Five years since the launch of PlayStation 5 and, naturally, it’s time to ruminate on what’s next. In a YouTube video from Moore’s Law is Dead, the leaker shares what they believe is extensive information on the PlayStation 6’s possible specs, starting price and release timing.
Caveat: Moore’s Law is Dead adds in the video a disclaimer that the info was sourced from a leaked AMD presentation to Sony back in 2023, adding that some of these specs may have changed by now.
The leaks suggest the company may prioritize lower power output and keeping costs in line with the previous generation. The video claims the next-gen console will have three times the rasterization, or 3D rendering, performance compared to the base PS5 and roughly double compared to the PS5 Pro.
A possible price of $499 might suggest Sony wants to channel the same success the PS4 had at launch, which was partly thanks to its lower price compared to both expectations and the competition.
— Mat Smith
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Nothing Phone 3 review
Not quite a flagship.
Nothing’s first true flagship falls a little short. The Phone 3 offers a big 6.67-inch screen, a large battery with fast charging and 256GB of storage — double that of rivals like the Pixel 9 and Galaxy S25.
However, a less-than-flagship chipset and inconsistent camera performance detract from the appeal of another intriguing phone with slick software and a unique design. The Glyph Matrix is much more helpful than the flashing lights of the Phone 3’s predecessors, even if the design isn’t quite as bold.
Apple reportedly making ‘stripped-down’ AI chatbot to compete with ChatGPT
There’s a dedicated team working on it.
According to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman, earlier this year, Apple created a team called Answers, Knowledge and Information, tasked with developing a “stripped-down rival to ChatGPT.”
It’s a big shift from Apple’s earlier stance on artificial intelligence when the company partnered with OpenAI in 2024 to infuse Siri with ChatGPT instead of developing its own AI chatbot. The team will develop in-house AI services for a “new ChatGPT-like search experience” that can crawl the web to respond to questions. These new capabilities could be a standalone app, as well as support AI capabilities for Apple’s Siri and Spotlight. The former could do with an injection of new ideas. Apple said the long-delayed new-and-improved Siri would eventually roll out “in the coming year.”
YouTube is testing Instagram-style collabs
It’ll let creators add other accounts to their videos.
YouTube is testing a new collaboration feature, similar to one already on Instagram and TikTok. A Google employee explained on YouTube Help creators will be able to add collaborators to a video, so they can recommend each other to audiences. The test is currently only available to a small group of creators, but YouTube plans to expand its availability in the future.
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