Mark Zuckerberg, Jensen Huang and Sergey Brin join Trump’s tech advisory panel

The leaders of several major tech companies will offer the White House their opinions on tech and science policy as part of an advisory council. Mark Zuckerberg, Jensen Huang, Michael Dell and Larry Ellison — the CEOs of Meta, NVIDIA, Dell and Oracle, respectively — are joining the panel alongside Google co-founder Sergey Brin and AMD CEO Lisa Su. Venture capitalist Marc Andreessen, who has donated to super PACs that support President Donald Trump, will serve on the panel too.

The latest iteration of the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST) has 13 members, though that could expand to 24. White House AI and cryptocurrency czar David Sacks co-chairs PCAST alongside Trump's science advisor, Michael Kratsios.

“Under President Trump, PCAST will focus on topics related to the opportunities and challenges that emerging technologies present to the American workforce, and ensuring all Americans thrive in the Golden Age of Innovation,” the White House told The Wall Street Journal in a statement. Zuckerberg said he was "honored to join the president’s council and work with other industry leaders" to help ensure the US is the world leader in AI.

George W. Bush established PCAST with a 2001 executive order, and some notable executives have been involved with the panel. Barack Obama's advisors included then-Google executive chairman Eric Schmidt and former Microsoft chief research and strategy officer Craig Mundie, while ex-Disney CEO Bob Iger served on PCAST during Trump's first term. Joe Biden's panel included Su.

The tech CEOs all have a personal and professional stake here, given the potential impact of federal rules on them and their businesses. It’s worth noting that Meta, Google and Huang all chipped in to help pay for the construction of Trump’s White House ballroom. Google, Meta and NVIDIA were among the companies that each donated $1 million to the committee for Trump's second inauguration.

Meanwhile, Ellison — whose family has spent much of the last couple of years building a media empire that includes Paramount and potentially Warner Bros. Discovery — has close ties to Trump. Oracle is also one of the companies that backed the takeover of the US version of TikTok, a deal that Trump approved with an executive order. It was reported this month that the Trump administration is receiving $10 billion for brokering the buyout.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/mark-zuckerberg-jensen-huang-and-sergey-brin-join-trumps-tech-advisory-panel-144722797.html?src=rss

The $1,099 Bargain? Everything That Changed Inside the New M5 MacBook Air

The $1,099 Bargain? Everything That Changed Inside the New M5 MacBook Air M5 MacBook Air

The M5 MacBook Air represents a pivotal step forward in Apple’s laptop lineup, blending portability with performance in a way that redefines expectations for lightweight devices. Historically seen as an entry-level option, the MacBook Air now features the power to rival older Pro models, thanks to the introduction of the M5 chip. While it excels […]

The post The $1,099 Bargain? Everything That Changed Inside the New M5 MacBook Air appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

Stephen Colbert is writing a new Lord of the Rings movie

It’s been quite a while since we visited Middle-Earth on the big screen (anime prequels aside), but it looks like Lord of the Rings fans have plenty to look forward to in the coming years. We already knew that Andy Serkis’ The Hunt for Gollum was in the works — and by all accounts is progressing nicely — but another Rings-related film is in development too, and it’s being co-written by none other than Stephen Colbert.

The announcement came from Peter Jackson himself, in a video posted by Warner Bros. to coincide with Tolkien Reading Day. The director of the Lord of the Rings trilogy provided a quick update on Serkis’ film (the British actor is both directing and reprising his role as Gollum), before introducing "very special partner" and diehard Tolkien fan Colbert on a video call.

With The Late Show nearing its end, its host was seemingly going to be out of work in the summer. Colbert is working with his son Peter as well as screenwriter Philippa Boyens (who co-wrote the original film trilogy). They'll adapt some early chapters of Fellowship of the Ring that never made it into Jackson’s 2001 film. The Lord of the Rings: Shadow of the Past is actually set 14 years after the events of Return of the King, and will see Sam, Merry and Pippin retrace the first steps of their famous adventure.

So while the new film is inspired specifically by Fellowship chapters III (‘Three is Company’) through VIII (‘Fog On The Barrow-Downs’), it sounds like we’re actually getting a sequel of sorts, in which we’ll also see Sam’s daughter Elanor make a huge discovery that puts her on her own quest.

Colbert and his son had been scribbling away at their idea for several years before plucking up the courage to show what they had come up with to Jackson, but the legendary 64-year-old filmmaker was clearly a fan. And given the timing of the announcement, Colbert will soon be able to commit all of his energy to the project, which has not yet named any cast members. Will Sean Astin, Billy Boyd and Dominic Monaghan be dusting off their hobbit attire? Only time will tell, but the time jump would presumably make it possible.

The Lord of the Rings: Shadow of the Past doesn’t have a release date, but its announcement coincides with the 25th anniversary of Fellowship of the Ring, which has already been marked by the whole trilogy returning to theaters earlier this year.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/tv-movies/stephen-colbert-is-writing-a-new-lord-of-the-rings-movie-143004743.html?src=rss

Anthropic releases safer Claude Code ‘auto mode’ to avoid mass file deletions and other AI snafus

Anthropic has begun previewing "auto mode" inside of Claude Code. The company describes the new feature as a middle path between the app's default behavior, which sees Claude request approval for every file write and bash command, and the "dangerously-skip-premissions" command some coders use to make the chatbot function more autonomously. 

With auto mode enabled, a classifier system guides Claude, giving it permission to carry out actions it deems safe, while redirecting the chatbot to take a different approach when it determines Claude might do something risky. In designing the system, Anthropic's goal was to reduce the likelihood of Claude carrying out mass file deletions, extracting sensitive data or executing malicious code. 

Of course, no system is perfect, and Anthropic warns as such. "The classifier may still allow some risky actions: for example, if user intent is ambiguous, or if Claude doesn't have enough context about your environment to know an action might create additional risk," the company writes. 

Anthropic doesn't mention a specific incident as inspiration for auto mode, but the recent 13-hour AWS outage Amazon suffered after one of the company's AI tools reportedly deleted a hosting environment, was probably front of mind for the company. Amazon blamed that specific incident on human error, saying the staffer involved in the incident had "broader permissions than expected."

Team plan users can preview auto mode starting today, with the feature set to roll out to Enterprise and API users in the coming days.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/anthropic-releases-safer-claude-code-auto-mode-to-avoid-mass-file-deletions-and-other-ai-snafus-142500615.html?src=rss

The Philosopher Wanted Silence. The Artist Built on Water.

In 1914, Ludwig Wittgenstein did something that, depending on your perspective, was either the most logical or the most eccentric thing a Cambridge-trained philosopher could do. He left England behind and built a tiny wooden cabin on the steep shoreline of Lake Eidsvatnet in Skjolden, Norway. The only way to reach it was by boat, or by walking across ice in winter. His mentor Bertrand Russell reportedly told him it would be lonely. Wittgenstein replied that he “prostituted his mind talking to intelligent people.” The anecdote is funny, but the philosophy behind it was completely serious.

What Wittgenstein found in that remote hut was the particular kind of quiet that forces real confrontation with your own thoughts. He was productive there in ways he couldn’t replicate anywhere else, later writing to a colleague that he “couldn’t imagine working anywhere as he did there,” and that the place had “a quiet seriousness” he found nowhere else. Some of his foundational thinking for Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus took shape in that small space, part of it on a boat his friend David Pinsent sailed across the Sognefjord. A philosopher doing his deepest work on open water, surrounded by mountains. That image stays with you.

Designer: Dionisio González

Spanish artist Dionisio González clearly felt it too. His series, Wittgenstein’s Cabin, takes that founding image as both premise and provocation. González works across photography, digital manipulation, and what you might call architectural fiction, and his practice has long focused on reimagining how people live in extreme or overlooked conditions. For this project, he envisioned a cluster of amphibious dwellings set directly on the Norwegian fjords, floating on artificial islands against the same vast and indifferent landscape that Wittgenstein once sought out. They are not proposals for construction. They are something closer to visual arguments.

The structures themselves are striking. Made primarily of weathered metal, they feel industrial and oddly organic at the same time. Each one has its own distinct form, but they share a visual family resemblance, like siblings built from the same strange blueprint. They sit on the water in ways that feel simultaneously precarious and deliberate. González has spoken about being drawn to “the confrontation, the frontality” of Wittgenstein’s original cabin with the fjord. For Wittgenstein, the water wasn’t backdrop. It was the actual condition of his solitude. González takes that thought and makes it architectural.

The project keeps pulling me back to one of the more persistent tensions in design conversation: the relationship between isolation and creative thought. The idea that you need to escape in order to think clearly is ancient, but it feels newly charged when genuine silence has become a luxury most people can’t really access. González frames philosophy itself as an “amphibian endeavour,” something that lives between the stable and the fluid, the settled and the speculative. His floating cabins give that metaphor a shape and a weight. They’re not quite houses. They’re more like habitable hypotheses.

None of these structures are intended to be built, and I think that’s precisely where their power lies. Architectural fiction as a practice asks you to sit with ideas rather than just objects. It creates room to think seriously about how we want to inhabit the world, even when the answer falls outside what’s commercially or technically possible. González’s designs carry a visual seriousness that separates them from pure fantasy, a quality that makes them feel genuinely worth spending time with.

Wittgenstein wanted to disappear from the world in order to think more clearly inside it. González takes that same instinct and places it on open water, wrapped in oxidized metal, asking what solitude actually looks like when landscape isn’t just a setting but a condition of being. The answer he offers is beautiful and strange, which feels entirely fitting for a project named after one of the twentieth century’s most beautiful and strange minds.

The post The Philosopher Wanted Silence. The Artist Built on Water. first appeared on Yanko Design.

7 Genius Ways to Use Claude as Your Daily Productivity Assistant

7 Genius Ways to Use Claude as Your Daily Productivity Assistant Example daily HTML dashboard that combines calendar events, email highlights, news links, and top priorities in one page.

Claude Cowork offers a range of AI-driven features designed to simplify daily workflows and enhance productivity. In a recent breakdown by Brock Mesarich | AI for Non Techies, the focus is on seven specific skills that can make a tangible difference in how you approach your workday. For instance, the Morning Briefing Skill consolidates your […]

The post 7 Genius Ways to Use Claude as Your Daily Productivity Assistant appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

The Wait is Over: Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra Leaks with 45W Charging and a Massive Battery Boost

The Wait is Over: Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra Leaks with 45W Charging and a Massive Battery Boost Leaked Galaxy Z Fold 8 dimensions shown beside Fold 7, highlighting the thicker 9 mm folded body.

The Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra 5G is shaping up to be one of the most anticipated foldable smartphones of 2026. Building on the success of its predecessor, the Fold 7, this latest iteration is expected to deliver a blend of subtle refinements and impactful upgrades. Whether you’re a tech enthusiast or simply curious about […]

The post The Wait is Over: Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra Leaks with 45W Charging and a Massive Battery Boost appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

Want Flawless OpenClaw in 2026? You Need MaxClaw and the MiniMax M2.7

Want Flawless OpenClaw in 2026? You Need MaxClaw and the MiniMax M2.7 MaxClaw screen showing one-click OpenClaw deployment running in the cloud inside the MiniMax agent workspace.

MaxClaw, powered by the MiniMax M2.7 model, provides a structured way to deploy OpenClaw, an AI agent framework designed for task automation and workflow management. According to Universe of AI, MaxClaw simplifies the process by offering a cloud-based, one-click deployment system, eliminating the need for self-hosting or intricate server setups. This approach ensures that features […]

The post Want Flawless OpenClaw in 2026? You Need MaxClaw and the MiniMax M2.7 appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

The $599 Showdown: Can the MacBook Neo Kill the Budget Windows Laptop?

The $599 Showdown: Can the MacBook Neo Kill the Budget Windows Laptop? Display comparison image showing a brighter 500-nit MacBook Neo panel next to a dimmer 300-nit Windows screen.

Apple’s MacBook Neo, powered by the A18 Pro chip and equipped with 8GB of RAM, enters the competitive mid-range laptop market with a focus on premium design and portability. However, when compared to Windows laptops in the $500-$700 range, it faces challenges in justifying its higher price tag, particularly in areas like performance and multitasking. […]

The post The $599 Showdown: Can the MacBook Neo Kill the Budget Windows Laptop? appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

Just Updated to iOS 26.4? Here Are the First Things You Should Do

Just Updated to iOS 26.4? Here Are the First Things You Should Do Apple Music on iOS 26.4 showing playlist background artwork and a text prompt for Playlist Playground creation.

Apple has officially launched iOS 26.4, a comprehensive update designed to enhance your experience across a variety of apps and functionalities. Whether you’re a music lover, a multitasker, or someone who enjoys personalizing their device, this update introduces features that cater to diverse user needs. Below is an in-depth look at the most noteworthy updates […]

The post Just Updated to iOS 26.4? Here Are the First Things You Should Do appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized