Anzeige: Künstliche Intelligenz strategisch und sicher im Unternehmen

Künstliche Intelligenz verändert Geschäftsmodelle und Prozesse nachhaltig. Ein zweitägiger Online-Workshop vermittelt Grundlagen, Potenziale und Herausforderungen für den professionellen Einsatz von KI in Unternehmen. (Golem Karrierewelt, KI)

Künstliche Intelligenz verändert Geschäftsmodelle und Prozesse nachhaltig. Ein zweitägiger Online-Workshop vermittelt Grundlagen, Potenziale und Herausforderungen für den professionellen Einsatz von KI in Unternehmen. (Golem Karrierewelt, KI)

A military satellite waiting to launch with ULA will now fly with SpaceX

The Space Force wants to launch this particular GPS satellite soon, but ULA isn’t ready.

For the second time in six months, SpaceX will deploy a US military satellite that was sitting in storage, waiting for a slot on United Launch Alliance's launch schedule.

Space Systems Command, which oversees the military's launch program, announced Monday that it is reassigning the launch of a Global Positioning System satellite from ULA's Vulcan rocket to SpaceX's Falcon 9. This satellite, designated GPS III SV-08 (Space Vehicle-08), will join the Space Force's fleet of navigation satellites beaming positioning and timing signals for military and civilian users around the world.

The Space Force booked the Vulcan rocket to launch this spacecraft in 2023, when ULA hoped to begin flying military satellites on its new rocket by mid-2024. The Vulcan rocket is now scheduled to launch its first national security mission around the middle of this year, following the Space Force's certification of ULA's new launcher last month.

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Framework “temporarily pausing” some laptop sales because of new tariffs

“We would have to sell the lowest-end SKUs at a loss.”

Framework, the designers and sellers of the modular and repairable Framework Laptop 13 and other products, announced today that it would be "temporarily pausing US sales" on some of its laptop configurations as a result of new tariffs put on Taiwanese imports by the Trump administration. The affected models will be removed from Framework's online store for now, and there's no word on when buyers can expect them to come back.

"We priced our laptops when tariffs on imports from Taiwan were 0 percent," the company responded to a post asking why it was pausing sales. "At a 10 percent tariff, we would have to sell the lowest-end SKUs at a loss."

"Other consumer goods makers have performed the same calculations and taken the same actions, though most have not been open about it," Framework said. Nintendo also paused US preorders for its upcoming Switch 2 console last week after the tariffs were announced.

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Daily Deals (4-07-2025)

The Lenovo Legion Tab (Gen 3) is a tablet made for gamers, with an 8.8 inch, 2560 x 1600 pixel, 165 Hz LTPS display, a Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 processor, 12GB of LPDDR5x memory and 256GB of UFS 4.0 storage. It supports WiFi 7 and Bluetooth 5.4 and …

The Lenovo Legion Tab (Gen 3) is a tablet made for gamers, with an 8.8 inch, 2560 x 1600 pixel, 165 Hz LTPS display, a Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 processor, 12GB of LPDDR5x memory and 256GB of UFS 4.0 storage. It supports WiFi 7 and Bluetooth 5.4 and has two USB Type-C ports (one […]

The post Daily Deals (4-07-2025) appeared first on Liliputing.

Nintendo explains why Switch 2 hardware and software cost so much

$450 system isn’t being sold at a loss, wasn’t priced with tariffs in mind.

Among the many surprises during last week's wider unveiling of the Nintendo Switch 2 was the pricing: $450 for the console itself and $70 to $80 for many first-party games. Now, in a set of interviews posted today (but conducted during last week's unveiling event), Nintendo executives are explaining and defending those prices, even as Trump's tariffs are apparently forcing the company to pause and reassess its whole launch strategy.

Nintendo of America President Doug Bowser was speaking to CNBC just as Trump's tariffs were being announced, and said in the moment that "we're still all trying to really understand [the tariffs] better and understand what possible impacts may rise from that." At the same time, he said that the company "didn't consider tariffs into that equation" when choosing the Switch 2's $450 price and instead went with what "we felt that was going to be the right price point for our consumers and the right value proposition if you will for the device that we're creating."

Elsewhere in that CNBC interview, Bowser suggested that Nintendo isn't following the Wii U example of selling hardware at a loss in order to gain more potential software customers. Instead, Bowser said the company is "trying to find a way to maintain... margins on the hardware even though they may be more slim than they are on software," and then "to make sure that they're seeing the value in their investment in one of our devices" through software.

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