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7 Jul 2026


Technology

Stop child sexual abuse ads immediately govt tells Meta

Meta asked to pull CSAM ads

The Centre has directed Meta to remove advertisements on Instagram linked to child sexual abuse material after media reports exposed their presence…

TS Amazon Prime Day 2026 features discounts on electronics

Amazon Prime Day sale goes live

Amazon has begun its much-awaited Prime Day Sale 2026, bringing substantial discounts across electronics, home appliances and everyday gadgets exclusively for Prime…

TS Meta One Premium subscription adds limits to smart glasses

Meta charges for smart glasses AI

Meta has begun charging users for some of the advanced artificial intelligence features available on its smart glasses, marking a significant shift…

TS PlayStation to discontinue physical game discs in January 2028

Sony ends PlayStation discs

Sony is taking PlayStation fully digital. Beginning January 2028, every new PlayStation game will launch only as a digital download, ending decades…

WhatsApp to allow usernames instead of phone numbers

WhatsApp set for username update

WhatsApp is preparing to roll out a major privacy update that will allow users to communicate using usernames instead of phone numbers,…

TS Google launches Nano Banana 2 Lite and Gemini Omni

Gemini Omni, Nano Banana debut

Google has introduced two new artificial intelligence models, Gemini Omni and Nano Banana 2 Lite, as it expands its AI offerings with…

Apple disputes Indian antitrust report on App Store TS

Apple questions CCI App Store probe

Apple has challenged the findings of India’s competition watchdog in the long-running investigation into its App Store practices, arguing that the probe…

TS Netflix mandates unique emails for profiles

Netflix tightens rules for shared profiles

Netflix has started rolling out a new feature that requires users to link a unique email address to every profile created under…

YouTube updates Shorts with heart icon and clear screen mode

YouTube Shorts gets cleaner, faster

YouTube is giving its Shorts platform a fresh makeover with a range of new features aimed at making short-video viewing more comfortable…

Google launches dedicated Finance app for Android

Google Finance app arrives on Android

Google has launched a dedicated Google Finance app for Android, giving users a simpler way to track stocks, monitor markets and manage…

About This Category

Technology Coverage Built Around What's Actually Changing

The technology beat in 2026 has one dominant story running underneath almost everything else: artificial intelligence is being embedded into every major platform, operating system, and hardware product simultaneously. Whether that represents genuine transformation or an industry-wide feature arms race is a question worth asking — and this section asks it, story by story.

That doesn't mean every piece is an AI piece. Samsung's Galaxy Watch health features, Spotify's playlist changes, and LinkedIn's creator analytics are covered because they reflect real shifts in how people use technology every day. But the honest editorial observation is that AI is the context for most of what is happening in tech right now, and pretending otherwise would make the coverage less useful, not more.

The Infrastructure Layer: Nvidia and COMPUTEX

The story that sets the conditions for everything else is the hardware race. Nvidia entering what it describes as a new phase of AI computing isn't just a product announcement — it's a signal about where the compute requirements for AI are heading, and who is positioned to supply them. COMPUTEX 2026 reinforced that framing, with the global AI infrastructure conversation dominating the opening of one of the industry's most significant annual showcases. These are the stories about the pipes and the processing power that make everything downstream possible.

Platform AI: What the Big Companies Are Building

Meta's AI Agents for business, Apple's iOS 27 Siri upgrade, and YouTube's dual AI rollout — podcast features and video labelling — represent three very different approaches to the same underlying technology. Meta is going after enterprise workflows. Apple is trying to make its long-underwhelming voice assistant finally competitive. YouTube's AI labelling is primarily a content trust and moderation tool, not a user feature. Grouping them all as "AI updates" flattens the distinction. This section tries to maintain it.

Creator and Professional Tools

Google's Search Profiles for content creators and LinkedIn's expanded audience analytics are both responses to the same economic reality: the creator economy has become large enough that the major platforms need to compete for the professionals building on top of them. These tools matter less as product features and more as indicators of where platform power and creator leverage are shifting.

Consumer Hardware and Wearables

Samsung's Galaxy Watch health additions are part of a broader trend in wearables — the watch becoming less of a notification device and more of a continuous health monitoring tool. Coverage here focuses on what the features actually measure, how reliable the data is claimed to be, and what the competition looks like rather than the launch event itself.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q1. What does The Summary's Technology section cover?

AI developments across major platforms and hardware, consumer technology from Apple, Samsung, Google, and others, creator and professional tools from LinkedIn and Spotify, and the semiconductor and infrastructure stories — Nvidia, COMPUTEX — that underpin the broader AI expansion. Coverage spans product announcements, platform policy changes, and the larger industry trends those announcements reflect.

Q2. How does The Summary cover consumer tech products like the Galaxy Watch or iOS updates?

Features are reported for what they actually do and what they change for users, not for what the company's press release claims. Samsung's health additions are covered in the context of the wearables market and what existing alternatives offer. iOS 27's Siri changes are assessed against where Siri actually stands today, not against a theoretical benchmark.

Q3. Does The Summary cover Indian technology companies and startups?

Where the news warrants it. The Technology section's coverage is driven by developments with broad significance — major platform changes, hardware shifts, enterprise software decisions. Indian tech companies appear when the story is genuinely substantial, not as regional representation for its own sake.

Q4. Is The Summary's tech coverage suitable for non-technical readers?

Yes. The section is written for a reader who uses technology and wants to understand what is changing, not for a reader who needs to know the technical implementation. Platform decisions, hardware advances, and AI deployments are explained in terms of what changes for users and businesses — not in engineering specifications.

Q5. How does The Summary approach tech stories that are primarily press releases?

Sceptically. When a company announces a feature or a capability, the coverage looks at what is actually confirmed, what the competitive context is, and whether previous claims from the same company have held up. Spotify's playlist features are a product update; Nvidia's compute shift is an industry story. The difference in scale and significance shapes how each is reported.