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'iPhone 17 Slim' With Smaller Display Rumored to Launch Next Year (1 minute read)

'iPhone 17 Slim' With Smaller Display Rumored to Launch Next Year (1 minute read)

Apple is reportedly planning an 'iPhone 17 Slim' model to replace the Plus model in its lineup. The Slim model will have around a 6.6-inch display, a slimmer design, an A18 or A19 chip, 8GB of RAM, a 24-megapixel front camera, and a 48-megapixel telephoto camera. It is expected to have an aluminum chassis and some other external design changes. Apple will likely announce the iPhone 17 lineup in September 2025.
How AI apps make money (7 minute read)
May 07 | Product

How AI apps make money (7 minute read)

We're at the early stages of AI app development, with many products still striving to find product-market fit. While innovating pricing models is challenging and often not the initial focus, most AI products adopt a strategy that focuses on making pricing predictable and ensuring it does not deter potential users.
The AI Hardware Dilemma (6 minute read)
May 06 | AI

The AI Hardware Dilemma (6 minute read)

Recent AI-powered hardware launches, like the Humane Pin and Rabbit R1, have faced criticism, yet there's still significant venture capital and interest in the sector, with prominent figures like Sam Altman eyeing substantial investments. The allure lies in AI's potential to revolutionize consumer hardware by utilizing sensors, silicon, and interfaces creatively. However, the challenge to offer a compelling alternative to versatile smartphones remains, with AI still needing to mature and hardware startups struggling to compete with established tech giants.
Dropbox Says Hackers Stole Customer Data and Auth Secrets from eSignature Service (2 minute read)
May 06 | Infosec

Dropbox Says Hackers Stole Customer Data and Auth Secrets from eSignature Service (2 minute read)

Dropbox reported a breach of its Dropbox Sign signature platform. Attackers gained access to authentication tokens, MFA keys, hashed passwords, and customer information. Dropbox says that the attackers gained access through a backend system configuration tool.

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