Tech
Impact of US judge’s ruling on Google’s search dominance

Google has escaped a breakup of its Chrome browser in a major US competition case, but the judge imposed remedies whose impact remains uncertain just as AI starts to compete with search engines.
Here is what we know about how the antitrust ruling could affect the company, the wider tech sector and ordinary users of the giant’s services.
—What is the impact on Google?
Judge Amit Mehta, who found a year ago that Google illegally maintained monopolies in online search, did not order the company to sell off its widely used Chrome browser in his Tuesday ruling.
Neither did he halt Google’s agreements with companies like iPhone maker Apple or Firefox browser developer Mozilla, under which it pays them to make Google their default search engine.
Instead, he ordered remedies including requirements to share data with other firms so they could develop their own search products, and barring exclusive deals to make Google the only search engine on a device or service.
The ruling was “far milder than feared… (it) removes a significant legal overhang and signals that the court is willing to pursue pragmatic remedies,” Hargreaves Lansdown analyst Matt Britzman commented.
Google chiefs nevertheless still “disagree… strongly with the Court’s initial decision in August 2024,” the company’s Vice President of Regulatory Affairs Lee-Anne Mulholland said in a blog post—hinting at a likely appeal that could go all the way to the US Supreme Court.
Stock in Google parent company Alphabet surged on Wednesday as investors welcomed the ruling.
—How will this affect the wider tech sector?
Mehta himself noted that the landscape has changed since the US Justice Department and 11 states launched their antitrust case against Google in 2020.
The emergence of generative artificial intelligence as a challenge to traditional search “give(s) the court hope that Google will not simply outbid competitors for distribution if superior products emerge,” he wrote in his ruling.
“Competition is intense and people can easily choose the services they want,” Google’s Mulholland agreed.
Others in the sector were unhappy with the ruling.
“Google will still be allowed to continue to use its monopoly to hold back competitors, including in AI search,” said Gabriel Weinberg, chief executive of privacy-conscious search engine DuckDuckGo.
Beyond Google, observers have pointed out that Apple and Mozilla are both big winners from the decision.
Ending tie-ups like theirs with Google would “impose substantial—in some cases, crippling—downstream harms to distribution partners, related markets and consumers,” Mehta wrote.
“This is a huge win for Apple, but perhaps even more so for Mozilla, which may very well have died” without the cash infusions, former Google Ventures investor M.G. Siegler wrote on his blog.
—What about ordinary search and AI users?
In the near term, some search data will be shared by Google with competitors under the ruling—with Mulholland saying the company has “concerns about how these requirements will impact our users and their privacy”.
Looking further ahead, “Google Search is in the process of being disrupted” by chatbots, Siegler said.
A future where the company’s flagship search product is completely displaced may yet be far off, as Google Search notched up more than 85 billion individual visits in the month of March 2024, the most recent with data available from Statista.
That compares with around 700 million weekly users reported by OpenAI for its ChatGPT chatbot, the biggest-name generative AI product.
What’s more, Google is not barred from entering into the same kinds of distribution deals as it struck for online search to place its own AI products on partner devices or services.
The company already reports 450 million monthly users for its Gemini chatbot app, and offers competitive tools in other areas like video generation.
© 2025 AFP
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Impact of US judge’s ruling on Google’s search dominance (2025, September 3)
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Tech
Europe’s fastest supercomputer to boost AI drive

Europe’s fastest supercomputer Jupiter is set to be inaugurated Friday in Germany with its operators hoping it can help the continent in everything from climate research to catching up in the artificial intelligence race.
Here is all you need to know about the system, which boasts the power of around one million smartphones.
What is the Jupiter supercomputer?
Based at Juelich Supercomputing Center in western Germany, it is Europe’s first “exascale” supercomputer—meaning it will be able to perform at least one quintillion (or one billion billion) calculations per second.
The United States already has three such computers, all operated by the Department of Energy.
Jupiter is housed in a center covering some 3,600 meters (38,000 square feet)—about half the size of a football pitch—containing racks of processors, and packed with about 24,000 Nvidia chips, which are favored by the AI industry.
Half the 500 million euros ($580 million) to develop and run the system over the next few years comes from the European Union and the rest from Germany.
Its vast computing power can be accessed by researchers across numerous fields as well as companies for purposes such as training AI models.
“Jupiter is a leap forward in the performance of computing in Europe,” Thomas Lippert, head of the Juelich center, told AFP, adding that it was 20 times more powerful than any other computer in Germany.
How can it help Europe in the AI race?
Lippert said Jupiter is the first supercomputer that could be considered internationally competitive for training AI models in Europe, which has lagged behind the US and China in the sector.
According to a Stanford University report released earlier this year, US-based institutions produced 40 “notable” AI models—meaning those regarded as particularly influential—in 2024, compared to 15 for China and just three for Europe.
“It is the biggest artificial intelligence machine in Europe,” Emmanuel Le Roux, head of advanced computing at Eviden, a subsidiary of French tech giant Atos, told AFP.
A consortium consisting of Eviden and German group ParTec built Jupiter.
Jose Maria Cela, senior researcher at the Barcelona Supercomputing Center, said the new system was “very significant” for efforts to train AI models in Europe.
“The larger the computer, the better the model that you develop with artificial intelligence,” he told AFP.
Large language models (LLMs) are trained on vast amounts of text and used in generative AI chatbots such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google’s Gemini.
Nevertheless with Jupiter packed full of Nvidia chips, it is still heavily reliant on US tech.
The dominance of the US tech sector has become a source of growing concern as US-Europe relations have soured.
What else can the computer be used for?
Jupiter has a wide range of other potential uses beyond training AI models.
Researchers want to use it to create more detailed, long-term climate forecasts that they hope can more accurately predict the likelihood of extreme weather events such as heat waves.
Le Roux said that current models can simulate climate change over the next decade.
“With Jupiter, scientists believe they will be able to forecast up to at least 30 years, and in some models, perhaps even up to 100 years,” he added.
Others hope to simulate processes in the brain more realistically, research that could be useful in areas such as developing drugs to combat diseases like Alzheimer’s.
It can also be used for research related to the energy transition, for instance by simulating air flows around wind turbines to optimize their design.
Does Jupiter consume a lot of energy?
Yes, Jupiter will require on average around 11 megawatts of power, according to estimates—equivalent to the energy used to power thousands of homes or a small industrial plant.
But its operators insist that Jupiter is the most energy-efficient among the fastest computer systems in the world.
It uses the latest, most energy-efficient hardware, has water-cooling systems and the waste heat that it generates will be used to heat nearby buildings, according to the Juelich center.
© 2025 AFP
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Europe’s fastest supercomputer to boost AI drive (2025, September 5)
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Tech
Lenovo’s New Laptop Concept Can Swivel the Screen From Landscape to Portrait

Lenovo isn’t shy about trying new things. Last year, the PC maker teased a concept laptop with a transparent screen. Earlier this year, the ThinkBook Flip concept employed a flexible OLED display that folded over the top of the laptop lid, ready to flip up whenever you needed the extra screen space. At CES 2025, we saw a ThinkBook with a rollable OLED screen that expanded upward automatically at the touch of a button—this one is a real product you can actually buy.
Get ready for another whacky concept. At IFA 2025, the tech exhibition in Berlin, Lenovo unveiled its latest idea: the Lenovo ThinkBook VertiFlex. This is a laptop with a screen that can manually swivel from a standard horizontal orientation to vertical.
Portrait Mode
By default, the ThinkBook VertiFlex Concept looks like a normal 14-inch laptop. Look closely at the screen’s edge, however, and you’ll see a second layer jutting out; that’s the actual screen. Grab the right corner edge of the screen and push it upward, and the display will smoothly swivel up into a vertical orientation.
The back panel the screen is mounted on has a felt backing to keep everything smooth and scratch-free, and you can even prop a phone up here in this orientation. There’s a mechanism inside that manages the motion and keeps it operating smoothly. Despite this, the PC is still fairly slim at 17.9 mm, and it weighs roughly 3 pounds. (The 14-inch MacBook Pro is around 15 mm thick and weighs 3.4 pounds.)
I use a dual-screen setup with one vertical monitor next to my main ultrawide monitor at home. Having a vertical screen is a game-changer, as it’s perfect for applications that utilize more vertical space. Email is a great example, so are apps like Slack, anything to do with PDFs, and even most word processing software. But I’ve yet to change my screen orientation in the middle of a workflow.
Tech
Get Our Favorite Smart Lock for Just $164 Right Now

Is your current smart lock frustrating you endlessly, like mine is? The Yale Approach Smart Lock (8/10, WIRED Review) is currently marked down to just $164 on Amazon, a healthy 32% discount on our editors’ top pick for smart locks. This sale comes at a perfect time, because I was just complaining about the fingerprint reader on mine no longer working.
The Yale Approach uses part of your existing deadbolt, which is great news for renters who don’t want to make major changes. You’ll also get to use your existing keys to unlock the deadbolt, which can save you a trip to the locksmith. There’s also a wi-fi bridge that needs a nearby plug to provide other services, but that’s not uncommon for smart locks. Our reviewer, Nena Farrell, even said it “works perfectly,” which is great news, because I have to unplug mine and plug it back in at least once a week.
Approach isn’t just a name, as this smart deadbolt’s standout feature is auto-unlock. By setting up your location in the Yale Access App, you can set the bolt to unlock as your get close to home, which our reviewer said “worked smoothly”, as long as she got far enough away from home for it to recognize her return. There’s an auto-lock, too, using timers from 10 seconds to 30 minutes.
This version of the Yale Approach includes the touchscreen keypad, which needs its own flat space to either stick or screw to. In exchange, it lets you set codes for yourself or friends, with options for time and access limits if you need to manage entry to your home more carefully. It also gives you an easy button to press to lock the deadbolt as you leave the house, and a biometric fingerprint scanner.
No matter what smart lock you buy, there’s going to be a little bit of hassle, that just comes with the territory, unfortunately. The Yale smooths out a lot of the worst parts by adapting to your existing hardware, and mostly stays out of the way afterwards. The auto-unlock feature isn’t totally unique to the Approach, but it is currently our favorite implementation. The price is normally a bit on the high side, so the discount here makes this a very appealing pickup for anyone ready to relegate their old front door lock to the garage door, like I’m about to.
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