Yes, Apple. Good.

TechLinked
TechLinkedMar 5, 2026

Why It Matters

Apple’s aggressive pricing expands access to high‑performance laptops, while AI‑related privacy and contract controversies signal escalating regulatory pressure that could reshape industry practices.

Key Takeaways

  • Apple launches entry‑level MacBook Neo at $599 with A18 Pro.
  • OpenAI renegotiates Pentagon contract, pledges limits on surveillance use.
  • Meta’s AI glasses send intimate user footage to Kenyan moderators.
  • Google releases Android 16 desktop mode for Pixel 8 and newer.
  • Xiaomi demonstrates 90% successful humanoid robots on EV assembly line.

Summary

Apple’s latest product wave dominated the tech headlines, unveiling the $599 MacBook Neo powered by the A18 Pro chip, a stripped‑down yet capable entry‑level laptop, alongside upgraded 14‑ and 16‑inch MacBook Pros featuring the new M5 Pro and M5 Max chiplet‑based "fusion" architecture. The company also introduced a refreshed M5‑based MacBook Air with 16 GB unified memory and refreshed Studio Display and Studio Display XDR models, signaling a broad push across its hardware portfolio.

Beyond Apple, the video highlighted several industry controversies: OpenAI’s CEO Sam Altman announced a renegotiated Pentagon contract that now explicitly bars domestic surveillance, after backlash over an earlier deal perceived as opportunistic. Meta faced scrutiny after Swedish reports revealed its AI glasses streamed intimate user video to Kenyan moderators, raising serious privacy concerns. Meanwhile, Google rolled out Android 16’s desktop mode for newer Pixel phones, and a massive DDR5 RAM scalping operation was uncovered, underscoring ongoing supply‑chain pressures.

Notable moments included Altman’s internal memo admitting the original contract was “sloppy,” and a Meta policy that essentially tells users not to record sensitive data, shifting responsibility onto consumers. The video also cited Google’s Coruna iPhone exploit affecting iOS 13‑17.2.1 and Xiaomi’s demonstration of humanoid robots achieving a 90 % success rate on its EV assembly line, hinting at rapid automation advances.

These developments suggest a tightening of regulatory and ethical scrutiny on AI and data practices, while hardware manufacturers double down on performance and price‑point diversification. Consumers may benefit from more affordable, powerful laptops, but must navigate heightened privacy risks and supply constraints, and enterprises should monitor the accelerating integration of robotics in manufacturing.

Original Description

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Timestamps:
0:00 I'm just ASKING
0:18 Macbook Neo, M5 Pro, M5 Max
2:38 OpenAI manages Anthropic backlash
4:31 Meta Glasses videos exposed?
7:05 QUICK BITS INTRO
7:12 Windows 12 this year NOT
7:54 Pixels get Android desktop mode
8:27 Scalper bots making RAM crisis worse
9:11 'Coruna' iPhone exploits
10:04 Xiaomi has robot 'interns'

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