π‘ Get your daily fix of innovation, gadgets, AI, cybersecurity, and the tech shaping tomorrow. Technology Daily keeps you in the loop with smart, snappy updatesβperfect for busy founders, engineers, and curious minds alike.
Welcome to Technology Daily, your source for the latest in tech news. I'm your host, and today is May 28th, 2026. We've got a packed show covering everything from AI legal battles and Apple's Siri overhaul, to new gaming hardware, smart wearables, and a landmark AI safety bill. Let's dive in.
First up, Apple is gearing up for what could be one of the biggest changes to Siri in years. Renders leaked by Bloomberg give us a preview of what iOS 27 might look like, and it's a significant departure from what we know today. Think a pill-shaped chat bubble emerging from the Dynamic Island, with a dropdown menu offering options for Ask, Siri, and ChatGPT. The design reportedly takes cues from ChatGPT's interface with a splash of Apple's Liquid Glass aesthetic. Apple is expected to officially unveil everything at WWDC in June, so stay tuned.
In AI legal news, CNN has filed a lawsuit against AI search startup Perplexity, alleging that the company's tools produce verbatim copies of CNN's journalism and even surface content locked behind their paywall. The lawsuit, filed in a New York court, claims Perplexity ignored efforts to block its web crawlers from scraping content. Quote: 'Human beings report, research, write, edit, and create the content that Perplexity takes without permission or compensation.' This is just the latest in a growing wave of legal challenges facing AI companies over their use of copyrighted material.
On the gaming hardware front, there's exciting news for competitive FPS players. Fosi Audio has announced the C3 Gaming Sound Card, a USB-C external sound card priced at around 130 dollars. What makes it stand out is a feature called StepSense, an AI-powered audio enhancement trained on extensive first-person shooter audio data. With StepSense enabled, positional sounds like enemy footsteps and vaulting noises are boosted so they cut through the overall audio mix. For players chasing every possible edge, that's a compelling proposition.
Intel is also making a move in the handheld gaming space with its new Arc G3 and Arc G3 Extreme chips, specifically designed for portable gaming PCs. Based on the Panther Lake architecture and packed with up to 12 Xe3 graphics cores, these chips are built to handle games without the bulk of a laptop. The Acer Predator Atlas 8 is one of the first devices confirmed to use the new silicon. After a rocky start with earlier handheld efforts, Intel appears serious about competing in this fast-growing category.
Speaking of handhelds, Nintendo Switch 2 owners looking to upgrade their setup have plenty to consider. From third-party controllers like the EasySMX S10, to protective cases from Dbrand and Tomtoc, to microSD Express cards for extra storage, the accessory ecosystem is already thriving. A couple of standout budget picks: a USB-C to Ethernet adapter for dramatically faster game downloads, and a simple screen protector to keep that display safe. The Switch 2's Wi-Fi can be notoriously slow for downloads, so that Ethernet adapter might actually be the most practical purchase you make.
Now let's talk wearables. Oura has announced the Ring 5, and it's making a strong case for skeptics. The new ring is 40 percent smaller than the Ring 4, measuring just over 6 millimeters wide and about 2.3 millimeters thick, starting at 399 dollars. But the hardware isn't the only upgrade. Oura is leaning hard into AI with a new health coaching feature designed to deliver proactive, personalized insights. If the size of previous rings kept you on the fence, this might be the version that wins you over.
In the laptop world, Qualcomm is pushing its Arm-based Windows chips further down the price ladder with the new Snapdragon C platform. The company says it will enable Windows laptops at the 300 dollar price point later this year, which would be a significant milestone. Even with component costs rising industrywide, Qualcomm is betting that budget-conscious buyers deserve responsive, capable machines at accessible prices.
Rivian's chief software officer has been making headlines with some bold statements about the future of cars. In a wide-ranging conversation, he doubled down on his belief that physical buttons are an anomaly of car design, and that voice-based AI interfaces are the future. Rivian has launched its AI-powered Rivian Assistant in R1 vehicles, capable of natural language commands, Google Calendar integration via an agentic MCP framework, and deep access to vehicle controls. The upcoming R2 will take things further with 5G connectivity and powerful on-device AI compute. CarPlay? Still not happening at Rivian, but apparently customer demand for it has dropped from over 70 percent to under 25 percent as the in-house software has matured.
On the EV front, there's a cautionary tale from Kia. The flagship EV9 has been experiencing widespread 12-volt battery failures that can leave the vehicle completely dead, with no key fob access, no app connection, nothing. It's a reminder that as cars become more software-defined, the auxiliary systems that support them become even more critical.
Switching to a different kind of breakthrough, a small but promising Phase 1 clinical trial has shown that a single dose of a gene-editing drug slashed LDL, or bad, cholesterol by 62 percent, with results lasting for months. The trial only included 35 participants, so we're in very early territory, but the implications for cardiovascular health could be enormous if the results hold up in larger studies.
Meanwhile, Illinois has passed what's being called America's strongest AI safety bill. The legislation requires companies including OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google to have third parties verify that they're following safety standards. Illinois Governor JB Pritzker has signaled he will sign it into law, making this a potentially significant step toward AI regulation at the state level.
And before we wrap up, a fun one from the world of science. Researchers have finally solved a 100-year-old debate in music: does a pianist's touch actually change the tone color of a note? The answer, according to scientists using a sensor system capturing piano key movements at 1,000 frames per second, is yes. Elite pianists subtly manipulate keys in ways that listeners can genuinely perceive, even without any musical training. A satisfying resolution to a century-long argument.
That's a wrap on today's Technology Daily. From Siri's redesign to gene editing breakthroughs, it's been a big day in tech. Thanks for listening, and we'll see you tomorrow.