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First Look: Samsung and Google’s New Mixed Reality Headset

CNET Editor-at-Large Scott Stein got to try Samsung’s new AR/VR headset called Project Moohan, which uses Google’s new software platform, Android XR and Gemini AI. #VR #ai #headsets #mixedreality

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CNET Editor-at-Large Scott Stein got to try Samsung’s new AR/VR headset called Project Moohan, which uses Google’s new software platform, Android XR and Gemini AI. #VR #ai #headsets #mixedreality

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4 Comments

4 Comments

  1. @Jayden-lr2mm

    December 12, 2024 at 12:01 pm

    The Samsung headset doesn’t look bad but similar to the AirPods max

  2. @celiojojojo

    December 12, 2024 at 12:16 pm

    I’m sooo glad there are more big name companies competing for the XR movement.

    • @mhnoni

      December 12, 2024 at 12:38 pm

      I’m glad too but trust me, this will have a shorter life span than APV. these people are out of their minds. they have no clue what people want from VR, as much as I dislike Meta, they knew exactly what an average person wants from VR.

  3. @NextNate03

    December 12, 2024 at 7:26 pm

    I don’t trust either 1 of them.
    Why?
    Samsung killed off Gear VR and Google killed off their vr headset and support.

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Science & Technology

Black Founders Had a Great Fundraising Quarter…With a Catch

On one hand, US-based, Black-founded startups have already raised $643M, 70% of what was raised in the entirety of last year. But dig a little deeper into the numbers, and you’ll find that in the words of Crunchbase’s head of research: “…data has shown a persistent decline in funding to Black-founded companies that outpaces the…

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On one hand, US-based, Black-founded startups have already raised $643M, 70% of what was raised in the entirety of last year.

But dig a little deeper into the numbers, and you’ll find that in the words of Crunchbase’s head of research: “…data has shown a persistent decline in funding to Black-founded companies that outpaces the overall decline in startup funding.”

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Bloomberg Technology

Anthropic Disables AI Access for Foreign Nationals | Bloomberg Tech 6/15/2026

Bloomberg’s Ed Ludlow breaks down why Anthropic disabled access to its most advanced models for all foreign nationals after a request from the Trump administration. Plus, Nvidia is seeking to raise at least $20 billion from its first corporate bond sale since 2021. And, SpaceX shares throttle up on day 2 of trading, adding to…

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Bloomberg’s Ed Ludlow breaks down why Anthropic disabled access to its most advanced models for all foreign nationals after a request from the Trump administration. Plus, Nvidia is seeking to raise at least $20 billion from its first corporate bond sale since 2021. And, SpaceX shares throttle up on day 2 of trading, adding to a blockbuster public markets debut on Friday.

Chapters:
00:00:00 – Bloomberg Tech Begins
00:01:31 – Mike Shepard & Seth Fiegerman, Bloomberg News
00:05:46 – Joelle Pineau, Cohere
00:12:07 – Robert Schiffman, Bloomberg Intelligence
00:14:35 – Stephanie Aliaga, JPMorgan
00:20:00 – Michelle Davis, Bloomberg News
00:23:55 – Tyler Kendall, Bloomberg News
00:26:14 – Alicia Yap, Citi
00:32:39 – Carmen Reinicke, Bloomberg News
00:35:17 – Mike Schroepfer, Gigascale Capital
00:41:12 – Mark Gurman, Bloomberg News
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Bloomberg Technology

China’s AI Markets Still ‘A Source of Funds’ Says Citigroup

Alicia Yap, Citi’s head of Pan-Asia Internet Research, breaks down where China’s tech market stands amid global AI adoption. But despite all this heavy corporate activity, Citigroup warns that global investors are still treating China tech as “a source of funds,” with Wall Street dumping local stocks to fund the global AI hardware trade. She…

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Alicia Yap, Citi’s head of Pan-Asia Internet Research, breaks down where China’s tech market stands amid global AI adoption. But despite all this heavy corporate activity, Citigroup warns that global investors are still treating China tech as “a source of funds,” with Wall Street dumping local stocks to fund the global AI hardware trade. She joins Ed Ludlow on “Bloomberg Tech.”
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Watch the latest full episodes of “Bloomberg Technology” with Caroline Hyde and Ed Ludlow here:

 
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