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OpenAI's Altman acknowledges that the defense agreement 'appeared opportunistic and poorly executed' in light of criticism.
Economy

OpenAI’s Altman acknowledges that the defense agreement ‘appeared opportunistic and poorly executed’ in light of criticism.

by admin March 3, 2026
written by admin

Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI Inc., during a media visit to a Stargate AI data center in Abilene, Texas, U.S., on Sept. 23, 2025.
Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

On Monday, OpenAI’s CEO, Sam Altman, remarked that the organization “shouldn’t have hurried” its recent agreement with the U.S. Department of Defense and detailed changes to the contract.

Altman presented what he characterized as a repost of an internal memo on X, stating the company would revise the contract to incorporate new language related to its principles on matters such as surveillance.

This included language to make clear that “the AI system shall not be purposely employed for domestic surveillance of U.S. persons and nationals.”

The memo further stated that “the Department recognizes the limitation to prevent intentional tracking, surveillance, or monitoring of U.S. persons or nationals, including through the acquisition or application of commercially obtained personal or identifiable information.”

These revisions follow the announcement by ChatGPT’s creator that it had reached a new agreement with the Defense Department on Friday, just hours after U.S. President Donald Trump ordered federal agencies to cease using the competing AI firm Anthropic’s tools, and hours before Washington was set to conduct strikes on Iran.

According to Altman, the Defense Department also confirmed that OpenAI’s tools would not be utilized by intelligence agencies like the NSA.

“There are numerous aspects that the technology simply isn’t prepared for, and many fields where we don’t yet grasp the tradeoffs necessary for safety,” Altman mentioned, adding that the organization would collaborate with the Pentagon on technical protections.

The CEO also conceded that he had erred and “shouldn’t have hurried” to finalize the deal on Friday.

“We were honestly attempting to de-escalate situations and avoid a significantly worse result, but I think it just appeared opportunistic and careless,” he noted in the post.

This admission follows a public conflict between Anthropic and Washington regarding safeguards for its Claude AI systems, which concluded without an agreement. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth declared on Friday that the firm would be identified as a supply-chain threat.

After an initial agreement last year, Anthropic became the first AI lab to roll out its models across the Defense Department’s classified network.

The organization later sought assurances that its tools would not be deployed for uses such as domestic surveillance in the U.S. or to operate and advance autonomous weapons without human oversight.

The disagreement started after it was disclosed that Anthropic’s Claude had been utilized by the U.S. military during its mission to capture Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in January, even though the firm did not publicly contest that application.

OpenAI’s arrangement with the Pentagon occurred immediately after discussions between Anthropic and the Defense Department faltered, although Altman had informed employees in a Thursday memo that OpenAI shared the same “red lines” as Anthropic. The company also stated in a post on Friday that the Defense Department accepted the company’s limitations.

It remains ambiguous why the Defense Department agreed to accommodate OpenAI and not Anthropic, although government officials have criticized Anthropic for allegedly being excessively concerned with AI safety for several months.

The timing of OpenAI’s deal with the Defense Department incited online pushback, with many users reportedly uninstalling ChatGPT in favor of Claude on app stores.

In his post, Altman further addressed the situation, asserting: “In my discussions over the weekend, I emphasized that Anthropic should not be classified as a [supply chain risk], and that we hope the [Department of Defense] grants them the same terms we’ve negotiated.”

Anthropic was established in 2021 by a group of former OpenAI employees and researchers, who departed the company after disagreements regarding its direction. The firm has promoted itself as a “safety-first” alternative.

— CNBC’s Ashley Capoot assisted with this report

March 3, 2026 0 comments
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The Strait of Hormuz is encountering a blockade. These nations will be affected the most.
Economy

The Strait of Hormuz is encountering a blockade. These nations will be affected the most.

by admin March 3, 2026
written by admin

In this piece

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Commercial vessels are anchored off the coast of the United Arab Emirates owing to navigation issues in the Strait of Hormuz, Dubai on March 2, 2026.
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The Iranian closure of the Strait of Hormuz is causing significant turbulence in global energy markets, with Asia likely to experience the worst effects.

An official from Iran’s Revolutionary Guards stated Monday that the Strait of Hormuz has been closed and cautioned that any ship trying to navigate the waterway would be attacked, Iranian media revealed.

The Strait, located between Oman and Iran, serves as a crucial channel for global oil transport. Approximately 13 million barrels per day flowed through it in 2025, accounting for roughly 31% of all maritime crude transfers, as per energy consultancy firm Kpler.

A lengthy closure of the Strait would likely result in a spike in oil prices, with some experts predicting oil surpassing $100 per barrel. The global benchmark Brent was most recently up 2.6% at approximately $80 per barrel — nearly 10% higher since the onset of the conflict.

About 20% of the world’s liquefied natural gas exports from the Gulf are also in jeopardy, especially those originating from Qatar and transported via the Strait of Hormuz, according to Kpler. Qatar, one of the leading global LNG suppliers, halted its production on Monday following Iranian drone strikes on its facilities in Ras Laffan Industrial City and Mesaieed Industrial City.

“In Asia, Thailand, India, Korea, and the Philippines are the most susceptible to rising oil prices, due to their high dependency on imports, while Malaysia may benefit comparatively as an energy exporter,” Nomura indicated in a note on Monday.

Here’s how those dependent on Gulf energy and shipments through the Strait of Hormuz are poised to be affected.

South Asia: immediate physical strain

South Asia would encounter the most severe disruptions, particularly concerning LNG supplies, analysts noted.

Qatar and the UAE make up 99% of Pakistan’s LNG imports, 72% of Bangladesh’s, and 53% of India’s, based on Kpler figures.

With restricted storage and procurement options, Pakistan and Bangladesh are particularly at risk. For instance, Bangladesh is already grappling with a significant structural gas deficit. According to the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis, the nation is facing a daily shortfall exceeding 1,300 million cubic feet.

“Pakistan and Bangladesh have limited storage and procurement flexibility, so any disruption would likely lead to rapid demand destruction in the power sector rather than vigorous spot bidding,” Katayama remarked.

India faces the highest combined risk in the area. “Over half of its LNG imports are tied to the Gulf, and a considerable portion is Brent-indexed, so a crude surge driven by Hormuz would simultaneously increase oil import expenses and LNG contract prices. This creates a dual physical and financial challenge,” he stated.

Moreover, approximately 60% of India’s oil imports come from the Middle East, as per UBP. A protracted blockade would thus exacerbate both energy import costs and current-account pressures.

China: significant exposure but adequate buffer

A closure of Hormuz would challenge China’s energy security, though stockpiles and alternative supplies provide some cushioning.

The nation is the largest crude oil importer globally and acquires over 80% of Iranian oil, according to Kpler.

About 30% of its LNG imports are sourced from Qatar and the UAE, and roughly 40% of its oil imports traverse Hormuz, estimates UBP.

“China is substantially exposed but somewhat adaptable,” Kpler’s Katayama commented.

According to Kpler, China’s LNG reserves as of late February stand at 7.6 million tons, providing short-term coverage. However, should the disruption extend, China would need to compete for Atlantic cargoes, tightening the Pacific basin, Katayama added. In such a scenario, price competition across Asia could intensify even if Beijing manages to avoid outright shortages.

Saudi Arabia has ramped up crude loadings in recent weeks, and strategic petroleum reserves held by major importing nations like China could provide temporary relief to the market, Rystad Energy indicated in a note on Sunday.

UBP stated that while China is a significant net energy importer in the region, it is not necessarily the most exposed to potential supply shocks.

Japan and South Korea

The Middle East supplies 75% of Japan’s oil imports and about 70% of Korea’s, according to UBP.

In terms of LNG, their Gulf exposure is less than that of South Asia. South Korea sources 14% of its LNG from Qatar and the UAE, while Japan sources 6%, as per Kpler’s estimates.

Even in the absence of outright shortages, price impacts could be significant. “Economies with high energy import dependence such as Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan are more susceptible to supply disruptions,” said Shier Lee Lim, lead macro and FX strategist of APAC at payment platform Convera.

Inventories are also constrained. Korea holds approximately 3.5 million tons of LNG, and Japan around 4.4 million tons in reserves, sufficient for roughly two to four weeks of steady demand, according to Kpler.

South Korea’s net oil imports constitute 2.7% of GDP, with Nomura identifying it as among the most vulnerable regarding current-account stability.

Southeast Asia

In much of Southeast Asia, the primary impact is cost inflation rather than an immediate shortage, stated industry experts.

Buyers of spot-reliant LNG would encounter significantly higher replacement costs as Asia competes with Europe for Atlantic cargoes, noted Kpler’s Katayama.

Thailand, in particular, stands out as a major loser in terms of oil prices in Nomura’s analysis because the external impact is substantial and immediate: it has the highest net oil imports in Asia at 4.7% of GDP, and every 10% increase in oil prices exacerbates the current account by approximately 0.5 percentage points of the nation’s GDP.

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Anthropic enhances Claude's memory to appeal to AI switchers
Tech/AI

Anthropic enhances Claude’s memory to appeal to AI switchers

by admin March 2, 2026
written by admin

Claude’s memory functionality now includes a new prompt and importing feature for transferring users’ data from alternative AI platforms.

Claude’s memory functionality now includes a new prompt and importing feature for transferring users’ data from alternative AI platforms.

Mar 2, 2026, 10:29 PM UTC
STK269_ANTHROPIC_A
STK269_ANTHROPIC_A
Stevie Bonifield
Stevie Bonifield is a journalist focusing on consumer technology. Stevie began at Laptop Mag, writing news articles and reviews on hardware, gaming, and AI.

Anthropic is facilitating smoother transitions to its Claude AI from other chatbots by releasing an update that adds Claude’s memory feature for users on the free plan, accompanied by a new prompt and specialized tool for data importing from different chatbots. These enhancements could enable users currently utilizing competitors like OpenAI’s ChatGPT or Google’s Gemini to swiftly transfer the information that their chosen AI has gathered about them to Anthropic’s chatbot. This means they won’t have to “start anew” instructing Claude on the context and history that their previous chatbot already possesses.

The ability to import and export memories from Claude has been available since October, when Anthropic introduced the option for users to activate Claude’s memory. Until now, the memory feature was restricted to users with paid Claude subscriptions, but now all Claude users can enable it by navigating to “settings” and selecting “capabilities.” Within this menu, users can also access the new memory importing tool, which instructs them to copy a pre-formulated prompt into their previous AI and then transfer the output back into Claude’s importing feature.

Anthropic is rolling out the updated memory importing tool as Claude is gaining traction, boosted by features like Claude Code and Claude Cowork. Last month, Anthropic debuted its new Opus 4.6 and Sonnet 4.6 models, which the firm claims excel in coding and managing complex tasks like navigating spreadsheets or completing forms.

Anthropic has also been drawing significant attention lately after standing firm against requests from the Pentagon to ease the safeguards on its AI models, with the organization publicly announcing that they established “red lines” regarding mass surveillance and fully automated lethal weapons.

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Apple may utilize Google servers to save information for its enhanced AI Siri
Tech/AI

Apple may utilize Google servers to save information for its enhanced AI Siri

by admin March 2, 2026
written by admin

Apple might be depending even more on Google as it endeavors to keep pace in AI.

Apple might be depending even more on Google as it endeavors to keep pace in AI.

Mar 2, 2026, 8:22 PM UTC
Vector illustration of the Apple logo.
Vector illustration of the Apple logo.
Jay Peters
Jay Peters is a senior journalist focusing on technology, gaming, and more. He joined The Verge in 2019 after spending nearly two years at Techmeme.

Apple has requested Google to investigate “establishing servers” for a new iteration of Siri that is powered by Gemini and complies with Apple’s privacy standards, The Information reports. Apple had previously declared in January that Google’s Gemini AI models would assist in powering the enhanced version of Siri it postponed last year, but The Information’s report suggests Apple might rely even more heavily on Google to close the gap in AI.

The initial partnership announcement stated that “the next generation of Apple Foundation Models will utilize Google’s Gemini models and cloud technology,” asserting that the models would “support future Apple Intelligence features,” including “a more customized Siri.” While the announcement highlighted that Apple Intelligence would “continue to operate on Apple devices and Private Cloud Compute,” it did not specify whether the new Siri would function on Google’s cloud.

A large portion of The Information’s article also explores the history of Apple’s own cloud computing and data center initiatives. As highlighted in the report, Apple has typically been more cautious in its infrastructure expenditures, particularly when compared to competitors like Google, Microsoft, and Amazon, which are making substantial investments to satisfy AI demand. Apple’s AI functionalities thus far have not gained significant popularity, with only 10 percent of its Private Cloud Compute capacity being utilized on average, The Information indicates.

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Charter secures FCC approval to buy Cox and become the largest ISP in the US
Tech/AI

Charter secures FCC approval to buy Cox and become the largest ISP in the US

by admin March 2, 2026
written by admin

The petition pointed to studies indicating that in the US airline sector some “mergers raised fares not just on overlapping routes but also on non-overlapping routes.”

Charter/Cox competition not completely absent

The petition also referenced remarks from the California Public Utilities Commission’s Public Advocates Office, which noted that Charter and Cox do directly compete in parts of their service areas. The California Public Advocates Office submitted a protest in the state regulatory proceeding in September 2025, stating:

The Joint Applicants assert that Charter and Cox have no, or very few, overlapping locations, so the Proposed Transaction will not harm competition. However, FCC broadband data show that Charter and Cox California have 25,503 overlapping locations. At 16,485 of these locations (65%), Charter and Cox California are the only two providers offering speeds of at least 1,000 Mbps download.

If the Proposed Transaction is approved, customers in those areas will have access to only a single provider for high-speed service and will have no meaningful choice between providers. Finally, Charter is already the sole provider of gigabit service in 48% of its service area, while Cox is the sole provider in 65% of its service area. Consolidating these footprints would significantly expand Charter’s monopoly power in the high-speed fixed broadband market.

Public Knowledge Legal Director John Bergmayer said that the Carr FCC “did not require Charter to do anything it wasn’t already planning to do.” He contrasted that with the FCC’s 2016 approval of Charter’s merger with Time Warner Cable, which allowed Charter to become the second-largest cable company in the US.

“In 2016, the commission approved Charter’s acquisition of Time Warner Cable only after imposing conditions on data caps, usage-based pricing, and paid interconnection,” Bergmayer said on Friday. “Today’s order finds those concerns no longer apply, largely because the agency credits fixed wireless and satellite as competitive constraints on cable. Further, the Commission imposed no affordability conditions, despite doing so in the 2016 Charter, Comcast-NBCU, and Verizon-TracFone transactions. The record does not support this outcome.”

Disclosure: The Advance/Newhouse Partnership, which owns 12 percent of Charter, is part of Advance Publications, which owns Condé Nast, the parent company of Ars Technica.

March 2, 2026 0 comments
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OpenAI's "settlement" with the Pentagon is what Anthropic dreads
Tech/AI

OpenAI’s “settlement” with the Pentagon is what Anthropic dreads

by admin March 2, 2026
written by admin

On February 28, OpenAI revealed it had secured a contract permitting the US military to utilize its technologies in sensitive contexts. CEO Sam Altman remarked that the discussions, which the company initiated only following the Pentagon’s public censure of Anthropic, were “clearly expedited.”

In its statements, OpenAI emphasized that it had not surrendered to allow the Pentagon unfettered access to its technology. The firm published a blog entry detailing that its arrangement safeguarded against uses involving autonomous weaponry and extensive domestic surveillance, and Altman asserted that the company did not merely agree to the same terms that Anthropic declined. 

You might interpret this to suggest that OpenAI secured both the agreement and the ethical high ground, but a closer examination reveals a different story: Anthropic opted for a moral stance that garnered many supporters but ultimately did not succeed, while OpenAI took a pragmatic and legal route that is ultimately more lenient toward the Pentagon. 

It remains uncertain if OpenAI can implement the safety measures it claims as the military hastens a politically charged AI strategy amidst operations in Iran, or if the deal will be deemed satisfactory by staff who hoped for a firmer stance. Balancing this situation will be challenging. (OpenAI did not immediately reply to inquiries for more details regarding its agreement.)

However, the intricacies are crucial. The reason OpenAI could reach an agreement when Anthropic was unable to was not solely about limitations, Altman noted, but about methodology. “Anthropic appeared more focused on specific prohibitions in the agreement, instead of referencing relevant laws, which we felt at ease with,” he stated. 

OpenAI claims one foundation for its willingness to cooperate with the Pentagon is a presumption that the government won’t violate the law. The company, which has released a limited snippet of its contract, points to various laws and policies regarding autonomous weapons and surveillance. These range from a 2023 directive from the Pentagon on autonomous weaponry (which doesn’t forbid them but provides guidelines for their design and testing) to the broader protections offered by the Fourth Amendment against mass surveillance. 

Nonetheless, the excerpt made public “does not grant OpenAI an Anthropic-like, independent right to prevent legal government usage,” wrote Jessica Tillipman, associate dean for government procurement law studies at George Washington University’s law school. It merely states that the Pentagon cannot employ OpenAI’s technology to contravene any of those laws and policies as presently articulated.

The primary reason Anthropic acquired so many backers in its struggle—including some of OpenAI’s own workforce—is that they doubt these regulations are sufficient to avert the development of AI-driven autonomous weaponry or widespread surveillance. And trusting that federal agencies will adhere to the law provides little comfort to anyone recalling that the surveillance practices unveiled by Edward Snowden were deemed lawful by internal agencies and were only ruled illegal after protracted disputes (not to mention the numerous surveillance strategies sanctioned by existing law that AI could enhance). On this aspect, we essentially find ourselves back at the starting line: permitting the Pentagon to utilize its AI for any lawful application. 

OpenAI might express, as its national security partnerships chief remarked yesterday, that if one believes the government won’t adhere to the law, then they should also doubt its commitment to the limitations Anthropic suggested. Yet that does not disprove the importance of establishing such limits. Imperfect enforcement does not render constraints meaningless, and contractual stipulations still influence behavior, oversight, and political repercussions.

OpenAI proposes a second line of defense. The firm asserts it retains control over the safety guidelines governing its models and will not provide the military with a version of its AI devoid of those safety measures. “We can incorporate our red lines—no mass surveillance and no guiding weapon systems without human oversight—directly into model operation,” wrote Boaz Barak, an OpenAI employee tasked by Altman to address the issue on X. 

However, the company does not clarify how its safety protocols for the military vary from those for ordinary users. Enforcement is also far from perfect, particularly when OpenAI is introducing these safeguards in a classified environment for the first time and is anticipated to accomplish this in merely six months.

There exists another query within all of this: Should it fall upon technology firms to restrict activities that are legal but that they find ethically troubling? The government certainly regarded Anthropic’s readiness to assume such a role as unacceptable. On Friday evening, eight hours prior to the US commencing airstrikes in Tehran, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth issued strong statements on X. “Anthropic delivered a master class in hubris and treachery,” he proclaimed, echoing President Trump’s directive for the government to halt its relationship with the AI firm after Anthropic endeavored to prevent its model Claude from being utilized for autonomous weaponry or mass domestic surveillance. “The Department of War must possess complete, unrestricted access to Anthropic’s models for any LAWFUL purpose,” Hegseth stated.

However, unless the entirety of OpenAI’s contract reveals further details, it’s challenging not to view the company as teetering on an ideological balance, asserting that it does possess leverage it will gladly wield to act according to its principles while relying on the law as the primary safeguard for what the Pentagon can enact with its technology.

Three critical factors warrant attention here. One pertains to whether this stance will suffice for OpenAI’s most essential employees. Given that AI companies are heavily investing in talent, it’s plausible that some at OpenAI might interpret Altman’s rationale as an unforgivable compromise.

Secondly, there is the scorched-earth approach that Hegseth has vowed to take against Anthropic. Surpassing merely canceling the government’s agreement with the firm, he announced it would be classified as a supply chain threat, and that “no contractor, supplier, or partner that collaborates with the United States military may engage in any commercial activities with Anthropic.” There is considerable debate regarding whether this lethal strike is legally feasible, and Anthropic has indicated it will pursue legal action if the threat is enacted. OpenAI has also publicly opposed the initiative.

Lastly, how will the Pentagon transition from Claude—the sole AI model it currently employs in classified tasks, including some in Venezuela—while it amplifies operations against Iran? Hegseth allocated six months for the agency to undertake this transition, during which the military will integrate OpenAI’s models alongside those from Elon Musk’s xAI.

However, Claude was reportedly employed in the strikes on Iran mere hours after the ban was put in place, indicating that a transition will likely be anything but straightforward. Even if the ongoing dispute between Anthropic and the Pentagon is resolved (which I doubt is the case), we are now witnessing the Pentagon’s AI acceleration strategy placing pressure on firms to relinquish limitations they had previously established, with new tensions in the Middle East serving as the primary testing grounds.

If you possess information regarding how this situation is evolving, please contact me via Signal (username: jamesodonnell.22).

March 2, 2026 0 comments
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An Iowa county enacts stringent zoning regulations for data centers, yet residents remain concerned
Tech/AI

An Iowa county enacts stringent zoning regulations for data centers, yet residents remain concerned

by admin March 2, 2026
written by admin



Photo credit:
Inside Climate News


Photo credit:

Inside Climate News

Mandating a water study provides, at minimum, a basic picture of nearby water supplies and how they behave around proposed data center sites. That information is something the state of Iowa generally lacks, said Cara Matteson, a former geologist and Linn County’s sustainability director.

DNR staff told Matteson that water information collected in Linn County by qualified researchers on behalf of a data center applicant would be factored into state permitting and enforcement decisions.

The department told Inside Climate News by email that it would make use of the extra local water data.

If a data center’s application is approved, developers would sign an agreement with Linn County specifying terms for water-use monitoring and reporting to both the county and the DNR. The pact could also contain drought contingency measures.

Still, the county’s ability to act on the water-monitoring data it seeks is limited. The DNR not only issues water-use permits but also imposes penalties for permit violations.

Nichols said Linn County’s zoning rule was revised several times in response to questions raised by people attending the first two public readings.

From its initial reading to final adoption, the ordinance expanded to add language setting light-pollution standards, requiring a waste-management plan, including the Iowa DNR in the water-use agreement to address possible well interference, and mandating an applicant-led public meeting before any zoning commission hearings.

“I am very confident that no ordinance for data centers in Iowa is asking for more information or asking for more requirements to be met than our ordinance right now,” Nichols said at the final reading.

The Cedar Rapids Metro Economic Alliance has stated it strongly supports current and future data center development in the region. Nichols said the new ordinance does not amount to an effective moratorium and that he “strongly believes” a data center can be built under the adopted framework.

Google spokespeople did not reply to requests for comment.

New rules may lead data centers to locate elsewhere, acknowledged Brandy Meisheid, a supervisor whose district includes many of Linn County’s smaller communities. But Meisheid said the ordinance is intended to protect residents, not developers. “If it’s too high a price for them to pay, they don’t have to come.”

Anika Jane Beamer reports on the environment and climate change in Iowa, concentrating on water, soil, and CAFOs. A lifelong Midwesterner, she writes about shifting ecosystems in one of the continent’s most altered landscapes. She earned a master’s degree in science writing from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a bachelor’s degree in biology and Spanish from Grinnell College. She is a former Outrider Fellow at Inside Climate News and was named a Taylor-Blakeslee Graduate Fellow by the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

This story first appeared on Inside Climate News.

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Tecno’s newest concept smartphone is illuminated by neon
Tech/AI

Tecno’s newest concept smartphone is illuminated by neon

by admin March 2, 2026
written by admin

It is accompanied by a color-shifting E Ink concept as well.

It is accompanied by a color-shifting E Ink concept as well.

Mar 2, 2026, 9:00 AM UTC
tecno-pova-neon
tecno-pova-neon
Dominic Preston
Dominic Preston is a news editor with over ten years of expertise in journalism. Previously, he worked at Android Police and Tech Advisor.

After revealing a magnetic, modular smartphone concept recently, Tecno has unveiled two additional phone designs focused on color-shifting finishes: one featuring E Ink, and the other with neon.

I find myself particularly drawn to the Pova Neon, which the brand claims includes real neon lighting, not merely vivid colors: it utilizes “ionized inert gas lighting technology” to achieve a luminous effect.

On the other hand, the AI EInk integrates color electronic ink into the back of the device, allowing for dynamic color changes. Perhaps even more impressively, you can set the color via the camera, enabling the phone to match your attire with a single photo.

As with any innovative concepts, there’s no assurance that Tecno will ever produce a legitimate phone utilizing either design, and the neon seems particularly unlikely to reach the marketplace — however, I can envision a color-changing E Ink phone launching sooner rather than later.

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Vivo's upcoming smartphone will debut featuring a professional camera setup.
Tech/AI

Vivo’s upcoming smartphone will debut featuring a professional camera setup.

by admin March 2, 2026
written by admin

This will mark the company’s first Ultra release outside of China.

This will mark the company’s first Ultra release outside of China.

Mar 2, 2026, 8:00 AM UTC
vivo-x300-ultra-camera-cage
vivo-x300-ultra-camera-cage
Dominic Preston
Dominic Preston is a news editor with over ten years of journalism experience. He has previously been associated with Android Police and Tech Advisor.

Vivo seldom makes an appearance at MWC, but this year it broke that pattern significantly by unveiling its upcoming flagship device, the X300 Ultra, along with an enhanced telephoto extender lens and a professional camera cage. While the company isn’t quite ready to launch the phone or disclose many specifications, it has assured that when it becomes available, it will be the inaugural Ultra model to be sold outside of China.

The sole specific information about the X300 Ultra that Vivo is willing to share is that it will include a 200-megapixel telephoto sensor. However, this was also the case with last year’s X200 Ultra, so we are still anticipating to learn what advancements Vivo has planned for my favorite mobile camera from previous year.

The 200-megapixel sensor is expected to be fully utilized by the new Telephoto Extender Gen2 Ultra, an optional accessory that can attach to the back of the phone. Telephoto extenders have become quite popular among manufacturers since Vivo introduced its version with the X200 Ultra, which has also been adopted by the X300 and X300 Pro, with similar products emerging from both Oppo and Honor. Vivo is stepping up its game by doubling the focal length from 200mm to 400mm with a lens co-designed with its long-time camera partner Zeiss.

This new accessory is noticeably thicker and heavier than its predecessor, yet retains a similar appearance. It comes alongside a revamped camera grip case that appears to have gained additional buttons and controls. Upon closer inspection, you may notice that the case lacks a cut-out for the touch-sensitive shutter button that was featured on the side of the X200 Ultra — could this mean that feature has been removed from the device?

In addition to the telephoto accessory, there’s a brand-new offering: a “pro-grade” camera cage developed in collaboration with phone photography accessory company SmallRig. Vivo’s press release states that the cage will feature an “array of cold shoe mounts and quick-release ports,” along with physical buttons for shutter and zoom controls, and a cooling fan specifically for demanding video recording sessions. This indicates that Vivo aims to position the X300 Ultra not just as a tool for photo lovers, but as a genuine productivity device for serious photographers and videographers.

While earlier Vivo Ultra phones have been restricted to the Chinese market, the X300 Ultra is anticipated to have a launch “in international markets” later this year. It remains uncertain how broad the actual release will be — it is nearly guaranteed that it won’t be available in the US, and Vivo’s inconsistent record in Europe raises questions as well.

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A rap celebrity could potentially outshine a past Prime Minister - what this indicates about Nepal's Generation Z election
Global

A rap celebrity could potentially outshine a past Prime Minister – what this indicates about Nepal’s Generation Z election

by admin March 2, 2026
written by admin

Over the past thirty years, Nepal has experienced a continuous cycle of unstable government coalitions primarily influenced by three political parties. These consist of two Communist factions, namely the Communist Party of Nepal Unified Marxist–Leninist (CPN UML) and the Nepali Communist Party CPN (Maoist Centre), along with the centrist Nepali Congress.

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