Qualcomm and NEURA Robotics partner to accelerate physical AI and cognitive robotics

NEURA Robotics and Qualcomm have formed a long-term strategic collaboration to advance physical AI and next-generation robotics platforms.

A partnership that aims to bring intelligent robots into real-world environments more rapidly by combining advanced AI processors with full-stack robotic systems.

The cooperation focuses on developing ‘Brain + Nervous System’ reference architectures that integrate high-level cognition, such as perception, reasoning and planning, with ultra-low-latency control systems.

Qualcomm’s robotics processors, including the Dragonwing IQ10 Series, will provide AI compute and connectivity, while NEURA contributes robotic hardware platforms and embodied AI software.

Both companies intend to support deployment across multiple robotic forms, including robotic arms, mobile robots, service machines and humanoid platforms.

NEURA’s cloud environment, Neuraverse, will serve as a shared platform for simulation, training and lifecycle management of robotic intelligence, allowing innovations developed by one robot to spread across entire fleets.

The collaboration also aims to establish a global developer ecosystem for robotics applications. Standardised runtime environments and deployment interfaces are expected to simplify how AI workloads move from development into production while maintaining reliability and safety.

Executives from both companies emphasised that robotics represents one of the most demanding AI environments, as decisions must be made instantly and locally.

By combining edge AI processing with cognitive robotic systems, the partnership aims to accelerate commercial deployment of humanoid and general-purpose robots capable of operating safely alongside humans across industries.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacyIf so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

Microsoft launches Copilot Cowork to automate tasks across Microsoft 365

AI is moving from assistance to execution as Microsoft introduces Copilot Cowork, a system designed to perform tasks across the Microsoft 365 environment.

Instead of simply generating text or suggestions, the feature allows users to delegate real work by describing a desired outcome.

Copilot Cowork converts requests into structured plans that run in the background. The system analyses signals from workplace tools such as Microsoft Outlook, Microsoft Teams and Microsoft Excel to understand schedules, documents and ongoing projects.

Users can approve or modify each step while the AI coordinates actions across meetings, files and messages.

Several enterprise scenarios illustrate the system’s capabilities. Cowork can reorganise calendars by analysing meetings and automatically proposing schedule changes.

It can also prepare complete briefing materials for customer meetings by collecting relevant emails, files and data before generating presentations and research summaries.

The technology also supports deeper analysis tasks. Users can request company research and receive structured outputs that include summaries, financial data and supporting documents.

In product launch planning, Cowork can compile competitive intelligence, build presentations and outline project milestones, creating a coordinated workflow for teams.

Microsoft emphasises that the system operates within enterprise security boundaries. Identity, compliance policies and data permissions remain enforced while tasks execute in a protected cloud environment.

The platform also reflects a multi-model strategy, combining Microsoft AI capabilities with Anthropic technology through the integration of the model behind Claude.

Copilot Cowork is currently available to a limited group of customers through a research preview.

Wider availability is expected later in 2026 through Microsoft’s Frontier programme as the company expands AI-driven workplace automation.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacyIf so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

Malaysia expands AI learning across universities with Google tools

AI tools from Google are now available across all public universities in Malaysia after the nationwide deployment of Gemini for Education.

An initiative that integrates AI capabilities into university systems, providing digital research and learning support to nearly 600,000 students and 75,000 faculty members.

The rollout is coordinated with the Ministry of Higher Education Malaysia as part of the country’s broader strategy to become an AI-driven economy by 2030. Universities already using Google Workspace for

Education can now access advanced tools, including NotebookLM and the reasoning model Gemini 3.1 Pro, which are designed to support research, writing and personalised learning.

Several universities are already experimenting with AI-assisted teaching. At Universiti Malaysia Perlis, lecturers have created customised AI assistants to guide students through specialised engineering courses.

Meanwhile, researchers and students at Universiti Putra Malaysia are using AI tools to improve literature reviews and academic research workflows.

Other institutions are focusing on digital literacy and AI skills.

At Universiti Malaysia Sarawak, hundreds of lecturers and students are receiving AI certifications, while training programmes are expanding across campuses.

Officials believe the combination of AI tools, training and research support will strengthen the education system of Malaysia and prepare graduates for an increasingly AI-driven economy.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacyIf so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

Every emergency department in New Zealand now uses AI scribes

New Zealand has completed a nationwide rollout of AI scribe technology across all public emergency departments, with approximately 1,250 emergency doctors and frontline staff now using the tool, 250 more than originally announced.

Health Minister Simeon Brown described the achievement as placing New Zealand among the fastest health systems in the world to move from pilot to full frontline AI deployment in emergency departments.

Early results have been striking. At Middlemore Emergency Department in Auckland, 80% of staff surveyed after one month reported improved productivity or efficiency, and 84% said it had a positive impact on their well-being during shifts.

A pilot study found that the tool reduced average documentation time from 17 minutes to 4 minutes, allowing doctors to see 1 additional patient per shift.

Following strong interest from clinicians, Te Whatu Ora is now preparing to procure over 1,000 additional AI scribe licences predominantly for mental health crisis teams, who were involved in early implementation phases, given their role supporting patients presenting in crisis within emergency departments.

The system is also being explored for outpatient clinics, with significant interest already received.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

Samsung’s AI smart glasses are coming to take on Meta Ray-Ban

Samsung has confirmed key details about its upcoming AI smart glasses, including a camera positioned at ‘eye level’ and smartphone connectivity, ahead of a planned 2026 launch.

The device is being developed in partnership with Qualcomm and Google, building on the same ecosystem that produced the Galaxy XR headset, and will be powered by Google’s Gemini AI.

Samsung executive Jay Kim indicated that the glasses will be able to understand ‘where you’re looking at’, allowing the AI to analyse objects or scenes in the user’s field of view and provide contextual information in real time.

Processing is expected to take place on a connected smartphone rather than within the glasses themselves, and Samsung has not confirmed whether a built-in display will be included, suggesting multiple versions may be in development.

The announcement puts Samsung on a direct collision course with Meta, whose Ray-Ban Meta Gen 2 glasses are already on the market, offering 3K video recording and up to eight hours of battery life. Meta has also launched the Oakley Meta HSTN glasses, aimed at sports and outdoor users.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

Concerns grow over Grok AI content on X platform

Social media platform X has launched an investigation into racist and offensive posts generated by its Grok AI chatbot in the UK. The review follows a Sky News analysis that flagged troubling responses produced publicly by the system.

Analysis by the broadcaster found Grok generating highly offensive replies, including profanities targeting certain religions. Some responses also repeated false claims blaming Liverpool supporters for the 1989 Hillsborough disaster.

Sky News reporter Rob Harris said X safety teams were urgently examining the chatbot’s behaviour after the posts spread online. The company and its AI developer xAI did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Concerns around Grok come as governments and regulators increasingly scrutinise AI-generated content on social platforms. Authorities in several countries have already raised alarms about sexually explicit or harmful material created by chatbots.

Earlier this year, xAI introduced new restrictions to limit some image editing features in Grok. Users in certain jurisdictions were also blocked from generating images of people in revealing clothing where such content is illegal.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot

AI tools linked to rise in abuse disclosures

Support organisations in the UK report that some abuse survivors are turning to AI tools such as ChatGPT before contacting helplines. Charities in the UK say individuals increasingly use AI to explore experiences and seek guidance before approaching professional support services.

The National Association of People Abused in Childhood said callers in the UK have recently reported being referred to its helpline after conversations with ChatGPT. Staff say AI is being used as an informal step in processing trauma.

Law enforcement and support groups in the UK have also recorded a rise in disclosures involving ritualistic sexual abuse. Authorities in the UK say only 14 criminal cases since 1982 have formally recognised such practices.

Police and support organisations are responding by improving training and launching specialist working groups. Officials aim to strengthen the identification and investigation of complex cases of abuse.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot

Hackers can use AI to de-anonymise social media accounts

AI technology behind platforms like ChatGPT is making it significantly easier for hackers to identify anonymous social media users, a new study warns. LLMs could match anonymised accounts to real identities by analysing users’ posts across platforms.

Researchers Simon Lermen and Daniel Paleka warned that AI enables cheap, highly personalised privacy attacks, urging a rethink of what counts as private online. The study highlighted risks from government surveillance to hackers exploiting public data for scams.

Experts caution that AI-driven de-anonymisation is not flawless. Errors in linking accounts could wrongly implicate individuals, while public datasets beyond social media- such as hospital or statistical records- may be exposed to unintended analysis.

Users are urged to reconsider what information they share, and platforms are encouraged to limit bulk data access and detect automated scraping.

The study underscores growing concerns about AI surveillance. While the technology cannot guarantee complete de-anonymisation, its rapid capabilities demand stronger safeguards to protect privacy online.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot

New AI method improves transparency in computer vision models

Researchers at MIT have developed a new technique designed to improve how computer vision models explain their predictions while maintaining strong accuracy. Transparency is crucial as AI enters fields like healthcare and autonomous driving, where decisions must be clear.

The method uses concept bottleneck models, which enable AI to base its predictions on human-understandable concepts. Traditional approaches rely on expert-defined concepts that can be incomplete or ill-suited, sometimes lowering model performance.

Researchers instead created a system that extracts concepts the AI learned during training. A sparse autoencoder selects key features, and a multimodal language model turns them into plain-language descriptions and labels.

The resulting module forces the AI to make predictions using only those extracted concepts.

Tests on bird classification and medical image datasets showed that the new method improved accuracy and provided clearer explanations. Findings suggest that using a model’s internal concepts can boost transparency and accountability in AI systems.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot

Lenovo introduces rollable laptop and AI agent

Redefining how people interact with technology, Lenovo is advancing through rollable laptops, foldable devices and adaptive AI systems that anticipate user needs.

The company is shifting from manufacturing hardware to creating multi-platform systems that adapt seamlessly to workflows instead of relying solely on traditional devices.

Qira, Lenovo’s personal AI super-agent, transfers tasks across devices while maintaining context and history with user permission. It can suggest actions and predict needs, aiming to improve productivity and employee satisfaction, although security and privacy concerns remain significant.

The rollable laptop features a 14-inch screen that expands vertically to 16.7 inches, providing immersive experiences for gaming and content consumption while remaining portable.

Lenovo is also exploring voice-driven tools, including AI Workmate prototypes, allowing users to create presentations and digital content simply through speech.

By combining innovative screen designs with intelligent AI agents, Lenovo aims to create unified ecosystems that prioritise user experience and adaptability instead of focusing solely on device specifications.

The company believes these technologies will gradually become culturally accepted, similar to self-driving cars.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacyIf so, ask our Diplo chatbot!