other more rapidly—without using more energy. The approach won't be available in commercial applications for at least three to five years, but it's already being called a game changer. (Fortune) Alphabet's drone delivery project hits turbulence. Google's parent removed two managers from the Project Wing initiative because of internal conflicts within the research lab. The team also grounded a partnership being discussed with coffee chain Starbucks, apparently due to a disagreement over how data would be used. (Fortune, Bloomberg, Wall Street Journal) GoPro recalls its new drone. The issue appears to be a problem with the Karma's power supply, and GoPro has halted shipments until it can figure out the cause. Meanwhile, it's offering full refunds on the roughly 2,500 devices it has sold so far. GoPro has been betting in this product diversification to rekindle growth, and the news comes as another blow to those prospects. (Fortune) The cloud is ready for business, and business is finally ready for the cloud. There may still be a lot of "server huggers"— IT people who don't want to trust any of their computing jobs to an outside cloud provider—but they're getting harder to find, speakers at a technology conference in San Francisco agreed this week. (Fortune) Ford pours millions into new technology center in India. The automaker, which has already invested about $2 billion in the country, will put another $195 million over the next five years into a facility near the Indian city of Chennai. Among other things, the group will work on mobility services. (Reuters) Ireland readies its official appeal of Apple tax case. The country expects this week to file its formal challenge to the European Commission's decision to fine the U.S. tech giant for billions in back taxes. The EU believes Ireland gave Apple special breaks that it shouldn't have. (Reuters) |
No comments:
Post a Comment