The next version of Microsoft Windows will become even more agentic, and Insta360's Antigravity brings a new immersive perspective to the drone creator toolkit.
Starring Jason Howell and Huyen Tue Dao.
JASON: This is the Daily Tech News for Thursday, August 14, 2025. We tell you what you need to know, follow up on the context of those stories and help each other understand.
HUYEN: Today new details on Apple’s plan to bring an AI robot to your tabletop, and Insta360’s Antigravity brings a unique drone perspective.
I’m Jason Howell,
I’m Huyen Tue Dao
JASON: Let’s start with what you need to know with the big story.
BIG STORY
Apple Plots Expansion Into AI Robots, Home Security and Smart Displays
Apple accidentally leaked some of its upcoming chip bumps
JASON: Apple is reportedly refocusing its AI push around a slew of new home devices. Leading the pack is a Tabletop robot, essentially a 7-inch iPad on a motorized arm that can swivel and extend to keep the display facing you while you move around. Underneath is expected to be a redesigned, more conversational Siri with better contextual awareness and memory. Also, improvements to the conversational nature of Siri are expected in the device for a tentative launch of 2027.
A simpler smart home hub that handles things like music, notes, web browsing, and video calls is expected to arrive sometime in 2026 ahead of the robot.
Both devices are reported to run a new multi-user OS called Charismatic with a more upbeat Siri persona and potentially a visual avatar component. Testing on that element has ranged from an animated Finder-like face to Memojis.
In unrelated but still leaky Apple news, Apple's code appears to reveal references to several chip upgrades to take place across its lineup. The next Vision Pro will reportedly jump to the M5. iPad Mini might get a big lift to the A19 Pro, the same chip expected to be in the iPhone 17 Pro later this year. Apple TV may get an upgrade to the A17 Pro from the A15 Bionic. Homepod mini could gain a shared architecture to the Watch Series 11.
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JASON: There’s more we need to know today, let’s get to the briefs.
BRIEFS
Microsoft's Windows lead says the next version of Windows will be "more ambient, pervasive, and multi-modal" as AI redefines the desktop interface
HUYEN: Microsoft's Windows lead Paval Davuluri says in an interview published by Microsoft that the next Windows will be more ambient, pervasive, and multi-model as AI moves further into the desktop experience. The OS will stay context-aware with an understanding of what's on the screen to understand user intent, and voice input will become even more important along with the usual mouse and keyboard input. Agentic AI will be woven into the interface as opposed to the current overlay approach.
Meta’s AI rules have let bots hold ‘sensual’ chats with kids, offer false medical info
JASON: Reuters has reviewed internal Meta documentation titled "GenAI: Content Risk Standards" that guides Meta AI and chatbots on Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp. The rules which were approved by Meta's oversight bodies, allowed bots to flirt with and romantically roleplay with minors, describe children's attractiveness, generate dehumanizing language, and produce false medical information. Meta confirmed the document's authenticity and has said that it removed the language permitting romantic chats with children. The other controversial aspects remain unchanged and Meta did not share the updated document with Reuters.
Google CEO adds a new calendar feature at Stripe co-founder’s request
HUYEN: A few new Google features of note.
Google added a simple but highly requested upgrade to Calendar on the web, triggered by Stripe co-founder John Collisions public request on X last month. Users can now duplicate events with a Control-click, similar to how native calendar apps tackle the task. Google CEO Sundar Pichai announced the new feature in Collision's Twitter thread, saying it is now live for everyone.
Google is also testing an AI-powered Flight Deals tool in Google Flights that suggests destinations based on open-ended prompts. You can describe what you are looking for, from vibe, to flight times, to flight length, to activities once you get there, and it can return budget friendly options in return. For example, “a trip to Europe with great cheese and wine in May.” If you do not specify when you want to travel, the system will default to sometime within the next six months. It's rolling out in beta to the US and Canada this week on the Flight Deals page.
Hue Bridge Pro and other new products appear on the Hue website
JASON: Philips Hue briefly revealed a slate of upcoming products on its site. The Hue Bridge Pro is a faster hub with more capacity, two front LEDs, and MotionAware that turns connected lights into motion sensors that can turn on and off automatically.A wired Secure Video Doorbell is also coming with a 2K camera, up from 1080p on previous versions. Hue also showcased a number of new String Lights, gradient lights, and a refreshed E27 bulb that adds Chromasync to deliver 40% less energy use and ultra-deep dimming down to 0.2%. Shortly after updating the site with the new products, Hue removed the information. Pricing and full specs are expected to be announced soon.
I flew Insta360’s Antigravity — it could change how drones are made
Insta360 Antigravity A1 drone preview: A 360-degree FPV drone unlike anything else
Insta360 Antigravity A1 drone footage
HUYEN: Previews of Insta360's Antigravity drone all hit this morning and it seems that most places agree that this drone is different. It records true 8K 360 video using top and bottom lenses so the drone itself stays out of frame. It is also bundled with Vision goggles and a Grip motion controller which actually decouple the view from the flight path, so the pilot can look anywhere while keeping the drone on a different pathway. Previews agreed that the experience resembles gameplay that lowers the barrier for new pilots and creators. No price tag is available yet.
Apple returns blood oxygen monitoring to the latest Apple Watches | The Verge
JASON: Apple has reintroduced Blood-Oxygen measurements for Apple Watches sold in the US after January 17th, 2024.
Previously on Apple Watch patent battles. Masimo, which makes pulse oximeters, sued Apple in 2020 for alleged violation of patents. It filed a case against Apple with the US International Trade Commission in 2021, and the ITC banned the import of Apple Watches with blood-oxygen measurements in December 2023. That meant anything on the shelves was OK to sell, but you couldn't bring in new ones. So as of January 17th, any Apple Watch sold in the US had Blood-Oxygen measurement disabled. Outside the US, it still worked as it always did.
Apple is pursuing a countersuit against Masimo for its watches, which Apple alleges are ripping off Apple's design. Apple is also still appealing the ITC ruling. And Masimo's relevant patents expire in 2028. So Apple might get the ban overturned or after 2028 it wouldn't matter.
In the meantimeApple has redesigned its new Apple Watches in the US. A software update for the watches that don't have blood-oxygen measurement will allow the watch to collect the data and transmit it to the Health app on the iPhone. The blood-oxygen level will then be calculated and shown in the respiratory sections of the Health app on the phone. US Customs has ruled that this does not violate the ITC ban.
Teenage Engineering’s new PC case is plastic and free
HUYEN: Teenage Engineering is bringing its high-concept design chops to desktop PCs with the Computer-2 computer case, a follow-up to the aluminum-bodied $149 Computer-1 released in 2021. The company says it is the "cheapest computer case in the world" with a price tag of free! It's a mini-ITX PC case made from a single sheet of semi-transparent PP plastic that folds together using plastic hinges and snap hooks. It supports a mini-ITX motherboard, SFX power supply, and a dual-slot GPU up to around 7 inches. It's assembled in an orami-style process and includes an 18-step guide. Don't break your fingertips trying to rush to the website to grab one though, they are already listed as sold out. You can leave your email to be notified if and when they return to availability.
PROMO
HUYEN: ALL WEEK AUGUST 11-AUGUST 15: All next week is DTNS Experiment week! We're swapping out our normal DTNS show and trying out some new ideas. In previous years we launched shows like Behind the Data and The Tech Jawn. This year we have exclusive Android Faithful reaction to the Pixel Event, Roger interviews Adam Sessler just to name a few. It all starts next week Monday Aug 11th on the feed.
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HELPING EACH OTHER UNDERSTAND
JASON: We end every episode of DTNS with some shared wisdom. Today Andrew shares his experience with LLM personalities.
HUYEN: DTNS Crew,
At work recently I have been using a somewhat non intuitive SDK for development, which leads to wrong answers from LLMs more often than normal. My company has a tool with many of the chatbots available, so I have seen the range of personalities come out on wrong responses. GPT4.1 has doubled down on an incorrect response more than once. Gemini is sometimes overly apologetic, like in your story, and Claude tends to say sorry and move on.
This far, the Claude approach is my favorite there. I have told the bots "it's ok I'm confused too" at least once, also.
Thanks,
Andrew from Colorado
JASON: What are you thinking about? Got some insight into a story? Share it with us feedback@dailytechnewsshow.com
JASON: Thanks to Andrew for contributing to today’s show. And thank YOU for being along for Daily Tech News Show. You can keep us in business by becoming a patron, atPatreon.com/dtns
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