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Pulse

Un individu à l'aise avec la technologie, passionné par l'intersection du logiciel open source, de l'intelligence artificielle et des télécommunications, avec un intérêt vif pour les modèles et les tendances émergents qui façonnent le paysage technologique. Il suit les développements et les innovations du secteur, à la recherche d'informations pour éclairer son travail.
Open source (20%)Models (20%)Ai (20%)Telecomms (20%)Technology trends (20%)

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AI models, open‑source strides, telecom upgrades, and wearable AI...

Mercredi 17 décembre 2025 à 15:50

AI Frontiers

Space‑bound AI data centres raise new challenges

Outsourcing AI compute to orbital platforms could sidestep terrestrial constraints, but the Financial Times warns of “surly bonds of earth” such as launch costs, latency, and regulatory uncertainty. The piece highlights that satellite‑based farms would need massive power and cooling solutions, potentially reshaping the economics of AI services. Industry observers note that while the concept promises geographic neutrality, it also threatens to widen the gap between well‑funded cloud providers and smaller players. Financial Times

Larian pushes back on AI‑generated content rumors

After a Bloomberg leak suggested Larian Studios was using generative AI for concept art and placeholder text, the studio’s CEO Swen Vincke clarified to IGN that no AI components will appear in the upcoming Divinity title and that no staff reductions are planned. The Verge reports that the clarification aims to quell community backlash and preserve the studio’s reputation for handcrafted design. This episode underscores the delicate balance developers must strike between leveraging AI for efficiency and maintaining artistic authenticity. The Verge

StackHawk leverages AI for business‑logic security testing

Security vendor StackHawk announced a new Business Logic Testing (BLT) module that uses AI to detect complex flaws like broken object‑level authorization, which traditional SAST/DAST tools miss. SD Times quotes CSO Scott Gerlach on how probabilistic AI models can map API behavior and generate intelligent test sequences from OpenAPI specs, dramatically reducing manual pen‑testing effort. Analysts see this as a sign that AI‑driven DevSecOps tools are moving from niche to mainstream. SD Times

Emerging Model Landscape

OpenAI unveils GPT Image 1.5, a faster, more precise generator

The Verge details OpenAI’s rollout of GPT Image 1.5, a flagship image‑generation model that promises four‑fold speed gains and finer control over edits, from clothing try‑ons to stylistic filters. According to OpenAI’s blog, the model better aligns outputs with user intent, narrowing the gap between text prompts and visual results. Early user feedback suggests the upgrade could set a new benchmark for consumer‑grade generative art. The Verge

Nvidia bolsters open‑source AI with Slurm acquisition and new models

Following its purchase of the Slurm scheduler company, Nvidia announced a trio of Nemotron models released under an open‑source licence, signaling a strategic push to democratise large‑scale LLM access. The Register notes that this move aims to fill the “open‑weights” void left by proprietary offerings, enabling researchers to fine‑tune models without vendor lock‑in. The initiative is being hailed as a pivotal step toward more transparent and collaborative AI development. The Register

TornadoVM 2.0 brings automatic GPU acceleration and LLM support to Java

The open‑source TornadoVM project reached version 2.0, now automatically offloading Java code to CPUs, GPUs, and FPGAs while adding native support for large language models. InfoQ highlights that this capability lowers the barrier for Java teams to experiment with LLMs, merging enterprise‑grade performance with the flexibility of the JVM ecosystem. Experts predict this could spark a wave of AI‑enabled Java applications across industries. InfoQ

Telecom Infrastructure Meets AI

Nokia urges network upgrades to sustain AI workloads

At a recent conference, Nokia warned that the “AI‑heavy” internet is outpacing current network capacities, calling for a coordinated upgrade of global fiber and 5G infrastructure. Tech Radar reports that the company sees AI as a driver for both bandwidth and latency improvements, urging operators to collaborate on shared standards. The push reflects growing consensus that telecoms must evolve to support the data‑intensive demands of generative AI services. Tech Radar

Ring deploys AI‑driven “Single Event Alert” to curb notification overload

Smart‑home security firm Ring introduced an AI feature that consolidates related doorbell and camera alerts into a single, context‑aware notification. Tech Radar explains that the system uses pattern‑recognition algorithms to merge events, reducing user fatigue without sacrificing safety. Early adopters report a cleaner notification feed, hinting at broader applications for AI in IoT device management. Tech Radar

Open‑Source Momentum

Mozilla’s new CEO pledges AI with privacy‑first ethos

Mozilla appointed Anthony Enzor‑DeMeo as chief executive, outlining a roadmap to embed AI into the Firefox browser while keeping user data under strict control. Computer World quotes the CEO’s blog stating that AI should be an “opt‑in” feature, with transparent models and minimal data collection. This stance positions Mozilla as a counterweight to the data‑hungry AI strategies of larger browsers, appealing to privacy‑conscious users and enterprises alike. Computer World

Nvidia’s open‑weights Nemotron models expand the open‑source AI ecosystem

In a separate announcement, Nvidia released its Nemotron 3 series as fully open‑source, addressing concerns that enterprise AI adoption stalls without accessible model weights. The Register emphasizes that open‑weights enable companies to run inference on‑premises, mitigating data‑privacy risks inherent in closed‑API services. The move is expected to accelerate AI integration in regulated sectors such as finance and healthcare. The Register

Shifting Technology Trends

Wearables transform into AI‑enabled personal assistants

The Verge chronicles a 2025 pivot where smart glasses and other wearables are being marketed as AI platforms rather than mere health trackers. At CES, Meta’s Ray‑Ban glasses and several rivals showcased on‑device inference for real‑time translation, contextual reminders, and visual search. Analysts view this shift as a convergence of edge computing and generative AI, foreshadowing a new class of always‑on, context‑aware devices. The Verge

Aller aux sources

11 sources citées

What happens if AI data centres slip the ‘surly bonds of earth’?

Financial Times

Larian’s CEO says the studio isn’t ‘trimming down teams to replace them with AI’

The Verge

StackHawk adds Business Logic Testing (BLT) to its AppSec platform menu

SD Times

OpenAI’s new flagship image generator AI is here

The Verge

Nvidia pledges more openness as it slurps up Slurm

The Register

TornadoVM 2.0 Brings Automatic GPU Acceleration and LLM support to Java

InfoQ

"AI is too big for the European internet" - so it's time for companies to work together, Nokia says

Tech Radar

Too many doorbell or camera notifications? Ring is using AI to condense alerts so you're not bombarded

Tech Radar

Mozilla appoints new CEO, unveils new AI focus

Computer World

Nvidia fills the void of American open-weights models with some of its own

The Register

In 2025, wearables made a hard pivot to AI

The Verge