Amazon has ended its proposed $1.7 billion purchase of iRobot, the maker of Roomba robot vacuums after a report that the EU regulatory agency refused to give approval. The UK antitrust agency had ok’ed the deal, but without the EU, both Amazon & iRobot said there was “no path to regulatory approval for the deal.” The Roomba maker also announced it would lay off 31% of its employees, around 350 people, and that its chair and CEO, Colin Angle, would step down effective immediately. Shares of iRobot fell 10% in morning trading on the news. Amazon will pay iRobot a $94 million break up fee.
Apple is expected to reveal new iPad Air, iPad Pro, and MacBook Air models “around the end of March,” according to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman. Gurman says new iPad Pros and a new 13 inch MacBook Air are already in production. The iPad Air collection will get a new 12.9 inch screen, and the 10.9 inch model gets a refresh…including an Apple M2 chip, and new rear camera. The Pros get OLED displays. Gurman expects both the 13 and 15 inch MacBook Airs to be updated to get the latest M3 chip. The MacBook Pros just got updated to the M3 last year.
A confirmation has come from X that it is blocking searches of Taylor Swift’s name after pornographic deepfakes of the artist began circulating on the platform this week. Engadget.com notes that the X head of business operations said, “This is a temporary action and done with an abundance of caution as we prioritize safety on this issue.” This step comes days after the problem first became known. X has drawn plenty of ire for being slow to curb the spread of nonconsensual, sexually explicit images. Taylor Swift fans went into action, mass-reporting the images and flooding the hashtags relating to Swift with positive content. Before X acted though, one post was viewed more than 45 million times. The deepfakes are believed to have originated from a Telegram group known for creating nonconsensual pornographic images of women.
As anyone, whether an EV owner or not, knows…the fact that it takes 30 minutes or more to ‘fast charge’ an EV is a drag on sales of the electric cars. Now, a group of researchers working at Cornell University have made an interesting breakthrough. According to a new paper the researchers published in Joule, their charger could make it possible to charge an EV battery in just five minutes, a nice upgrade from the current EV fast chargers that take at least 30 minutes to charge up. Bgr.com reports that the key to the 5 minute charging is use of a metal called indium for battery anodes. The metal is already used in touchscreens and solar panels. If the battery catches on, it could make EVs more affordable…smaller batteries with less than 300 miles of range would work for a lot of folks, if they could recharge in 5 minutes. If a buyer wanted to spring for the bigger battery, they could surpass the mileage of a gas powered car.
I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.