You're tuned in to Tech Beat. Here's what's moving today.
Bitcoin clawed back above sixty-three thousand dollars after what had been shaping up as its worst week in months. Easing tensions around Iran gave risk assets some breathing room, though a small, quiet share sale by MicroStrategy's Michael Saylor is raising fresh questions about just how absolute his famous never-sell conviction really is.
That Iran de-escalation also helped fuel enthusiasm around the SpaceX public market debut, which gave broader sentiment a lift. But the real story in crypto circles is what happened when platforms tried to offer tokenized SpaceX shares ahead of the IPO. The technology worked fine — the problem was far more basic: actually getting hold of the underlying stock in the first place.
Meanwhile, a proposal called WebMCP is now entering origin trials in Google's Chrome browser, and it could quietly reshape how AI agents interact with the web. Rather than having an agent scrape page code or read pixels off a screen, WebMCP lets websites directly expose tools and functions to in-browser agents, making automated actions far more reliable and far less expensive to run.
That's the pulse of the day. Keep surfing. Tech Beat out.
