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No one goes to Hank's for his spreadsheets. They go for a darn good pizza. Lately, though, the shop's been quiet, so Hank decides to bring back the $1 slice. He asks copilot in Microsoft Excel to look at his sales and costs and help him see if he can afford it. Copilot shows Hank where the money's going and which little extras make the dollar slice work. Now Hanks has a line out the door. Hank makes the pizza, Copilot handles the spreadsheets. Learn more@m365copilot.com work if this was a
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potluck and my name was Jeremy, I'd bring my famous Jeremy sue dessert. But my name's not Jeremy, it's Riley. So I guess this tech news will have to do Nvidia finally revealed its long rumored consumer CPU for laptops and desktops at Computex yesterday. The new RTX Spark SuperChip sports 20 ARM CPU cores and 6,144 Blackwell GPU cores and 128 gigs of LPDDR 5x memory. It's essentially the same GP10 chip that powers the DGX Spark AI focused mini PC Nvidia launched last year. The difference is that this one is showing up a year late, but it will still try to compete with Qualcomm Snapdragon X series chips inside actual laptops and desktops coming this fall with Microsoft, Dell, hp, Asus, Lenovo and MSI all lining up systems. And it's nice to see all of Nvidia's sycophants line up and follow their orders. But the more interesting part is what this means for gaming. Windows on ARM runs most games through Prism emulation, which has traditionally made Anti Cheat and DRM software a huge pain. Nvidia says it's finally fixing that with native support for Easy, Anti Cheat, battleye, and Denuvo. The exact kind of thing Linux gamers have begged for since forever. But sure, Windows First. It was nice to hear about that all from Jensen, but the best part of the keynote was having him cap it all off by dancing on stage with friends who definitely aren't on his payroll. It was either that or the ear splitting AI music video at the end depicting the decline of humanity and the rise of like, robotic supremacy. I don't know who is this for? Yeah, everyone's clapping. Why? Anthropic, maker of the Claude family of large language models, has submitted its proposed IPO filing to the sec, opening itself up to public investment. If they're approved, it's a move heavily anticipated by the financial world, since Anthropic is one of three companies expected to do something no company has done before enter the market with valuations over one trip trillion dollars. Uh oh yes, SpaceX recently filed its IPO, while OpenAI is seemingly waiting for just the right moment. Because while these IPOs could make investors and employees with equity very wealthy, many fear, thanks to recently changed NASDAQ rules, that it could also drastically shift the balance of stocks in the index funds that are relied upon by normie investors who will be left holding the bag when the AI bubble pops. If it pops, Sorry? Well, we don't know. But don't worry, you can totally hedge your bets with some action on Polymarket or something. This is not financial advice very obviously. Or is it? Oh no. AMD is extending socket AM5 support all the way to 2029, which means people already on the platform can keep upgrading without ripping out their whole motherboard. And even AM4 isn't dead yet. To celebrate that socket turning 10, AMD is bringing back the Ryzen 7 5800x3D as a drop in upgrade for older boards, giving DDR4 holdouts one more escape hatch from today's unhinged RAM prices. AMD also announced the Ryzen 7.7700x3D, which will become the cheapest way into AM5x3.3D gaming. Yet it sits just under the beloved 7800x3D with eight cores, a big pile of cash and a suspiciously familiar Zen 4 skeleton underneath. But that is the world that we live in now. So AMD News seemed surprisingly consumer friendly until they announced that they would be launching the formerly China exclusive Radeon RX9070 GRE into global markets for 550 bucks, the same price they originally launched the faster RX9070 non GRE at before immediately giving it a price pump that was just a trial run. This is the real gpu. Unfortunately the GRE is cut down with less VRAM and fewer cores, making it less Golden Rabbit Edition and more generally reduced everything. But you'll be genuinely really excited about our sponsor Ugreen. Do you love how itty bitty the M4 Mac mini is, but hate how few port there are? Well, good news. Ugreen has a little dock that sits right under your Mini and gives you 10 extra ports. You got USB A&C ports, SD card slot, an audio jack, displayport, and a built in SSD enclosure that gets you up to eight terabytes of extra storage. Oh man, Apple would love to charge you more for that stuff, but now they can't. And the 10 gigabit per second USB ports can rip through like 3000 high res photos in a minute. I don't even know if there's that many pictures in the world. Also, the display port drives dual screens at up to 4K at 240Hz on the M4 Pro version. So if you wanna soup up your M4 or M4 Pro Mac mini, then grab yours at the link below the Quick bits. Love hors d'. Oeuvres. Cause you know if you just add E on there then it says Quick bites. So that's why Nvidia is finally upgrading DLSS ray reconstruction, its AI ray tracing denoiser tech, to the same second gen transformer approach. The rest of DLSS 4.5 started getting after CES and until now RTX owners could use the newer upscaler, but Ray Reconstruction was still stuck on the older model. The August update should mean cleaner upscaling and ray tracing at the same time across every RTX car. With the AI handling that much of the rendering, no wonder Jensen still had the energy to dance. Usually they sapped the rest from him. Computex also brought a fresh wave of gaming handhelds. ASUS refreshed the ROG Xbox ally with an X20 model. It's got a 7.4-inch OLED and AMD's Z2 Extreme inside, while MSI's Claw 8 EX AI and Acer's Predator Atlas 8 both lean on Intel's new Arc G3 handheld chips. Acer also made the Nitro Blaze Link, a Linux handheld that only streams games from your PC over wifi. And I believe it's also got 1 gigabyte of RAM. It's all you need. So it's a handheld gaming PC minus the gaming PC part, which traditionally has been kind of important, but not anymore. You know if you use your imagination, you need zero gigabytes of ram. Come on kids, stop being lazy. Meta says it's patched a flaw that allowed attackers to use prompt injection to trick Meta's AI powered support bot, or Metabot as I call it, into sending Instagram password reset links without two factor authentication. Effectively, the hack allowed the hackers to completely take over people's accounts. But it's been patched. So there goes my dream of hacking Jeremy Renner's Instagram account and finally launching my famous Jeremisu desserts. Man, this sucks. Sony shared details on its upcoming PlayStation accessories, including the Flexstrike Wireless Flash Fight stick, a new PlayStation branded monitor, and the Pulse Elevate speakers. The Wireless Fight Stick uses Sony's low latency PlayStation Link and the 27 inch 1440pmonitor supports up to a 240Hz refresh rate. Both those items launch in August. However, CNET says the release date for the wireless speakers are still shrouded in mystery. The Batman of PlayStation peripherals, if you will, and paint.net finally got its own clean official paint.net domain after over two decades of using the older getpaint.net address, making a long overdue upgrade for the popular image editor. Is this okay? Rick Brewster, Paint.net's author, is hyped about it. Speaking of painting, MSI is releasing a pair of limited edition laptops covered in Van Gogh art. It's hard to imagine the Dutch artist would have been excited about this development, but from what I understand of Van Gogh's life, he wasn't excited about much. Chronically depressed? It's a sad story. You should look it up. I'm also van going to be sad if you're not Back here on Wednesday for more tech news. Can you think of any other names that fit nicely into dessert names? I'm not sure I want to become Jeremy Murdoch, but I definitely want a dessert pun name. It's so hard I have to think about it.
Episode: Nvidia RTX Spark, Anthropic Files to Go Public, AMD Announcements + more!
Host: Riley (Linus Media Group)
Date: June 2, 2026
In this engaging episode, Riley covers a jam-packed tech news day, highlighting Nvidia’s introduction of its consumer-focused RTX Spark SuperChip, Anthropic’s groundbreaking IPO plans, AMD’s extended motherboard platform support, and new product launches in both gaming hardware and PC accessories. As always, the tone is witty, irreverent, and packed with both critique and celebration of the tech industry’s quirks.
[00:32 - 02:25]
Specs & Details:
Windows on ARM & Gaming Improvements:
Riley’s Take:
[02:15 - 03:00]
Context:
Market Impact:
Riley’s Note:
[03:11 - 04:10]
AM5 Sockets Supported Through 2029:
Ryzen 7 7700X3D:
Radeon RX 9070 GRE Launch:
[05:08 - 07:28]
Nvidia DLSS Ray Reconstruction Upgrade:
New Gaming Handhelds Debut at Computex:
MetaBot Security Patch:
Sony PlayStation Accessories Announced:
Paint.NET gets official domain:
MSI Limited Edition Van Gogh Laptops:
Riley brings his signature humor, especially with dessert pun names and irreverent takes on corporate announcements. “Can you think of any other names that fit nicely into dessert names? I'm not sure I want to become Jeremy Murdoch, but I definitely want a dessert pun name. It's so hard I have to think about it.” ([07:28])
For listeners and non-listeners alike, this episode offers sharp insight, major tech news, and plenty of laughs—essential TechLinked energy.