NO GALAXY FOLD FOR YOU!
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Learn more about Storyblocks Video at storyblocks.com GET MERCH: lttstore.com Twitter: twitter.com Instagram: @TechLinkedYT Facebook: @TechLinked NEWS SOURCES: THEY WOKE THE DRAGON arstechnica.com qz.com youtube.com twitter.com A Tesla blew up too motherboard.vice.com twitter.com FOLD – AS IN POKER arstechnica.com wired.com youtube.com Teardown: trustedreviews.com SCARY BAD COMPANY, BAD kitguru.net cnet.com Huawei: ...we good theverge.com QUICK BITS ANYTHING THEY CAN DO I CAN DO BETTER slashgear.com twitter.com techspot.com TELL ME WHAT U WANT reddit.com OUR BRAINS ARE BROKEN kitguru.net ASK THE OMNISCIENT GADGET androidpolice.com ROBOTS CAN BE TENDER, TOO engadget.com
The video opens with a quick recap of SpaceX and its Dragon spacecraft, noting that the mission team described the incident as an anomaly, while leaked footage suggests an explosion during a countdown test. The hosts explain that the explosion occurred on the launch site, creating large, orange clouds of smoke, and discuss the potential impact on future crewed missions and timelines. They contextualize the event within broader tech and space news, noting accompanying incidents such as a Tesla fire in Shanghai and the ongoing delays surrounding the Galaxy Fold. The segment then pivots to a discussion of why foldable phones have faced hurdles, with Samsung delaying the Galaxy Fold launch to evaluate reports of malfunctioning units and to conduct further tests, hinting that the required folding technology has not yet reached reliable consumer readiness. The hosts touch on potential rivals like Huawei and intelligence community claims, balancing skepticism with a call for receipts in tech industry narratives. A brief sponsorship segment introduces Storyblocks Video, followed by quick bits about next generation gaming hardware and broader tech ecosystem developments, including Intel graphics community input and UK government information services through voice assistants. The episode wraps up with a light look at robotics research from MIT that enables gentler grasping for future robots, tying together the theme that innovation comes with growing pains, and closes with a nod to upcoming studio appearances and a playful sign-off from the hosts.
Topics · technology · space · consumer_electronics · news_and_events · robotics