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Nintendo finally confirmed it. The Switch 2 is real, it’s coming this year, and it’s not trying to be a PS5. It’s sticking with that hybrid handheld model—and doing it smarter. Bigger screen, Wi-Fi 6, USB-C, and yes, backward compatibility. For all the buzz about raw specs, Nintendo is playing the long game: community, accessibility, and value. No one wants a $900 console. They want games that work, last, and bring people together—families, friends, even
TSMC just posted monster gains—revenue up 39% in the first two months of 2025, driven by sky-high demand for AI chips. They’re also dropping $100 billion more into their Arizona expansion. That’s right, Brother—$165B total, right here in our own desert backyard. Now, as a longtime Arizona tech guy, I should be cheering. But let’s slow our roll. Yeah, it’s great for jobs and local investment. But AI chip production isn’t just about silicon—it’s about
Xbox dropped a Developer Direct and gave us a peek at some big 2025 releases. New action titles, narrative RPGs, and updates to existing franchises are on the docket—and fans are hyped. But if you’re running an indie studio or gaming-adjacent business? Pay attention to the gaps. Microsoft’s roadmap tells you what they aren’t focusing on—narrative depth, nostalgia, or niche mechanics. That’s where smaller players can make a dent. My peeps building tools for gamers
Nvidia and other AI-heavy stocks took a gut punch after DeepSeek-R1 launched. Market analysts are calling it saturation. I call it reckoning. We’ve been riding the AI hype cycle hard—venture funding, infrastructure spending, and everybody slapping “AI-powered” on their products whether it made sense or not. Now folks are realizing: you can’t just automate your way to profit. Not sustainably. If you’re a small biz with tech investments, use this moment to reflect. Diversify your
OpenAI just rolled out “Operator,” a hands-free digital agent that can fill out forms, book your appointments, and generally run errands for you online. Think of it like an intern that doesn’t eat lunch or ask for PTO. For those of us juggling multiple hats (and maybe still cleaning up our own ticket queues), this is intriguing. But don’t rush in blind. Operator’s still in beta, and it’s only available to Pro users in the