Shooting at Wisconsin Sikh temple


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My fiancee' is Sikh and thankfully none of the victims were friends or family members of hers. Once again it's tragic to see what destruction a nutcase can cause. I want to attempt to clarify a few things said in this thread as well as share my opinion.

First of all, the whole "Guns don't kill people, people kill people" is a truism. That is certainly the case. But, while this may be true, guns, while not the most efficient or devastating means of murdering someone, do enable people to kill quickly and in numbers.

Again, they're not the most efficient means of killing. But, they are the most efficient means which are readily available to the general populace. The two sides of this debate have valid points. However, for the pro-gun side not to admit that homicides would be drastically reduced were there no guns, is being willfully na?ve.

Now, I said if there were no guns. That is, if guns didn't exist. People WILL find a way to kill each other. It's part of being a primitive, and far too often, barbaric species. But, I can say with almost no equivocation that there would be nowhere near 16,000 murders in the U.S. if guns didn't exist.

Number of Murders, United States, 2009: 15,241

Number of Murders by Firearms, US, 2009: 9,146

That's 60 some odd percent of all murders in the US via firearm. Is there a possibility that without guns we'd still kill this number of people? Sure. But, in my opinion, I'd say it's not very probable.

Just from these statistics alone, wouldn't most critically thinking individuals acknowledge something needs to be done? Or, are you content with the status quo? Is that something an outright ban? Probably not. I'd say no. It would take decades upon decades to attempt to do this plus many, many other factors would have to come into play as well.

So, perhaps a different sort of firearm regulation needs to be looked at as what we're doing now has no effect whatsoever. Now, there are those making the arguments that criminals will still have guns no matter what. And, you are correct... some criminals would. And, there's been talk about gunrunners etc. here. This is one of the main misconceptions that I won't to clear up.

First of all... the vast majority of violent criminals obtain their guns indirectly through legal means. Now, I say indirectly because most don't go and buy them at your local gun shop (some actually do). Allow me to explain to you how the majority of violent criminals get their guns and no, it's not from gunrunners as you might think. More on that later.

Gun Shops/Dealers - Most guns that are currently in the hands of violent criminals originated from legal sources which includes gun shops and/or other dealers. These guns were either stolen from their original sources or sold by those original sources. Yes... some dealers do sell their stock to criminals who never fill out weapons transfer sheets or undergo any sort of background check. Trust me when I say this happens.

Gun Shows - this is a big one. Here in Texas there's a gun show somewhere every weekend. There are many collectors and private sellers there who rent booths and sell off their weapons. There are also "dealers" (people with FFLs) that have no shops, but instead sell their merchandise at these shows.

Many gangs, or other would be criminals will send a proxy in to these shows with cash to purchase multiple weapons. Again, no checks, no paperwork.

Legal Gun Owners - these people, also, sell their weapons. However, these guns are often times stolen obviously without any paperwork. ;)

I can tell you for a fact that the above three avenues are how most violent criminals in this country come by their firearms.

Gunrunners - now to address this myth. I know people here watch a lot of TV and movies. And, to a degree, some of that stuff is true. But, gunrunners are people who usually operate in bulk and they are relatively few in number.

The weapons they sell come from three different sources: Military, Law Enforcement Agencies, and Gun Manufacturers. These weapons are usually surplus stock which is set to be destroyed. In some instances, these weapons have slight imperfections. While functional, they do not meet the standards of whatever agency they're going to or whatever manufacturer is producing them.

Another source for gunrunners' stock is theft. These guns are stolen from the above group or made to seem as though they were stolen. This seldom happens for several reasons I won't get into.

For the most part gangs and common criminals do not have guns sold to them by real gunrunners. Has it happened? Sure. But, most of these guns are going toward cartels, and various wars and skirmishes around the world.

It was suggested that the Aurora shooter, if he wanted to get a gun and they were illegal, could roll on down to the hood and hit up some gangbangers and buy himself a gun. A more likely scenario would be to rob this guy flat out, or take his money and leave him hanging. He's not a source for consistent revenue, he's out of his element, and these individuals have no incentive to part with a GOOD gun when they can keep the gun and his money.

I'm a gun owner, but I don't count myself in the pro-gun camp or the anti-gun camp as I see validity for both sides. But... the status quo CANNOT continue as is. Something needs to be done.

TL;DR Guns don't come from where you think they come from, if guns were banned most people couldn't get them even common criminals would have a hard time, a outright ban isn't the answer, something must be done the status quo cannot continue.

P.S. I know people on the internet always say, trust me I know what I'm talking about. But, trust me, I know what I'm talking about. There is no source that I could or would be willing to post. So, take it as you will.

  • Like 2

TL;DR Guns don't come from where you think they come from, if guns were banned most people couldn't get them even common criminals would have a hard time, a outright ban isn't the answer, something must be done the status quo cannot continue.

Glad to see some people in USA still knows how to think.

Wasn't an AR15 used in the Aurora massacre? OK, you got me. Automatic, semi-automatic, I'm not a gun expert. My mistake for not using proper terminology.

Still doesn' really answer the question of why anyone needs one or wants one.

Something that is useless if you have an individual who has an undiagnosed psychiatric disorder. Which I imagine a lot of people do.

And if you don't have a uniform laws across the country couldn't someone just go to a neighbouring state which don't require background checks and procure firearms?

AR-15's can be used to hunt and are often used in varmint hunting as well. It was used in the Aurura shooting yes but it jammed quickly after he tried using it. He used a shotgun and a glock .40 for the majority of the shootings. It looks military to you so that means we can't have them right?

Any criticism of any part of American culture gets one labelled as anti-American these days. Just ignore it ;)

And you seem to do a lot of it. Wasn't I told that it was your choice to have restrictions on guns? Yes, well we don't want restrictions on ours. If you want me to respect your decision them I'd suggest you respect ours but in all likelihood you wont respect that and continue you're bashing at any opportunity you can.

And you seem to do a lot of it. Wasn't I told that it was your choice to have restrictions on guns? Yes, well we don't want restrictions on ours. If you want me to respect your decision them I'd suggest you respect ours but in all likelihood you wont respect that and continue you're bashing at any opportunity you can.

Hilarious as usual.

USA doing this to plenty of other countries, but it is never reciprocal.

P.S. look up dictionary if you don't know reciprocal.

Hilarious as usual.

USA doing this to plenty of other countries, but it is never reciprocal.

P.S. look up dictionary if you don't know reciprocal.

Oh its always our government. Is the people doing it? How can you blame citizens for what the government does? If you want the honest truth I think the majority of Americans disapprove with how our country is run both from a domestic and foreign policy stand point. A lot of people would change what the government is doing. But they go ahead and dig on the American people as always.We're either too fat or too skiny, we're too religious, we're blood thirsty gun owners obsessed with death. We eat nothing but fast food and are hill billy rednecks. There's nothing that we can do to get them to stop. They will find some excuse to trash us.

Oh its always our government. Is the people doing it? How can you blame citizens for what the government does? If you want the honest truth I think the majority of Americans disapprove with how our country is run both from a domestic and foreign policy stand point. A lot of people would change what the government is doing. But go ahead use that as an excuse to dig on the American people..

Yes, majority disapprove....ROFL

OK, How about some action with the gun rights that your founding father fought for it?

I distinctively remember some of your kind spew that the gun rights are for overthrowing mediocre government.

According to your post I assume an uprising is soon?

Yes, majority disapprove....ROFL

OK, How about some action with the gun rights that your founding father fought for it?

I distinctively remember some of your kind spew that the gun rights are for overthrowing mediocre government.

According to your post I assume an uprising is soon?

I don't know. Probably not. But I do know there's a lot of people that wouldn't give up their guns willingly and by willingly I mean will go down in a hail of gun fire. Once the contract with the American people is broken and that contract is the bill of rights. Once that contract is broken the U.S will cease to be the U.S. Are you from the U.S? Because I noticed you said your founding fathers. I notice it says your from Wisconsin is that correct?

this just in. Reports by multiple eye witnesses state it was multiple gunmen and in a "well coordinated" attack. Me thinks this wasn't an incident that was perpetrated by a crazy wild eyed gunman as we are led to believe

An eyewitness to the Sikh temple shooting in Wisconsin says that a team of four men dressed in black carried out the massacre, contradicting the official narrative that a lone gunman was the culprit.

http://youtu.be/zYCurbSAsd4

and:

http://youtu.be/9ecdSKi9_fs

I don't know. Probably not. But I do know there's a lot of people that wouldn't give up their guns willingly and by willingly I mean will go down in a hail of gun fire. Once the contract with the American people is broken and that contract is the bill of rights. Once that contract is broken the U.S will cease to be the U.S. Are you from the U.S? Because I noticed you said your founding fathers. I notice it says your from Wisconsin is that correct?

So to put it simply: you love your gun more than your country and your people.

Case closed.

Gun nut identified.

this just in. Reports by multiple eye witnesses state it was multiple gunmen and in a "well coordinated" attack. Me thinks this wasn't an incident that was perpetrated by a crazy wild eyed gunman as we are led to believe

An eyewitness to the Sikh temple shooting in Wisconsin says that a team of four men dressed in black carried out the massacre, contradicting the official narrative that a lone gunman was the culprit.

http://youtu.be/zYCurbSAsd4

and:

http://youtu.be/9ecdSKi9_fs

Well of course the media wants to downplay it...blame it on everything but twisted America culture.

So to put it simply: you love your gun more than your country and your people.

Case closed.

Gun nut identified.

Well of course the media wants to downplay it...blame it on everything but twisted America culture.

I love my country just as much as I love my guns.

Yes, majority disapprove....ROFL

OK, How about some action with the gun rights that your founding father fought for it?

I distinctively remember some of your kind spew that the gun rights are for overthrowing mediocre government.

According to your post I assume an uprising is soon?

a solicitation by DHS to order riot gear: https://www.fbo.gov/...b=core&_cview=0

and: another agreeing article: http://rt.com/usa/ne...-riot-gear-431/

It?s more than just stockpiling surveillance drones to spy on US citizens: the United States Army is attempting to procure an arsenal of riot gear in case the military must go toe-to-toe with civilians on US soil.
Richteralan, on 05 August 2012 - 22:35, said:

Yes, majority disapprove....ROFL

OK, How about some action with the gun rights that your founding father fought for it?

I distinctively remember some of your kind spew that the gun rights are for overthrowing mediocre government.

According to your post I assume an uprising is soon?

so yes, the government is expecting civil unrest.

I don't know. Probably not. But I do know there's a lot of people that wouldn't give up their guns willingly and by willingly I mean will go down in a hail of gun fire. Once the contract with the American people is broken and that contract is the bill of rights. Once that contract is broken the U.S will cease to be the U.S. Are you from the U.S? Because I noticed you said your founding fathers. I notice it says your from Wisconsin is that correct?

"Over my cold dead hand"? Probably there are some. But I won't for a second believe that a significant portion of people will going to go down in a shower of bullets, And anyone with half a brain would realise taking away guns would be a terrible idea anyway. A lot of countries are plotting towards being smokefree (as in smoking), but none of them go and went "no more tobacco for sale". As for an effective way, now that is the better question but it would be a generational thing.

As for US cease to be the US. Just reeks of paranoia there I'm sorry.

Side track Rant: Way too many people treat founding papers way too importantly. Maybe I'm not religious and never had an all-conquering document to abide to like a bible or a koran. But surely a country is held together by more than mere amendments written by people who probably never envisioned the future as what it is today. I can't pretend I know American history much, but I assume the amendments were written at a time that is still pretty lawless and British presence was still fresh in their minds. America back then is not America now. The whole "Founding" document thing just seem to handcuff progress, and very often ends debate without even pursuing the issue just because it is "in the constitution". It is really backwards thinking.

And I'm sure there are much more holding the country together than some mere words. A country won't become not the same country in a blink of an eye, a country where it may be always evolve.

"Over my cold dead hand"? Probably there are some. But I won't for a second believe that a significant portion of people will going to go down in a shower of bullets, And anyone with half a brain would realise taking away guns would be a terrible idea anyway. A lot of countries are plotting towards being smokefree (as in smoking), but none of them go and went "no more tobacco for sale". As for an effective way, now that is the better question but it would be a generational thing.

As for US cease to be the US. Just reeks of paranoia there I'm sorry.

Side track Rant: Way too many people treat founding papers way too importantly. Maybe I'm not religious and never had an all-conquering document to abide to like a bible or a koran. But surely a country is held together by more than mere amendments written by people who probably never envisioned the future as what it is today. I can't pretend I know American history much, but I assume the amendments were written at a time that is still pretty lawless and British presence was still fresh in their minds. America back then is not America now. The whole "Founding" document thing just seem to handcuff progress, and very often ends debate without even pursuing the issue just because it is "in the constitution". It is really backwards thinking.

And I'm sure there are much more holding the country together than some mere words. A country won't become not the same country in a blink of an eye, a country where it may be always evolve.

No it's patriotism. he loves his country and the ideals it has had for the last roughly 235 years. He and I both care about our country and the freedoms we enjoyed.

it's good to see people express sadness at the lost lives before they go into partisan rhetoric... oh wait. :whistle:

If I didn't care I wouldn't be posting here. But my position is that restricting access to guns would reduce the number of tragedies like this occurring. You simply don't see shootings like this occurring in the UK and the last time we did - back in 1996 with the Dunblane massacre, in which 18 people were killed - we responded by tightening gun control laws, including the outright ban of handguns. That was 16yrs ago and thankfully we haven't seen anything like that since. That's not to say we don't have gun crime and that's not to say that there won't be shootings in the future - I'm not that naive - but we have taken sensible safeguards to minimise the risk.

The US response is the opposite. Rather than restricting guns we see groups and politicians pushing for more weapons, for more access and large increases in the number of people buying guns. So yes, I won't apologise for being critical of the US position - I think it's moronic. It flies in the face of common sense. This is the second high profile mass shooting in less than a month and yet is anything going to be done? Of course not. Politicians will put on their sad faces for a few days and then continue on as if nothing has happened.

PS - I've said it before but I have several shotguns in my house, including a semi-automatic. I go out shooting with them and was a member of a local rifle shooting club for a while. I'm not an anti-gun nut by any stretch of the imagination. However, I'm a strong believer in strict firearms restrictions.

  • Like 1

"Over my cold dead hand"? Probably there are some. But I won't for a second believe that a significant portion of people will going to go down in a shower of bullets, And anyone with half a brain would realise taking away guns would be a terrible idea anyway. A lot of countries are plotting towards being smokefree (as in smoking), but none of them go and went "no more tobacco for sale". As for an effective way, now that is the better question but it would be a generational thing.

As for US cease to be the US. Just reeks of paranoia there I'm sorry.

Side track Rant: Way too many people treat founding papers way too importantly. Maybe I'm not religious and never had an all-conquering document to abide to like a bible or a koran. But surely a country is held together by more than mere amendments written by people who probably never envisioned the future as what it is today. I can't pretend I know American history much, but I assume the amendments were written at a time that is still pretty lawless and British presence was still fresh in their minds. America back then is not America now. The whole "Founding" document thing just seem to handcuff progress, and very often ends debate without even pursuing the issue just because it is "in the constitution". It is really backwards thinking.

And I'm sure there are much more holding the country together than some mere words. A country won't become not the same country in a blink of an eye, a country where it may be always evolve.

There would be quite a few that would indeed go down fighting believe me. I don't just say that to sensationalize it. The founding fathers knew what an all powerful government could do. The idea's the founding fathers had back then are still very relevant today.They didn't write the documents based on lawlessness they based it on ideals they found to be self evident. Back then as today governments if given the chance would love to rule over its people with as much power as possible. Look no further than North Korea for instance. They wrote those documents to keep us from becoming countries like North Korea.

If I didn't care I wouldn't be posting here. But my position is that restricting access to guns would reduce the number of tragedies like this occurring. You simply don't see shootings like this occurring in the UK and the last time we did - back in 1996 with the Dunblane massacre, in which 18 people were killed - we responded by tightening gun control laws. That was 16yrs ago and thankfully we haven't seen anything like that since. That's not to say we don't have gun crime and that's not to say that there won't be shootings in the future - I'm not that naive - but we have taken sensible safeguards to mitigate the risk.

The US response is the opposite. Rather than restricting guns we see groups and politicians pushing for more weapons, for more access and large increases in the number of people buying guns. So yes, I won't apologise for being critical of the US position - I think it's moronic. It flies in the face of common sense. This is the second high profile mass shooting in less than a month and yet is anything going to be done? Of course not. Politicians will put on their sad faces for a few days and then continue on as if nothing has happened.

PS - I've said it before but I have several shotguns in my house, including a semi-automatic. I go out shooting with them and was a member of a local rifle shooting club for a while. I'm not an anti-gun nut by any stretch of the imagination. However, I'm a strong believer in strict firearms restrictions.

I disagree. case in point. There's a HUGE push for control or banning going on. mix with that the fast and furious government gun running, Aurora and now this along with the UN gun treaty to remove the 2nd amendment.

as for you being in the UK. do you see the bad in that? when a government has guns and the people can't defend themselves if the government gets out of hand, you'll wish you had arms to protect your loved ones.

If I didn't care I wouldn't be posting here. But my position is that restricting access to guns would reduce the number of tragedies like this occurring. You simply don't see shootings like this occurring in the UK and the last time we did - back in 1996 with the Dunblane massacre, in which 18 people were killed - we responded by tightening gun control laws, including the outright ban of handguns. That was 16yrs ago and thankfully we haven't seen anything like that since. That's not to say we don't have gun crime and that's not to say that there won't be shootings in the future - I'm not that naive - but we have taken sensible safeguards to minimise the risk.

The US response is the opposite. Rather than restricting guns we see groups and politicians pushing for more weapons, for more access and large increases in the number of people buying guns. So yes, I won't apologise for being critical of the US position - I think it's moronic. It flies in the face of common sense. This is the second high profile mass shooting in less than a month and yet is anything going to be done? Of course not. Politicians will put on their sad faces for a few days and then continue on as if nothing has happened.

PS - I've said it before but I have several shotguns in my house, including a semi-automatic. I go out shooting with them and was a member of a local rifle shooting club for a while. I'm not an anti-gun nut by any stretch of the imagination. However, I'm a strong believer in strict firearms restrictions.

Yet you criticize me for talking about your gun laws and the response was. We voted for it, its freedom... We want to keep our guns so let us alone.

I disagree. case in point. There's a HUGE push for control or banning going on. mix with that the fast and furious government gun running, Aurora and now this along with the UN gun treaty to remove the 2nd amendment.

as for you being in the UK. do you see the bad in that? when a government has guns and the people can't defend themselves if the government gets out of hand, you'll wish you had arms to protect your loved ones.

The U.N gun treaty wasn't signed by the u.s thankfully. The high cap magazine ban failed too. But I see that coming up again because it was tied in with a cyber security bill. Wait till its tied to something more relevant to guns and it'll be passed probably.

And yet now Germany has a very low rate of firearms fatalities. Even if the US were to introduce proper restrictions on guns tomorrow it would take years, if not decades to start to make a difference. Nobody is claiming that this is an overnight fix.

Good plan, lets sacrifice more people now so that it MIGHT be better later, no thanks, I choose to be responsible for my own safety.

Last time gun control worked in Germany, a genocide occurred because no one could stop it.

Stop watching Fox News.

Thats hilarious, I ve never watched fox news. good try though.

You know nothing about me, so making bad assumptions about me only serve to discredit your own already poor arguments.

Seriously. If there were adequate gun restrictions in place you wouldn't need to worry about such attacks, so you wouldn't have anything to defend yourself from.

Are you that disconnected from reality?

The ONLY way to create a place where these attacks couldn't exist would be to create a big-brother police state similar to path the UK is taking, and the thought police clamp down on you for even thinking "gun". Something like that would cause a second American Revolution.

Guns exist, what has been made, cannot be unmade. Even in a country with massively restrictive laws like Norway bad people can and DO still get guns, and all that the gun laws did was to create an easy to slaughter population. You cannot even point to "the police will protect you" because Brevik was able to slaughter an unprecidented number of people and children before law enforcement could even react at all. With more people able to carry, it may have given him pause, or at least given them more of a chance than cows being led to slaughter.

It's really bizarre that people would advocate more guns and more places to allow them as a solution. That's not addressing the problem - that's contributing to it!

I disagree, in fact its more bizarre that you think the idea that "Laws" will prevent gun crime when things like Norway happen, highlighting the fact that restrictive laws only allow greater numbers of people to be slaughtered.

Laws havn't exactly stopped drugs or murder have they?

Why do you think James Holmes chose a "Gun free zone"? He could have gone to a gun show and tried the same thing, but I would imagine that would not have worked out so well in his favor.

Let me repeat it since you are not getting it: Gun control ONLY punishes the 187 million gun owners that are not murdering anyone and following the law already

Good plan, lets sacrifice more people now so that it MIGHT be better later, no thanks, I choose to be responsible for my own safety.

Last time gun control worked in Germany, a genocide occurred because no one could stop it.

Thats hilarious, I ve never watched fox news. good try though.

You know nothing about me, so making bad assumptions about me only serve to discredit your own already poor arguments.

Are you that disconnected from reality?

The ONLY way to create a place where these attacks couldn't exist would be to create a big-brother police state similar to path the UK is taking, and the thought police clamp down on you for even thinking "gun". Something like that would cause a second American Revolution.

Guns exist, what has been made, cannot be unmade. Even in a country with massively restrictive laws like Norway bad people can and DO still get guns, and all that the gun laws did was to create an easy to slaughter population. You cannot even point to "the police will protect you" because Brevik was able to slaughter an unprecidented number of people and children before law enforcement could even react at all. With more people able to carry, it may have given him pause, or at least given them more of a chance than cows being led to slaughter.

I disagree, in fact its more bizarre that you think the idea that "Laws" will prevent gun crime when things like Norway happen, highlighting the fact that restrictive laws only allow greater numbers of people to be slaughtered.

Laws havn't exactly stopped drugs or murder have they?

Why do you think James Holmes chose a "Gun free zone"? He could have gone to a gun show and tried the same thing, but I would imagine that would not have worked out so well in his favor.

Let me repeat it since you are not getting it: Gun control ONLY punishes the 187 million gun owners that are not murdering anyone and following the law already

They don't understand. They don't have to deal with gang members willing to kill you over the things you own or kill you just because you're on their turf. They don't have the same problems we do.

as for you being in the UK. do you see the bad in that? when a government has guns and the people can't defend themselves if the government gets out of hand, you'll wish you had arms to protect your loved ones.

What utter nonsense. A few handguns and automatic weapons aren't going to do anything against a government willing to use tanks, jets, helicopter gunships, chemical weapons or drone strikes against its citizens. Yet firearms restrictions do reduce the number of firearms fatalities... dramatically.

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Ubuntu Livepatch: Canonical's zero-downtime service Livepatch arrived on Arm64 devices running Ubuntu Core 26 and Ubuntu 26.04 LTS. Livepatch allows users to apply important kernel updates without any service interruption or rebooting. AMD 26.6.2 driver: The new driver version for Radeon hardware owners brought FSR 4.1 upscaling tech to an entire generation of its products: the RX 7000 series. However, the 26.6.2 FSR driver flew dark clouds over users, breaking many Windows PCs and causing a yellow bang or other launch failures on Windows 10. AMD later pushed the 26.6.3 Hotfix update to fix the issues. Goodbye Notion email: It's been a little over a year since the AI-powered email client launched. The company has announced its shutdown, which will take effect on September 22, and said it doesn't see the point in maintaining a frontend email client when people are moving towards automation. Ventoy version 1.1.14: The biggest change in the Rufus alternative is an updated Secure Boot shim file to resolve the UEFI CA 2023 issue, a compatibility problem that affected Secure Boot environments on some systems. This week in hardware news Image: Valve Catch up on some of the latest software news updates that arrived throughout the week: 14,000 mAh battery: Yes, that's something that iPhone users can only dream of. But a Chinese company is reportedly developing a smartphone with a 14,000mAh battery. If it ever sees daylight, it would be the largest battery ever on a smartphone, possibly offering a week of backup on a single charge. Steam Machine prices: Valve finally confirmed the Steam Machine's pricing. Starting at $1,049 for the 512GB option, storage and the included controller are the biggest differences among the four variants presented. Xbox just got more expensive: Rising costs of storage and memory prompted Microsoft to raise prices. Xbox Series X|S models wth 512GB storage will cost $100 extra, and 1TB models will cost $150 extra. However, the Redmond giant discounted the 2TB models. New NVIDIA supercomputers: The company announced plans to deploy 35 high-performance (HPC) AI supercomputers across Europe this year, primarily at national supercomputer centers, AI factories, and research institutes. Fast fast memory: Samsung built the UFS 5.0 storage solution, which pushes the data transfer speeds to 10.8 GB/s on mobile devices. It can open doors for faster local AI performance, which otherwise doesn't look promising under the current scenario. Custom chips for TikTok: Qualcomm is reportedly in talks with ByteDance to build custom video chips optimized for its massive data center workloads. ByteDance needs hardware that can help it ingest, process, and serve billions of short-form videos daily. OpenAI Jalapeño: The AI giant announced its first custom-designed AI chip developed in partnership with Broadcom. Jalapeño is designed specifically for large language model inference and is the first product from a multi-generation compute platform being developed by OpenAI. Galaxy A27 5G: The new mid-range smartphone from Samsung arrived with a platter of updates over A25 5G, including a 120Hz refresh rate, Infinity-O punch-hole camera design, expanded AI features, and more. Qualcomm takes on NVIDIA: The chipmaker baked the new Dragonfly CPU, High Bandwidth Compute technology, and AI chips to challenge NVIDIA in the AI data center market. Qualcomm said its new lineup improved per-watt performance, token throughput, and total cost of ownership for AI data centers. IBM goes sub-1nm: The company reached a semiconductor milestone by announcing the world's first sub-1-nanometer chip technology, based on a 0.7nm (7-angstrom) node. It can pack nearly 100 billion transistors onto a chip the size of a fingernail. This week in Google News Image: Google Catch up on some of the latest Google news updates that arrived throughout the week: What to expect from the Pixel 11 series: The upcoming lineup is expected to feature four different variants and a price hike due to the global memory shortage. Read our detailed coverage to know about the expected Pixel 11 specs. Stopping Google: The Free Software Foundation Europe urged the European Commission to stop Google from silently reinstalling AI models and requiring registration. Users should be able to fully uninstall AI-based features from Android devices and access interoperability features. Chasing Anthropic: The Claude-maker is making new strides every day in the AI world, but the search giant is struggling to catch up. Google is said to be reshuffling its AI coding "strike team" it created roughly about two months ago, turning it into a broader model-training group amid talent losses at DeepMind. New Google Play billing: Google has faced a long legal battle with Epic Games, and the search giant is rolling out a redesigned Play Store billing and fee structure. Available in the US, UK, and the European Economic Area, it will take effect on June 30. Error-free Sheets? A new feature in Google Sheets allows Gemini to inspect formula errors and apply corrections directly in the spreadsheet. Google said the new feature can handle pretty much everything from basic arithmetic to very complex calculations. Breeze through airports: Google Wallet became the first digital wallet to integrate with TSA PreCheck Touchless ID, a program that enables travelers to move through airport security checkpoints using facial recognition instead of a physical ID or boarding pass. Built-in computer control: Gemini 3.5 Flash got a built-in tool called Computer Use, which allows developers to build agents that navigate browsers, mobile interfaces, and desktop applications. Google Finance: The redesigned platform is now out of beta. Google has added several new features, including portfolio tracking, scheduled market briefings, and a dedicated Android app. An iOS app is planned for later in 2026. This week in Apple News Image: Apple Catch up on some of the latest Apple news updates that arrived throughout the week: Trade secrets reportedly exposed: Apple's manufacturing partner in India, Tata Electronics, confirmed a cybersecurity attack on its systems that may have exposed trade secrets of Apple and Tesla. Hackers reportedly stole up to 630 GB of data and posted up to 200,000 files on the dark web. Grab your payout: Apple is facing a class-action lawsuit in the UK and might end up paying $4 billion (£3 billion) if it loses. The iPhone-maker has been accused of trapping users in iCloud by restricting rivals from fully accessing iOS. The tribunal recently set a full trial date for October 2028. iOS 27 Beta 2: Apple's latest iPhone update is moving forward, and a new beta was pushed this week. While iOS 27 Beta 2 for developers pushed several bug fixes across the system, the AirPort Utility was deprecated; it's no longer available to new users. Price hike: Just like others, Apple has raised prices of several MacBook and iPad models, including the MacBook Neo, which now starts at $699. This comes after reports that this year's iPhone will also become expensive. Second-gen iPhone Fold: While the world is desperate to see Apple's foldable iPhone, leakers have started to talk about its second generation. Apple is expected to launch a successor in Fall 2027, featuring a wider folding display while reusing the same screen found in the first generation. The search for memory: Apple is reportedly looking at blacklisted Chinese companies amid rising memory chip prices. The company is seeking clearance from the Trump administration to purchase memory from ChangXin Memory Technologies (CXMT). This week in Meta news Image: Meta Catch up on some of the latest Meta, WhatsApp, and Instagram updates that arrived throughout the week: WhatsApp gets a new final boss: Mark Zuckerberg announced that CRED's Kunal Shah will become the next global head of WhatsApp, as Will Cathcart steps down and moves to a new role at Meta. The social media giant invested money in CRED through a Series H funding round. AI glasses in 26 styles: A new line of Meta Glasses launched in partnership with EssilorLuxottica. Starting at $299, it comes in more than two dozen styles across different colors, lenses, and frames. More ways to doomscroll: Instagram for TV is now available on Samsung smart TVs launched in 2020 and later years. The company also announced that it's testing several new features on Instagram for TV, bringing it closer to YouTube and Netflix. This week in AI news Image: Microsoft Catch up on the latest artificial intelligence news updates that arrived throughout the week: Water-saving data center: Microsoft is building a gas-powered AI data center with a capacity of 2 gigawatts. The company will deploy a closed-loop cooling system, saying that its total lifecycle water use will be "only a fraction of that consumed annually by a typical fast-food restaurant.” OpenAI beats Claude Mythos: GPT-5.5-Cyber got a limited release for verified defenders. It scored 85.6% on CyberGym, compared with 81.8% for GPT-5.5 and 83.8% for Claude Mythos 5. The AI giant also announced a limited preview of its new GPT-5.6 model series, whose flagship model, GPT-5.6 Sol, is targeted at demanding reasoning and agentic workloads. Proceed with caution: The Trump administration instructed OpenAI to limit the distribution of GPT-5.6 to a small group of government-approved partners rather than the general public, as has happened in the past. Claude Tag: Anthropic launched its new AI teammate for Slack, enabling teams to delegate tasks to Claude directly within Slack channels. What makes it different is that it's designed to operate as a shared assistant for an entire team rather than a single user. Challenging US dominance: The UK government has funded £60 million ($70 million) to Oxford and UCL to keep the country in the AI race by building open-source, low-hardware alternatives. The two organizations will share the money over six years. Paying for AI development: One cost is the loss of human jobs. Oracle laid off about 21,000 employees (13% of its workforce) amid increasing AI adoption. The software giant said that AI advancement and adoption "may continue to result in reductions to our workforce." GitHub strips features: It removed the ability to manually detect an AI model from its Copilot Free and Student plans. In other words, its automatic routing system is the only way to choose a model. Are you a copycat? Anthropic accused Alibaba of creating about 25,000 fraudulent accounts to copy Claude's capabilities at scale. It told US lawmakers that operators linked to Alibaba generated 28.8 million exchanges with Claude between April 22 and June 5, 2026. Reserve my memory: The semiconductor company Micron revealed that AI companies are spending billions to lock up its memory years in advance. Its customers have locked in $22 billion worth of memory supply commitments. Another AI battle: A publisher group that collectively owns 400 newspapers sued OpenAI and Microsoft for scraping their content to build AI chatbots such as ChatGPT and Copilot without compensation. Anthropic AI ban: The US government partially reversed the Anthropic AI ban, allowing it to restore Claude Mythos 5. However, it can only be deployed for a limited set of US organizations that operate and defend critical infrastructure. This week in Microsoft News In some of the hottest stories of the week: Windows 10 quietly gained a year of support and updates, Windows 11 KB5095093 released with a long list of features, and Windows 11 26H2 is finally getting the ability to disable web search results in Windows 11 Search. You can check out Taras's freshly baked Microsoft Weekly roundup to catch up on all the interesting stories this week. This week in science news Image by Pascal Küffer via Pexels Catch up on some of the latest science and out-of-this-world updates that arrived throughout the week: 13 billion-year-old secret: Scientists found that the universe's first molecule (helium hyride) reacted with hydrogen much faster in cold temperatures than previously believed. It's a new breakthrough that changes our understanding of early star formation. Cosmic Living Fossil: Astronomers found CR3, a surprisingly pristine 11.5-billion-year-old galaxy dubbed a "living fossil." It suggests the universe's first generation of stars formed much later than previously assumed. Einstein's 100-year-old theory: Thanks to relativity, researchers calculated that clocks on Mars tick 477 microseconds faster per day than on Earth. This minute gravitational difference is crucial for synchronizing future interplanetary space missions. Don't panic: NASA's James Webb Telescope finally eliminated the threat of asteroid 2024 YR4 striking the moon in 2032. The rocky giant will give us a safe fly-by without causing any harm. This week in gaming? The latest issue of Pulasthi's Weekend PC Game Deals curates several exciting games on sale this week. RollerCoaster Tycoon 3 Complete Edition and Voidwrought have replaced the old titles in this week's Epic Games Store giveaway. For Xbox Free Play Days, the new titles include House Flipper 2, Blades of Fire, and Assetto Corsa Competizione. Steam Summer Sale 2026 kicked off with discounts for everything from the newest games and retro gems to all sorts of DLC packs, until July 9. Meanwhile, NVIDIA GeForce NOW added support for several new titles, including Dark Scrolls, SAND: Raiders of Sophie, and EMPULSE. That said, here are some more stories from the gaming world: Age of Empires Mobile comes to PC, here's how to carry over progress from your phone Xbox Insiders get Xbox 360 achievements and Gamertag character upgrades Grand Theft Auto VI pricing revealed alongside Ultimate Edition and pre-loading details Sony announces Bungie layoffs that will affect "significant number of employees" From the review corner This week, Steven published a review of the TerraMaster F4-425 Pro AI-powered NAS, featuring an all-metal exterior on the lines of the four-bay F4-425 series. Powered by the octa-core Intel Core N350, the TerraMaster F4-425 Pro is highly energy-efficient, operates quietly, and offers three M.2 slots. On the flip side, OpenClaw support requires removing security hardening (SPC), AI requires a paid subscription, the software feels like a beta, and the rubber feet constantly come unstuck. ZimaBoard 2 1664 Starter Kit Another NAS setup reviewed this week is the ZimaBoard 2 by IceWhale Technology. It comes in a small footprint with great modern hardware through a combo of Intel N150 and DDR5 memory support. On the downside, the memory is not upgradeable, ZimaOS is a bit barebones, factory reset requires USB flashing, and there is no automatic backup via the mobile app. Synology's BeeCamera software Christopher wrote his review of the software that powers BeeCamera Plus and said "the BeeCamera app is a great way to add private home monitoring to your network but there are some limitations." It's free with an easy setup process, fast response time, and good AI and detection features. However, there is no desktop version; it only works with Synology cameras, some configurations are difficult to set up on a phone, and it lacks the features of the surveillance station. More price drops! We got you covered with some hot tech deals all week. For some reason, if you missed out on a great discount, here is a summary of some recent deals that are still alive: Onkyo Dolby Atmos AV receivers are really solid deals 4TB TEAMGROUP MP44Q, 2TB T-Force G50, and 2TB WD My Passport SSDs drop to great prices Edifier S3000MKII hi-fi audiophile grade bookshelf speaker is at its lowest price now The best controller for XBOX and PC is down to the lowest price Limited time Prime Day deal cuts price of this Hisense 65" 4K smart TV in half To view all of our recent deals, click here. So, these were some of the biggest tech news and other updates from this week. There will be more issues of our 7 Days series in the coming weeks and months, so stay tuned. You can also support Neowin by registering for a free member account or subscribing to extra member benefits, along with an ad-free tier option. Have a great weekend!
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