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19 Mar 2025   
  
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NVIDIA unveils GR00T N1 model for humanoid robots
NVIDIA has launched the Isaac GR00T N1, a pioneering humanoid robot model aimed at tackling global labour shortages, enhancing robotic reasoning and skills. 
© 2025 ITBrief 10:05am 

NVIDIA unveils RTX PRO Blackwell GPUs for AI & design
NVIDIA has unveiled its RTX PRO Blackwell series of GPUs, promising enhanced performance across industries such as AI and design, with significant boosts in productivity. 
© 2025 ITBrief 9:55am 

Jetty demolished for being unsafe seemed ‘solid as solid’ to man who helped build it
The jetty on Best Island has been demolished due to safety concerns, surprising the man who built it. 
© 2025 Stuff.co.nz 9:55am 

Farms turn into deserts as drought conditions worsen
A drought has been declared in the Northland, Waikato, Horizons, Marlborough-Tasman and Taranaki regions. 
© 2025 Stuff.co.nz 9:55am 

What is going on with the price of butter?
If you have bought butter recently you might have noticed something - it is a lot more expensive. 
© 2025 Stuff.co.nz 9:55am 

NVIDIA unveils Blackwell Ultra for advanced AI reasoning
NVIDIA has unveiled the Blackwell Ultra platform, enhancing AI reasoning capabilities with advanced systems aimed at improving performance and accuracy. 
© 2025 ITBrief 9:45am 

Swyftx acquires Easy Crypto, expands ANZ crypto presence
Australian exchange Swyftx has acquired New Zealand's leading crypto platform, Easy Crypto, enhancing its presence in the trans-Tasman digital asset market. 
© 2025 ITBrief 9:35am 

Concerns mount over Cook Islands' ‘national security’ amid China’s influence
The concerns of opposition leader Tina Browne follow warnings from New Zealand's intelligence chief about China's growing influence in the Pacific. 
© 2025 RadioNZ 9:25am 

NVIDIA partners with tech leaders to pioneer AI-native 6G
NVIDIA has teamed up with T-Mobile, MITRE, and Cisco among others to advance AI-native 6G networks, aiming to support billions of connected devices. 
© 2025 ITBrief 9:25am 

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Check out this HP workstation laptop with 4 DIMM and M.2 slots
If you’re using a workstation-class laptop, odds are pretty good that you didn’t buy it. Your employer did. These things are only “portable” in the sense that it’s technically possible to carry a cinder block around, and they’re designed to be full-power desktop replacements for industrial or professional media applications. That said, HP’s new ZBook Fury G1i does something so cool I had to show it to you. During the demonstration at an HP media event, the presenter grabbed this chonkster of a laptop, flipped it over, and unlatched the bottom with just two tabs. He then pulled it off—without a screwdriver in sight—to expose four, count ’em, four SO-DIMM slots, all of which are accessible to the user. Metal covers protect them, but they’re easy to get out with just a finger. There are also four M.2 SSD slots in there, at least one of which is Gen5. This is the kind of expansion you can usually only get with a desktop PC… and it’s all available in just a few seconds. Michael Crider / Foundry The ZBook Fury G1i comes in 16-inch and new 18-inch designs, with a top-end configuration using an Intel Core Ultra 9 285HX processor with 24 cores. This one’s maxed out at 200 watts of TDP and paired to an Nvidia Blackwell RTX 5000 graphics card (exact specs aren’t nailed down yet). Most of the other internal components outside of the motherboard can be replaced fairly easily, all the better for an IT department to save time. The only unfortunate thing is, all that power needs an old-fashioned barrel charger to get it going. USB-C just won’t cut it. HP This is not, repeat, not a gaming laptop, though some developers might be able to make use of it that way. It’s got a little gaming DNA in there in the latest generation. The 16-inch can get up to 120Hz on the screen and the 18-inch can go up to 165Hz, and HP has splashed out on an RGB keyboard with program-specific bindings… purely for the sake of showing hotkeys in your important creative workflows, you understand. If you were to, hypothetically, sync it to your Overwatch ult, your manager might have to give you a talking-to. Michael Crider / Foundry These ZBook Fury G1i laptops can be loaded with up to 192GB of RAM and 16TB of storage when they’re configured to the maximum, a truly astonishing amount of power and capability when paired with those CPUs and GPUs. How much that would cost? I couldn’t guess, except that it’s probably worth more than my car. 
© 2025 PC World 9:15am 

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NVIDIA unveils new silicon photonics networking solutions
NVIDIA has unveiled its innovative Spectrum-X and Quantum-X silicon photonics networking switches, boosting AI factory efficiency while slashing energy use. 
© 2025 ITBrief 9:55am 

Quick-acting witness videos suspect in Pokémon heist
A vigilant member of the public has played a key role in the arrest of a man who allegedly stole more than $2200 worth of Pokémon cards from a store in Taupo. 
© 2025 Stuff.co.nz 9:55am 

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Consumer confidence falls amid global uncertainty and cost-of-living pressures
New Zealand consumer confidence has taken a hit in early 2025, with the Westpac-McDermott Miller Consumer Confidence Index falling 8 points to 89.2 in March. 
© 2025 Stuff.co.nz 9:55am 

NVIDIA introduces Dynamo to optimise AI reasoning models
NVIDIA has unveiled Dynamo, an open-source tool aimed at enhancing AI reasoning model efficiency, optimising GPU resources and reducing operational costs. 
© 2025 ITBrief 9:45am 

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Winston Peters optimistic after meeting Marco Rubio
It's hoped the face-to-face will lead to positive cooperation between New Zealand and the US. 
© 2025 RadioNZ 9:25am 

SquareX launches 'Year of Browser Bugs' cyber project 2025
SquareX has launched its Year of Browser Bugs initiative for 2025, aimed at spotlighting web browser vulnerabilities as critical security concerns. 
© 2025 ITBrief 9:25am 

NVIDIA unveils DGX Spark & DGX Station AI desktops
NVIDIA has launched its DGX Spark and DGX Station AI desktops, bringing advanced capabilities for AI research directly to users' workspaces. 
© 2025 ITBrief 9:25am 

Dell’s new RTX Pro AI PC boasts an ‘unlimited turbo’ mode
Dell’s new Pro Max AI PCs boast the new Nvidia RTX Pro Blackwell GPUs, making them desirable to AI developers for that reason alone. But the new desktop and laptop lineup also include several nerdy new innovations that we haven’t seen before, including an “infinite turbo” mode that most gamers would pine for and 18-inch displays. Dell’s “Pro Max” lineup isn’t for the everyday user. Instead, the Pro Max is what Dell traditionally called the Precision lineup: workstations, basically. Dell will ship its 14- and 16-inch laptops with the new Nvidia RTX Pro laptop GPUs in July, alongside AMD Ryzen and Intel Core Ultra Series 2 chips; versions with integrated graphics will ship on March 27. Dell’s desktops — the Slim, Micro, and Tower series — will be available with “Ada”-class RTX 4000-series GPUs on March 27; versions with the Core Ultra Series 2 desktop or AMD Threadripper CPUs plus the RTX Pro Blackwell desktop GPUs will ship in July. Dell did not announce prices. Dell also plans to sell Nvidia’s new GB300 Grace Blackwell Ultra Desktop Superchip inside a “desktop” design. That’s 20,000 TOPS, Nvidia says, plus a whopping 784GB of memory (288GB to the GPU and the remaining 496GB to the CPU) to basically run all of the AI models that you can think of. Dell’s Pro Max desktops include tech that gamers would die for That “desktop,” though, will be likely out of reach for many. Dell’s Tower, Slim, and Micro Pro Max PCs should be priced much more affordably, and include some cool tech that is making us drool already. The Dell Pro Max tower desktop PC workstation.Dell Dell claims that its Dell Pro Max Tower T2 will be the world’s fastest tower for single-threaded application performance, based on what Dell is calling its exclusive unlimited turbo duration technology. As many enthusiasts know, Intel and AMD cite both a base clock speed and a “turbo” clock speed at which one or all of its cores can run. Eventually, the CPU has to drop out of its turbo or boost speed to avoid overheating; the time in which the CPU runs in turbo mode is known as the “tau,” and is prolonged as long as possible. It’s one of the reasons that PCWorld uses the prolonged transcoding application Handbrake as part of our laptop testing, to try and see how long the laptop can run in turbo mode. Dell is apparently saying that the T2 never has to drop out of turbo mode, due to the tower’s cooling. (I’ve asked for confirmation of this, but haven’t heard back from Dell.) The idea, of course, is to allow the T2 to serve as an AI workstation, running prolonged AI applications. It would certainly be nice to see this feature appear in a gaming PC from Alienware someday, however. Interestingly, “select” Dell Pro Max desktops will ship with a modular USB-C port, designed to enhance durability. It’s not clear what the purpose is on a desktop, although the poor mechanical reliability of USB-C ports on smartphones can lead to them wearing out. A modular USB-C port would be a great addition to a future laptop. Dell’s Pro Max laptops balloon to 18 inches Dell’s AI Max laptops, meanwhile, ship in three product categories: the Base, Plus, and Premium tiers. The base 14-inch and 16-inch tier receives a boost just from its upgraded components, between 33 and 36 percent more performance from the Precision 3-series workstations. Dell’s Pro Max 14 Premium.Dell The Plus tier offers both 16- and 18-inch models, which I’d like to see fit inside my backpack. (At 6.9 pounds minimum, to boot!) Here, we’re seeing Thunderbolt 5’s power delivery, delivered: These laptops will boast the latest 48-volt EPR USB-C power adapters, delivering up to 240W directly to the laptop. Naturally, these laptops are designed for running code, and will include RTX Pro 5000 GPUs with 24GB of GPU memory and up to 256GB of system memory, cooled with three fans. Inside is up to 16 terabytes — yep, terabytes — storage, with RAID options. The Premium tier, somewhat surprisingly, doesn’t offer an 18-inch model. Instead, Dell’s premium AI PCs boast tandem OLEDs, which debuted with the M4 version of the Apple iPad but have since started appearing in laptop PCs. Tandem OLEDs combine two OLED panels one on top of another, potentially increasing the HDR light output (to TrueBlack 1000, in this case) without robbing them of their key advantage: “perfect,” deep blacks. The laptops also include a zero-lattice keyboard. Dell is including up to 64GB of LPDDR5X memory and up to 8TB of dual-storage RAID. The Dell Pro Max 16 Plus.Dell 
© 2025 PC World 9:15am 

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