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T-Mobile is taking Broadcom to court over VMware licensing, and the scale of the dispute is striking. The carrier says it runs tens of thousands of virtual machines across more than three hundred thousand CPU cores, and it argues Broadcom was contractually bound to keep supporting its perpetual licenses. The migration away from VMware is underway, but by T-Mobile's own account, it is slow and technically grueling work.
Turning to wearables, Meta has quietly opened up a developer platform for web apps on its Ray-Ban display glasses. That means third-party developers can now build browser-based experiences for a device people are actually wearing in public. It is an early signal that the glasses form factor may be getting serious infrastructure attention, not just hardware headlines.
And on the security front, a video circulating this week shows a researcher tearing apart a budget camera purchased through Temu. What they found raises real questions about supply chain oversight, with the device allegedly phoning home in ways that would alarm most users. It is a reminder that cheap connected hardware rarely comes without hidden costs.
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