📱 Apple Could Be Working on 'Spatial iPhone' With Holographic Display
Rumors suggest Samsung is developing a holographic display that could be used in a future "Spatial iPhone."
According to a leak, the technology uses eye-tracking and a nano-structured layer to create 3D effects without glasses. The screen would function as a normal 4K display, only activating the holographic depth for specific content.
Samsung has been researching this for years, and Apple has explored similar concepts for a long time. However, the project is still in early development, and such smartphones likely won't arrive until around 2030s.
Singapore has introduced new guidelines allowing schools to use caning as a last resort for male students aged nine and older who engage in bullying, including cyberbullying. The punishment, limited to a maximum of three strokes, will only be administered by authorized teachers following approval from a principal.
International organizations, including UNICEF, oppose such corporal punishment, citing risks to the physical and mental health of children.
Do you support these measures?
❤️ — Yes, it is fair
🔥 — No, these are medieval methods!
📹 Kling Motion: Transfer Movement from Video to Photo
Now with @GPT4Telegrambot you can upload any reference video—a TikTok dance, Reels gesture, or a viral move—and Kling will map that motion onto your photo.
How to Try:
➡️ In the @GPT4Telegrambot menu, tap Video Generation.
1️⃣ Select Kling Motion.
2️⃣ Upload the movement video, then add your photo.
3️⃣ Choose the Kling version and quality: 720p or 1080p.
4️⃣ Start the generation.
Pricing depends on the version, quality, and length of the original video.
💉 Cameroon Sees 70% Drop In Child Malaria Cases With Full Vaccination
More than two years after Cameroon introduced the malaria vaccine into its routine schedule, health officials report a 70% decrease in cases among young children who receive the full series of doses.
A WHO official noted that when the vaccine is used correctly alongside other tools, it significantly reduces child mortality. Malaria remains a major health threat in the country, causing most deaths among children under five.
🎓 Oral Exams Are Making a Comeback at U.S. Universities
"You can't just coast through an oral exam with the help of AI," says Chris Schaffer, a professor of biomedical engineering at Cornell University. He introduced an oral defense format after written assignments: no laptops, no chatbots, no paper—the student simply has to explain to the instructor what they did and why.
American universities are increasingly returning to in-person knowledge checks. Students submit nearly perfect essays and solutions, but they can't always explain their own work. The issue isn't just whether a student used ChatGPT—it's whether they actually learned anything at all.
ℹ️ For example, NYU Stern School of Business is already testing a voice AI assistant that administers exams to students.
💡 The next stage of education may not be a total ban on AI, but a new way of verifying authorship and understanding: can a student defend the work they turned in?
Are oral exams necessary?
❤️ — Yes, it's a real test
🔥 — No, it's a relic of the past
🖥 OpenAI's Brockman Says AI Now Writes 80% of Code
OpenAI President Greg Brockman told a Sequoia Capital audience this week that agentic coding tools have undergone a dramatic leap, going from writing 20% of code to 80% over the course of December 2025, a shift he described as moving AI from a convenience to a necessity.