Panel

Noticias Financieras

Commodore 64 Helps Revive the BBS Days
hackadayhace 69d

Commodore 64 Helps Revive the BBS Days

Before the modern Internet existed, there were still plenty of ways of connecting with other computer users “online”, although many of them might seem completely foreign to those of us ...read more

#TECH
Build ChatGPT Mini Apps Easily with Shortcuts on Mac : Millions of Uses
geeky_gadgetshace 69d

Build ChatGPT Mini Apps Easily with Shortcuts on Mac : Millions of Uses

What if you could turn your Mac into a personal assistant that handles tedious tasks with just a few clicks? Imagine summarizing lengthy articles, organizing recipes, or saving key insights into Apple Notes, all without lifting more than a finger. In this walkthrough, Craig Neidel shows how to harness the power of macOS Shortcuts and [...]The post Build ChatGPT Mini Apps Easily with Shortcuts on Mac : Millions of Uses appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

#TECH
DriveValue Introduces a Smarter Way to Own a Car in Delhi NCR
startupnewshace 69d

DriveValue Introduces a Smarter Way to Own a Car in Delhi NCR

New Delhi [India], January 20: As rising vehicle prices and long-term financial commitments make car ownership increasingly challenging in urban India, a Delhi NCR–based company is offering an alternative approach. DriveValue, a premium car leasing firm, is seeking to reshape how individuals and families access cars by replacing traditional ownership with a structured leasing model. [...]

#TECH
Context is AI coding’s real bottleneck in 2026
startupnewshace 69d

Context is AI coding’s real bottleneck in 2026

Walk into any engineering leadership meeting today, and someone will question whether AI-generated code is secure or whether agents can be trusted in production. These are valid concerns, but they don’t determine whether your team ships faster. The bottleneck is context: the gap between what engineers carry in their heads and what AI can understand [...]

#TECH
Week in review: Fully patched FortiGate firewalls are getting compromised, attackers probe Cisco RCE flaw
helpnetsecurityhace 69d

Week in review: Fully patched FortiGate firewalls are getting compromised, attackers probe Cisco RCE flaw

Here’s an overview of some of last week’s most interesting news, articles, interviews and videos: Review: AI Strategy and Security AI Strategy and Security is a guide for organizations planning enterprise AI programs. The book targets technology leaders, security professionals, and executives responsible for strategy, governance, and operational execution. It treats AI adoption as an organizational discipline that spans planning, staffing, security engineering, risk management, and ongoing operations. More employees get AI tools, fewer rely ... More →The post Week in review: Fully patched FortiGate firewalls are getting compromised, attackers probe Cisco RCE flaw appeared first on Help Net Security.

#TECH
Optimus joins Tesla’s line, but Atlas can’t even cross Hyundai’s plant
koreajoongangdaily_joinshace 69d

Optimus joins Tesla’s line, but Atlas can’t even cross Hyundai’s plant

From left: The Atlas humanoid robot; Members of the Hyundai Motor labor union stage a protest, calling for a wage increase, in Ulsan on Sept. 3, 2025. [REUTERS/YONHAP] [NEWS ANALYSIS] While Hyundai Motor has been enjoying a surge in its market valuation since the unveiling of its Atlas humanoid robot, the Korean automaker is facing a big yet expected obstacle: a hard-line labor union. With the union’s declaration that “not a single Atlas robot will be permitted onto the factory floor,” this could potentially stall the company’s growth at a time when market rivals such as Tesla are rapidly training their humanoids to deploy them in real-world fields to win the physical AI race. Related ArticleHyundai paints a robotic future at CES 2026 — yet a reassuring oneAI gets physical: Humanoid robots hit factory floors Exclusive: Hyundai's Georgia plant to use Boston Dynamics' Atlas humanoid robot from October The Hyundai Motor chapter of the Korean Metal Workers’ Union issued a newsletter on Thursday, rejecting the introduction of AI-powered robots. The union said that such a move would become a “convenient justification for a profit-seeking company” to not hire actual humans and that a “unilateral push without labor-management consensus will never be tolerated.” The Atlas, developed by Hyundai-backed Boston Dynamics and unveiled at CES 2026 in Las Vegas earlier this month, will be deployed at Hyundai’s Georgia plant beginning in 2028. The group also hinted at a wider deployment through its plan to open a robot factory with an annual capacity of 30,000 units in the United States. Hyundai’s shares skyrocketed from 308,500 won ($210) on Jan. 6, ahead of CES 2026, to 510,000 as of Friday, a gain of roughly 65 percent in about two weeks. Atlas, a humanoid robot by Hyundai Motor-backed Boston Dynamics, demonstrates working at a factory at CES 2026 in Las Vegas on Jan. 8. [YONHAP] Hyundai's dilemma lies in that rivals, including Tesla and Figure AI, are surging ahead, advancing humanoid technology and formalizing commercialization strategies, while it grapples with union-imposed hurdles, effectively widening the gap in the global humanoid arena. Tesla in particular has already deployed its in-house humanoid robot, Optimus, on a trial basis for logistics operations at its Texas factory. The EV giant is also building a dedicated Optimus production line in Texas, with a target capacity of 1 million units annually, and plans to begin mass production this year. Unlike its peers, Tesla has no company-wide labor union, which allows CEO Elon Musk to pursue an aggressive rollout of humanoid robots without the need for labor-management negotiations. In Europe, even companies with strong labor unions have not faced significant obstacles from them when stationing humanoid robots on the factory floor. Optimus, a humanoid robot by Tesla [JOONGANG ILBO] Figure AI’s humanoid robot, Figure 02, was deployed at BMW’s Spartanburg plant in South Carolina, where it operated for 11 months and contributed to the production of 30,000 BMW X3 vehicles. The robot reportedly handled 90,000 parts, walked a total of 200 miles and worked 10 hours per day on weekdays, accumulating 1,250 hours of operation. Mercedes-Benz is currently testing the U.S. humanoid robot Apollo, developed by Apptronik, in the logistics and production sections of its Kecskemét plant in Hungary. “Labor unions are strong in Korea; it's good to have them on board and make them understand that [this move] is not against them, but it's rather supporting their members to introduce automation,” said Susanne Bieller, the general secretary of the International Federation of Robotics, during a recent interview with the Korea JoongAng Daily. “For instance, Germany has strong labor unions, but it really understands well the benefits [of humanoids] and is supportive [of the robots]. That's also one of the factors increasing productivity: [whether] you have the staff embracing the technology and not fighting against it.” UBTech Robotics' Walker S2 humanoid robot is able to swap its battery on its own in three minutes. [SCREEN CAPTURE] UBTech Robotics, widely regarded as China’s leading humanoid robotics developer, deployed its Walker S1 robot for training at BYD’s factory as early as 2024. The Chinese company also placed dozens of units at facilities operated by Geely, Volkswagen and Audi and has secured preorders exceeding 500 units. The market estimates the price of a single Atlas robot to be roughly 200 million won, with annual maintenance costs of around 14 million won. Considering the average salary of Hyundai’s production workers, the investment could be recouped within two years. Atlas can lift weights up to 50 kilograms (110 pounds) and is capable of operating at full performance in extreme temperatures ranging from minus 20 degrees Celsius (minus 4 degrees Fahrenheit) to 40 degrees Celsius. It can learn most tasks in a single day. “Average labor costs in the U.S. manufacturing sector range between $70,000 and $80,000 annually, and since Atlas would be operated 24 hours a day, the initial hourly cost of the robot is estimated at $9.40, which could drop to as low as $1.20 per hour once production exceeds 30,000 units — roughly one-sixth of labor costs in China,” said Esther Lim, an analyst at Samsung Securities. Kim Gwi-yeon, a researcher at Daishin Securities, predicted that even if Atlas can replace just 10 percent of Hyundai's production workers, it can help Hyundai save 1.7 trillion won. “Labor costs at major Hyundai affiliates average around 130 million won per worker, while the annual maintenance cost per humanoid robot is some 14 million won,” Kim explained. “Taking into account actual working hours — eight hours for humans versus 18 for robots — the profitability impact is highly attractive.” Regarding the concerns of Atlas taking jobs from human labor, Hyundai Motor Group Vice Chairman Chang Jae-hoon said at the CES trade show that he plans to “deploy productive robots for hazardous and repetitive tasks that workers avoid,” and the introduction of robots will also “create new job opportunities related to their operation and maintenance.” Atlas, a humanoid robot by Hyundai Motor-backed Boston Dynamics, demonstrates working at a factory at CES 2026 in Las Vegas on Jan. 8. [YONHAP] BY SARAH CHEA [chea.sarah@joongang.co.kr]

#TECH