
More colorful PC cases from Hyte.
I'm already dying to get my hands on the Y70 Touch Infinite, but the bubbly X50 and X50 Air look just as fun. The compact mid-tower case made its debut at Computex 2025, and it comes with plenty of mesh for more airflow and enough room for up to 10 fans.
The X50 Air with the mesh panel will cost $119.99, while the X50 with glass will cost $149.99 (not including tariffs). It will come in white, black, red, pink, purple, and green when it launches this summer.

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Fox News
28 minutes ago
- Fox News
If you don't know about these video tools, you're already behind
I've said it before, and I'll say it again, AI is changing everything. And now, it's coming for video in a huge way. We're not just talking about deepfakes or filters anymore. This is next-level, movie-magic stuff. Enter to win $500 for you and $500 for your favorite person or charity in our Pay It Forward Sweepstakes. Hurry, ends soon! Let's talk about the wild part first. You don't need any editing software. You don't need a green screen. Heck, you don't even need a camera. Your keyboard is now the director, the producer, the editor, and your creative partner. All you have to do is type what you want to see, and boom, AI turns your words into high-def, studio-quality video clips. It's like having a Hollywood studio tucked inside your laptop. Two of the biggest names in this space right now are Sora from OpenAI and Veo from Google. And yes, you can actually try them both right now. I've tested them side by side, and you can watch my results at the end to see which one came out on top. Sora is built right into ChatGPT and is shockingly good. Type something simple like, "a golden retriever puppy playing on the beach with a tennis ball," and within seconds, Sora delivers a smooth, visually rich video clip. No stock footage. No need to mess with editing timelines or export settings. Just write what you want to see. Here's the breakdown: And here's a hot tip: Microsoft just announced that Sora is being integrated into their new Bing Video Creator, so you'll start seeing it pop up in more places soon. Now over to Google's Veo, and wow, this one is aiming for cinematic quality. Veo gives you up to 60-second videos in 1080p, and the realism is something else. You can include camera moves, lighting shifts, and smooth transitions, just by typing a sentence. For example: "A cat runs across a Paris rooftop at sunset." And it delivers exactly that, complete with lens flares and realistic shadows. To get your hands on Veo, you'll need to sign up for Google's Gemini plans: I wanted to see how each platform handled the same prompt, so I asked both to generate a video based on: "Show me a golden retriever puppy playing on the beach with a tennis ball." Now you can watch the videos side-by-side. My AI puppy Bella stars in both (Veo's on the left, Sora's on the right). My thoughts? Sora nailed the adorable close-up details, Bella's floppy ears, the texture of the fur, the light hitting the waves. But it fumbled a bit when it came to physics. The ball's bounce didn't feel quite right. On the other hand, Veo did a better job with the action. The puppy's movements were more lifelike but it wasn't as sharp on the visual details. We are entering a new age of video creation where your ideas are enough. No gear, no crew, no edits. Just imagination and a little typing. Whether you're a marketer, content creator, educator, or just someone who likes to experiment, this is the future of storytelling. Trust me, it's just getting started. Award-winning host Kim Komando is your secret weapon for navigating tech. Copyright 2025, WestStar Multimedia Entertainment.


TechCrunch
37 minutes ago
- TechCrunch
Why investing in growth-stage AI startups is getting riskier and more complicated
Making a bet on AI startups has never been so exciting — or more risky. Incumbents like OpenAI, Microsoft, and Google are scaling their capabilities fast to swallow many of the offerings of smaller companies. At the same time, new startups are reaching the growth stage much faster than they historically have. But defining 'growth stage' in AI startups is not so cut-and-dried today. Jill Chase, partner at CapitalG, said on stage at TechCrunch AI Sessions that she's seeing more companies that are only a year old, yet have already reached tens of millions in annual recurring revenue and more than $1 billion in valuation. While those companies might be defined as mature due to their valuation and revenue generation, they often lack much of the necessary safety, hiring, and executive infrastructure. 'On one hand, that's really exciting. It represents this brand new trend of extremely fast growth, which is awesome,' Chase said. 'On the other hand, it's a little bit scary because I'm gonna pay at an $X billion valuation for this company that didn't exist 12 months ago, and things are changing so quickly.' 'Who knows who is in a garage somewhere, maybe in this audience somewhere, starting a company that in 12 months will be a lot better than this one I'm investing in that's at $50 million ARR today?,' Chase continued. 'So it's made growth investing a little confusing.' To cut through the noise, Chase said it's important for investors to feel good about the category and the 'ability of the founder to very quickly adapt and see around corners.' She noted that AI coding startup Cursor is a great example of a company that 'jumped on the exact right use case of AI code generation that was available and possible given the technology at the time.' Techcrunch event Save $200+ on your TechCrunch All Stage pass Build smarter. Scale faster. Connect deeper. Join visionaries from Precursor Ventures, NEA, Index Ventures, Underscore VC, and beyond for a day packed with strategies, workshops, and meaningful connections. Save $200+ on your TechCrunch All Stage pass Build smarter. Scale faster. Connect deeper. Join visionaries from Precursor Ventures, NEA, Index Ventures, Underscore VC, and beyond for a day packed with strategies, workshops, and meaningful connections. Boston, MA | REGISTER NOW However, Cursor will need to work to maintain its edge. 'There will be, by the end of this year, AI software engineers,' Chase said. 'In that scenario, what Cursor has today is going to be a little less relevant. It is incumbent on the Cursor team to see that future and to think, okay, how do I start building my product so that when those models come out and are much more powerful, the product surface represents those and I can very quickly plug those in and switch into that state of code generation?'


Forbes
43 minutes ago
- Forbes
Despite The Feud, Donald Trump Has Still Made Elon Musk A Lot Richer
Musk lost $27 billion on Thursday amid his ongoing feud with his former boss, but he's still much richer than he was before he endorsed Trump. Elon Musk's feud with Donald Trump is already costing him big—Musk's fortune fell by $27 billion Thursday, with Tesla's shares sinking by 14%, as the pair took to blowing up their relationship in a public back-and-forth. Yet, despite the bitter breakup, which many figured from the outset was only a matter of time, Trump has still proven to be very good for Musk. The world's richest person, Musk is still $145 billion richer than he was before endorsing Trump last July, worth $394 billion as of 4 p.m eastern Friday. He's also $129 billion richer than when Trump was elected. After Musk spent nearly $300 million to help Trump get elected last November, Tesla's market capitalization soared to an all-time high of $1.5 trillion in December, thanks to what was widely viewed as a 'Trump Bump' given Musk's nearly unprecedented access to the president. In November, Trump announced he was tapping Musk to 'pave the way for my Administration to dismantle Government Bureaucracy, slash excess regulations, cut wasteful expenditures, and restructure Federal Agencies', which Trump described as 'Essential to the 'Save America' Movement.' But Tesla's public market valuation has since fallen by more than a third from the December peak, to around $950 billion as of 4 p.m. eastern Friday, due in large part to investors' worries about Musk being distracted by his role as head of the Department Of Government Efficiency (DOGE) he and Trump created, and a widespread backlash against his aggressive cost cutting efforts during his 130 days leading the department, which he left on May 30. (Tesla's shares rebounded slightly by nearly 4% on Friday.) Despite the recent slump, however, Tesla's stock price remains nearly 20% higher than when Musk endorsed Trump, making Musk's nearly 12% stake in the EV maker (excluding options) worth $121 billion, or $18 billion more than the day he made the endorsement. The value of Musk's Tesla options, meanwhile, is up another $6 billion, to $41 billion. (Forbes discounted the value of Musk's options by 50% last January, after a Delaware Judge voided the underlying CEO Performance Award granted to Musk in 2018. Musk has appealed the court ruling.) The sniping back and forth between Musk and Trump has spooked Tesla investors, according to Wedbush analyst Dan Ives, who explained in a note to clients yesterday that 'investors fear that this Musk/Trump battle the regulatory environment for Tesla on the autonomous front over the coming years under the Trump Administration.' As the cofounder of seven companies, Musk has insulated himself somewhat against attacks on Tesla, currently his most valuable asset. He's added some $71 billion to his net worth over the past year thanks to the rising value of SpaceX in particular. The private rocket maker was most recently valued at $350 billion in a December tender offer, nearly double its valuation from around the time of Musk's Trump endorsement last summer, undoubtedly in part based on closer ties to the Trump administration. Musk's 42% stake in SpaceX is now worth $147 billion. Still, like Tesla, SpaceX—which counts NASA among its biggest clients—is potentially subject to the whims of the head of the executive branch as well. Fortunately for Musk, he also has xAI Holdings, which he formed in April when he merged his artificial intelligence company xAI with his social media company X in a deal that valued the combined company at $113 billion. As a result of that deal, and a series of earlier funding rounds by xAI at increasingly high valuations, the value of Musk's stake in the combined companies has soared by $45 billion since July, to $66 billion. Then there's his stakes in his brain-computer interface startup Neuralink and his tunneling venture Boring Company, which Forbes estimates together add another $12 billion to Musk's fortune. So Musk should be fine no matter whatever happens during the rest of Trump's four-year term—and he has a much bigger warchest should the spat devolve into all-out war. Musk is 72 times richer than Trump, whose net worth stands at an estimated $5.5 billion. Not that it's made Musk any less resentful. 'Without me,' Musk posted on X yesterday, 'Trump would have lost the election.'