OpenClaw's iOS and Android apps are companion nodes, not standalone chatbots. Each phone pairs to a self-hosted Gateway over WebSocket. This adds device hardware — camera, location, voice, and Canvas — to a local-first AI agent. Here is the architecture, the capabilities, and the trade-offs for builders.
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Fiu's resilience highlights the importance of explicit configuration in AI security, potentially guiding future autonomous AI development strategies.
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Gradium released two real-time speech translation models, stt-translate and s2s-translate, covering English, French, German, Spanish, and Portuguese across 20 language pairs. The models collapse the standard three-model cascade into two, pairing single-pass transcription-and-translation with a Gradium TTS stage over one duplex WebSocket. Gradium reports a better accuracy-latency tradeoff than gpt-realtime-translate and gemini-3.5-live-translate, plus output voice selection and cloning.
The post Gradium Launches stt-translate and s2s-translate, Real-Time Speech Translation Models Beating gpt-realtime-translate on Accuracy and Latency appeared first on MarkTechPost.
Few things are as delightfully divisive as Android’s dark mode.
Some phones now ship with Android’s darker-style interface activated by default. Most reasonably recent devices offer it as a swift ‘n’ simple toggle. And most people, in my experience, have amusingly strong preferences about which approach they prefer — the standard Android “light” mode, in which screens tend to be bright and with shades of white as a foundation, and the dark mode (a.k.a. “dark theme”), where black and dark gray dominate and everything is much more muted and muddy.
It really is a night and day difference, so to speak — but no matter where you fall on the light vs. dark preference spectrum, it’s well worth your while to noddle over two pertinent points:
Android’s dark mode doesn’t have to be an all-or-nothing decision. With the right setup, you can use it as a dynamically activated sometimes switch that enables itself automatically based on different variables and gives you a darker, less glary motif when
A new Android banking trojan is targeting 217 banking and cryptocurrency apps while giving attackers broad control over infected devices. The malware is called Rokarolla and is distributed through malicious websites that disguise it as popular applications such as TikTok and Google Chrome, reports the mobile cybersecurity firm Zimperium. Zimperium says Rokarolla is designed to […]
The post Hackers Targeting 217 Android Finance Apps, Draining PINs, Patterns and Passwords: Zimperium appeared first on The Daily Hodl.
Brazil iOS overhaul enables alternative app stores and payments on iOS 26.5 with new Apple fees from 5%–21%. Stablecoin wallets could test native flows—if they nail compliance.
Google’s latest and greatest Android version is officially now out in the world and available — but if you’re using any phone other than a Pixel, that doesn’t mean much for you just yet.
The reason why is simple: Despite Google officially launching Android 17 and starting to send it out to Android phone-owners this week, it’s up to each individual device-maker to process the software and deliver it to its customers. And outside of Google itself, unfortunately, most Android device-makers are exasperatingly unreliable about making that happen — some of ’em to almost comically bad extremes (insert exaggerated sigh here).
Hold the phone, though — ’cause there is some good news here: While we can’t force any Android phone-maker to start treating software support as a priority, we can get creative and find ways to bring interesting new Android features to devices running older Android versions. In fact, all four of the Android 17 features I called out earlier this week can be emulated on any