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کانال CHEATKOTT - Your Daily News (@cheatkott) در بخش زبانی انگلیسی بازیگری فعال است. در حال حاضر جامعه شامل 2 813 811 مشترک است و جایگاه 19 را در دسته فناوری و برنامهها و رتبه 5 را در منطقه الولايات المتحدة الأمريكية دارد.
📊 شاخصهای مخاطب و پویایی
از زمان ایجاد در невідомо، پروژه رشد سریعی داشته و 2 813 811 مشترک جذب کرده است.
بر اساس آخرین دادهها در تاریخ 13 ژوئیه, 2026، کانال فعالیت پایداری دارد. در ۳۰ روز گذشته تغییر اعضا برابر -168 995 و در ۲۴ ساعت گذشته برابر -5 641 بوده و همچنان دسترسی گستردهای حفظ شده است.
- وضعیت تأیید: تأیید نشده
- نرخ تعامل (ER): میانگین تعامل مخاطب 0.18% است و در ۲۴ ساعت نخست پس از انتشار، محتوا معمولاً 0.07% واکنش نسبت به کل مشترکان کسب میکند.
- دسترسی پستها: هر پست به طور میانگین 4 983 بازدید دریافت میکند. در اولین روز معمولاً 2 008 بازدید جمعآوری میشود.
- واکنشها و تعامل: مخاطبان بهطور فعال حمایت میکنند؛ میانگین واکنش به هر پست 22 است.
- علایق موضوعی: محتوا بر موضوعات کلیدی مانند glass, trailer, chaos, battery, nvidia تمرکز دارد.
📝 توضیح و سیاست محتوایی
نویسنده این فضا را محل بیان دیدگاههای شخصی توصیف میکند:
“We’re your go-to infotainment hub, keeping you updated on everything Web 3.0, business, fashion, lifestyle, and education.
@CheatKott_Godfather”
به لطف بهروزرسانیهای پرتکرار (آخرین داده در تاریخ 14 ژوئیه, 2026)، کانال همواره بهروز و دارای دسترسی بالاست. تحلیلها نشان میدهد مخاطبان بهطور فعال با محتوا تعامل دارند و آن را به نقطه اثرگذاری مهم در دسته فناوری و برنامهها تبدیل کردهاند.
در حال بارگیری داده...
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| 2 | What's up with the Steam Machine?
Accessory brand Jsaux has confirmed it's finishing up its swappable front panels with a built-in display for Valve's Steam Machine. The idea is simple: you replace the console's stock face with a custom one that has a small screen embedded right into the front. They first teased these back in November, and now they've shared updated designs.
Three panels are promised, by screen type: E Ink, color E Ink, and a dot matrix display.
As for price and release date — still silence on that.
Bottom line: soon you'll be able to change your console's face to match your mood. A small thing, but modders will love it. | 2 607 |
| 3 | What's up with the Lego Hubble?
Lego is dropping a set of the iconic Hubble Space Telescope — 1,252 pieces, and the built model stretches to 38 centimeters. Nice touch: the engineers went inside too, tucking in mirrors and gyroscopes, while the outside has movable solar panels and antennas you can pose however you like.
Goes on sale August 1, priced at $140.
Bottom line: put a legendary telescope on your shelf without spending NASA's annual budget on it. | 3 372 |
| 4 | What's up with GTA 6?
It's official: Rockstar kicks off GTA VI pre-orders on June 25 — and dropped the cover art too. The leads are Jason and Lucia Caminos, a duo tangled up in a massive conspiracy in the state of Leonida, in Vice City. They'll have to survive against everyone, relying on no one but each other.
The game itself lands on PS5 and Xbox Series X|S on November 19.
Bottom line: get your wallet ready for the 25th and your calendar for November) Meanwhile, there's always time for one more replay of GTA V — twelfth lap, no biggie) | 8 760 |
| 5 | What's up with FiiO's speaker?
FiiO is rolling out its Retro Box speaker worldwide — it used to live only in China. The whole trick is that one of the brand's players acts as the screen and the "cassette": slot in your JM21, M21, or M33 and you're off. Just like loading a tape into a deck, only hi-fi)
The specs are solid too: Bluetooth 6.0 with LDAC (or USB DAC when wired), two speakers plus two passive radiators, 10W, up to 15 hours of playback, and a built-in mic. Already on sale for ~5000 ₽ on Ali and other marketplaces.
Bottom line: nostalgia for tape decks, minus the chewed-up film and the pencil for rewinding) For five bucks' worth of rubles — a solid grab. | 7 023 |
| 6 | What's up with Midjourney?
The same Midjourney that turns text into images suddenly launched a medical arm — Midjourney Medical. And the first product isn't a picture, it's a whole-body ultrasound scanner, the Midjourney Scanner.
The trick: it scans your entire body in 60 seconds, no radiation, no magnets — just sound and water. They claim the imaging even beats MRI in places. The plan is wild: roll out around 50,000 of these scanners worldwide over 6 years and put people through a monthly full-body scan.
The first center opens in San Francisco in late 2027 — and it's not a hospital, it's a spa: hot tubs, saunas, cold plunge zones. They'll install 10 scanners that together do more scans per year than every MRI machine on the planet combined.
Bottom line: yesterday it was a neural net for art, tomorrow it scans you between the sauna and the cold plunge) The future showed up sideways — but it looks good) | 5 663 |
| 7 | What's up with the robot?
French startup Genesis AI revealed Eno, a home assistant robot that looks like Apple itself unveiled it at a keynote. Pure Cupertino aesthetic — even their head designer looks like Jony Ive) And no, it's not AI slop — the company swears it'll start shipping to real customers by the end of this year.
The price is still under wraps, but you can join the waitlist here.
Bottom line: while Apple spends years teasing its projects, the French just went and built a robot in their style. Minimalist, pricey, and without a single button — just how we like it) | 4 461 |
| 8 | What's up with Kodak?
Kodak dropped the Charmera Millennium Edition micro-camera — a straight-up portal back to the 2000s. Chrome body, fresh colorways, Y2K-aesthetic filters. Shoot like it's the year 2000 and you're waiting on the dial-up to connect) On sale June 16 for a laughable $35 — cheaper than a single gas fee during network congestion.
Bottom line: while everyone chases a chrome future, Kodak's out here selling a chrome past. And honestly? That might be bullish too) | 4 319 |
| 9 | What's up with Snap's glasses?
Snap unveiled its Specs AR glasses for $2195 (~160k ₽). Inside are two auto-tinting displays that project a virtual screen up to 115 inches. AI-powered cameras scan your surroundings and offer tips on the fly. Battery lasts 4 hours, and the case recharges them four more times. There's stereo sound, plus gesture and voice control. Two sizes, shipping this fall.
Bottom line: for 160k you wear a cinema right on your nose) Now we just need to figure out who's buying) | 4 043 |
| 10 | What's up with the Surface?
Microsoft refreshed the Surface Pro and Laptop. Same look outside, new Snapdragon X2 chips inside: graphics up 53%, up to 20 hours of battery, and OLED on the Pro now. Catch is, the price went up too — Pro starts at $1499, Laptop at $1599. And the keyboard for the tablet? Still sold separately)
Bottom line: faster, brighter, pricier. You foot the bill for progress) | 4 621 |
| 11 | 😎 Google’s smart glasses are coming this fall
Google just revealed its Android XR vision — and the first smart glasses launch this fall. The first wave focuses on lightweight audio glasses, not full AR displays.
Powered by Gemini, the glasses understand what you’re looking at. Ask about restaurants, parking signs, or get live translation — all hands-free.
Google partnered with Gentle Monster and Warby Parker for the design, clearly aiming for something people actually want to wear all day.
And yes, they work with iPhone too.
Looks like the smartphone is slowly becoming just the “brain in your pocket.” 👓 | 11 221 |
| 12 | 🦖 Colossal is building artificial eggs to revive giant birds
The company trying to resurrect mammoths just unveiled an artificial egg incubator — and it already hatched multiple chicks.
The end goal? Bringing back the giant moa, a 3-meter-tall bird from New Zealand that went extinct centuries ago. Problem is: no living bird can realistically incubate an egg that size.
So Colossal built a silicone-based artificial egg with a membrane that mimics real shell oxygen exchange. Scientists can even watch embryos develop in real time while testing genetic edits.
For now it’s chickens. Next: emus and ostriches. Then maybe… moa.
We officially live in a timeline where extinct birds might come back through biotech. 😶 | 7 324 |
| 13 | ⚡️ Xiaomi built a crossover with supercar energy
Xiaomi unveiled the YU7 GT, a high-performance electric SUV that already set a Nürburgring record for its class.
Specs are wild: 1003 hp, 0–100 km/h in 2.92s, top speed 300 km/h. That’s supercar territory — in a crossover.
Inside? Massage seats, smart panoramic roof, and a 25-speaker sound system. Basically a rolling cyberpunk lounge.
Starting price in China: around $54K.
Xiaomi is clearly no longer “just a phone company.” 🚗⚡️ | 5 436 |
| 14 | 🧮 AI solved a math problem humans struggled with for 80 years
An OpenAI model just cracked a famous 1946 problem posed by mathematician Paul Erdős — something researchers couldn’t solve for decades.
The challenge: arrange points on a plane so the maximum number of pairs sit at the same distance. Everyone believed square grids were basically optimal.
The AI proved otherwise.
Not with one trick example — but with an infinite family of better constructions.
The scary part? It connected geometry with algebraic number theory — fields humans rarely linked together here.
This wasn’t faster calculation.
It was a genuinely new mathematical insight. 🤖 | 4 560 |
| 15 | 🤖 Space robots are evolving correctly — now with 4 arms
Orbit Robotics unveiled HELIOS, a humanoid robot built for zero gravity. Instead of legs? Two extra arms. And honestly, it makes perfect sense.
In space, you don’t walk — you grab, pull, and stabilize yourself. HELIOS can anchor itself with two arms while using the others for repairs, cargo handling, and maintenance.
Astronauts spend huge amounts of time on routine station work. HELIOS is meant to take over the boring tasks so humans can focus on science instead of moving boxes around.
It looks like a sci-fi boss fight… until you realize it’s basically the ultimate orbital handyman. 🚀 | 4 107 |
| 16 | 🚀 Starship V3 just reached space for the first time
SpaceX launched the fully redesigned Starship Version 3 — and yes, it came with the usual chaos. One Raptor engine failed at liftoff, the booster splashed into the Gulf, and Ship lost an engine mid-flight. Very SpaceX: “something broke, but the mission worked.”
The important part: Ship 39 reached space and deployed 22 satellites, including two real Starlinks with onboard cameras capturing insane footage of Starship in orbit.
Then it survived reentry plasma, extreme thermal stress, and performed a controlled splashdown in the Indian Ocean.
At this point, Starship launches feel less like tests… and more like the start of a new space era. 🌍🚀 | 4 370 |
| 17 | 🎙 Insta360 put E Ink screens on lav mics
Insta360’s new Mic Pro looks less like audio gear and more like a cyberpunk accessory. Each transmitter gets a tiny color E Ink display for names, logos, or labels.
Inside are three microphones with smart audio modes: shotgun-style focus, cardioid voice capture, even figure-8 for two-person dialogue.
There’s also 32 GB onboard backup recording, so if your main track dies — you’re still safe.
Up to 30 hours with the charging case, Bluetooth support, USB-C — creator gear keeps getting weird in the best way. | 3 963 |
| 18 | ⏱️ A clock powered by… vacuum
A German DIY creator built a clock that displays time using air pressure — or rather, the lack of it.
A flexible membrane gets pulled inward by vacuum at specific points, forming digital segments. No screen, no light — just physical dents as pixels.
Best part? The shape persists even after power is off, until pressure resets.
Totally useless. Totally brilliant. | 0 |
