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Bitcoin is showing signs of renewed confidence, with buyers accumulating more than two hundred fifty thousand coins in the price range between fifty-nine thousand and sixty-seven thousand dollars. On-chain data from Glassnode shows the buying spans both retail investors and larger whale cohorts, pushing the Accumulation Trend Score to its strongest reading of the current drawdown. Whether this signals a floor or just a pause remains the open question.
Shifting to the broader internet, a new analysis of twenty-one hundred sixty-five Polish organisations reveals a striking gap between Europe's ambitions for digital sovereignty and the reality on the ground. The vast majority of those organisations still route their web traffic and email through American infrastructure providers, raising pointed questions about what European independence actually means when the underlying pipes remain firmly in US hands.
And from the graveyard of ambitious hardware, Intel's cancelled Arctic Sound GPU has resurfaced as an engineering sample. The chip, built on the original Xe-HP architecture, features two tiles and thirty-two gigabytes of high-bandwidth memory. It never made it to market, but its reappearance is a reminder of how much investment Intel poured into AI acceleration before pivoting away from that particular path.
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