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More than 100 of North Korea's elite 'Storm' troops are dead and 1,000 more wounded from their first battles for Russia: South Korean intel

Russian President Vladimir Putin, and North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un wear suits and shake hands while looking at a camera in front of them with their countries' flags behind them
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AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, Pool, File

  • More than 100 of North Korea's elite troops were killed in their first battles for Russia, per South Korean intel.
  • A futher 1,000 were wounded in the fighting, South Korea's National Intelligence Service said.
  • The troops are ill-prepared for drone attacks and the local terrain, the agency added.

More than 100 of North Korea's best "Storm" troops have been killed and a further 1,000 injured fighting alongside Russia in its invasion of Ukraine, according to South Korean intelligence.

South Korea's National Intelligence Service told lawmakers on Thursday that the troops' losses came in their first battles for Russia, The New York Times reported.

One lawmaker, Lee Seong-kweun, also told reporters that a general-ranking officer may be among the dead, the report said.

North Korean troops arrived in Russia in October. Ukraine said the following month that it attacked North Korean forces for the first time.

Since then, North Korean troops' casualties have mounted. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Monday that preliminary estimates say over 3,000 North Korean soldiers had been killed or wounded in Russia's Kursk region.

That region, into which Ukraine launched an offensive in August, is where North Korean troops are now fighting.

North Korea's "Storm" Corps are among the most well-trained in Pyongyang's military, as well as the most indoctrinated, the Times reported.

But despite that elite status, they were still not ready for the fight in Ukraine, South Korea's National Intelligence Service said.

It told lawmakers that they were poorly prepared for drone attacks and the local terrain.

It's not the first time reports have suggested North Korea's forces are ill-prepared for the war.

The BBC reported that the Storm troops get more advanced training than other soldiers, but they are still underfed and can be malnourished.

Ukrainian officials and soldiers have also said that North Korean troops have been killed by drones that they did not realize were dangerous.

Ukrainian intelligence previously reported that North Korean troops accidentally killed eight Russian soldiers in Kursk, describing it as a "friendly fire" incident caused by a language barrier.

South Korea's National Intelligence Service reportedly told lawmakers that North Korean troops were sent to Russia so quickly that Moscow could not properly integrate them into the military and that they only learned a few military phrases in Russian, like "open fire," "artillery," and "in position" before being sent to battle.

But warfare experts warn that the troops' potential impact should not be dismissed, especially given that Russia's tactics have been to use poorly trained soldiers to overwhelm Ukraine.

For its part, Ukraine is reportedly trying to get North Korean troops to surrender, making videos and dropping leaflets on troops in a bid to get them to desert. It has also warned that Russia will treat North Korean troops like disposable cannon fodder, as it appears to have done with many of its own troops.

However, South Korea's National Intelligence Service said that North Korea appeared to be preparing to put more troops in Russia, the Times reported.

Zelenskyy also predicted that North Korean soldiers will at some stage be sent to the front lines in Ukraine.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Trump vows to "vigorously pursue the death penalty" after Biden commutations

President-elect Trump promised Tuesday that his Justice Department will "vigorously pursue the death penalty," one day after President Biden announced he had commuted sentences for most of the people on federal death row.

The big picture: The Trump administration set records with a spree of executions during his first term, and he appears poised to reverse Biden's moratorium on federal use of capital punishment once he's sworn into office.


  • Biden, in a statement announcing he would convert the inmates' sentences to life without possibility of parole, said he could not "stand back and let a new administration resume executions that I halted."

Driving the news: "As soon as I am inaugurated, I will direct the Justice Department to vigorously pursue the death penalty to protect American families and children from violent rapists, murderers, and monsters," Trump wrote in a Christmas Eve Truth Social post.

  • He added, "We will be a Nation of Law and Order again!"

Context: Biden emphasized in a statement that he does "condemn these murderers, grieve for the victims of their despicable acts, and ache for all the families who have suffered unimaginable and irreparable loss."

  • The three men who did not receive a commutation are the convicted gunman in the Mother Emanuel AME Church shooting, the Tree of Life synagogue shooter and the surviving Boston Marathon bomber.
  • The Biden administration in 2021 announced a moratorium on federal capital punishment pending a study of policies and protocols.
  • The president said his Monday commutations were in line with the standard of the administration's moratorium, which applies "in cases other than terrorism and hate-motivated mass murder."

Flashback: The first Trump administration announced in 2019 that it would instruct the Federal Bureau of Prisons to reinstate the death penalty after a 16-year hiatus.

  • There were 13 federal executions during Trump's first term. They mainly occurred toward the end of his White House tenure.

Zoom out: Trump has previously said he plans to expand use of the death penalty to drug crimes.

  • "We're going to be asking everyone who sells drugs, gets caught selling drugs, to receive the death penalty for their heinous acts," Trump said during his official announcement of his 2024 presidential candidacy.

Go deeper: Biden commutes sentences of 1,500 Americans in single day record

Marc Benioff explains what it was like going to 'guru' Steve Jobs for advice

Steve Jobs
Steve Jobs gave Marc Benioff advice when he was going through a period of "entrepreneur's block."

Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

  • Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff has no shortage of stories about late Apple cofounder Steve Jobs.
  • Benioff interned at Apple in college and got to know Jobs as he moved on to Oracle and Salesforce.
  • On a recent podcast episode, he recalled advice Jobs gave him when he had "entrepreneur's block."

Ask a major tech CEO for a Steve Jobs story, and you'll probably get one.

Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff certainly has his fair share of stories regarding the late Apple cofounder.

Benioff interned at Apple while in college, and the two got to know each other as Benioff moved on to Oracle and ultimately cofounded Salesforce.

On a recent episode of "Lenny's Podcast," Benioff recalled some advice Jobs dispensed when Benioff was going through "entrepreneur's block."

Jobs said, "There's three things you need to do right now."

First: "Your company, it better get 10 times larger than it is now in 24 months, or it's over."

Second: "You better sign a huge customer for this Salesforce automation product like Avon." (Benioff notes: "The CEO of Avon was on his board at the time, so that was on his mind.")

And lastly: "You better go build an application economy."

Benioff recalls being confused and asking Jobs what he meant by that, to which Jobs responded, "I don't know, but you're going to go figure it out."

As he thinks back on that conversation, Benioff says it was "like meeting with your guru and getting a zen koan or something where now you have a puzzle I have to solve."

"I literally went away, and I had all the notes from the meeting," he said. "I went through it over and over again. Then, finally, I'm like, 'I think he wants me to build an app store.'"

Salesforce launched AppExchange, its apps and services store, in 2006. Apple launched its app store in 2008. Benioff later gave the App Store trademark and the appstore.com domain to Apple as a gift.

Benioff, looking back, said he was "very grateful to have that relationship" with Jobs, which "dramatically influenced me in my career and my whole life."

Read the original article on Business Insider

What Big Tech giants are planning for 2025 that we can't wait for

Logos of Google, Apple, Meta, Amazon, and Microsoft on screen
Consumers should brace for another year of AI products and new releases from Big Tech companies.

Illustration by Idrees Abbas/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

  • Meta, Apple, OpenAI, and Tesla are set to launch new technology in the new year.
  • In 2025, you can expect a display in Meta's glasses and a Gemini-infused mixed reality headset.
  • Apple reportedly has several new offerings in the works, like an iPhone Air and a new iPhone SE.

Big Tech companies didn't hold back when releasing AI updates and hardware in 2024 β€” and you can expect the same pattern in 2025.

Many companies showcased flashy product announcements and extravagant demonstrations at annual events this year, but a number of those offerings aren't available quite yet. Examples include Apple's revamped Siri, Meta's Orion glasses, and Google's Project Astra.

While some release dates remain unclear, here's what you can expect to see from Big Tech companies in 2025.

Meta

Meta is reportedly adding a screen inside its Ray-Ban smart glasses that could be available in an update as early as the second half of 2025, the Financial Times reported Monday. The screen would be able to display notifications and responses from Meta's chatbot, the report said.

CTO and head of Reality Labs Andrew Bosworth wrote in a December blog that in 2025, users can expect personalized AI assistants that don't just respond to prompts but help users throughout their day.

"One of the things I'm most excited about for 2025 is the evolution of AI assistants," Bosworth said in the post.

Apple

Apple is expected to release a "more personal Siri," but it's unclear if that will come next year or with the Siri update expected in 2026. Apple is expected to announce the "LLM Siri" in 2025.

Apple will also announce the release of a smart home device as early as March, according to a November Bloomberg article. The device may be a wall-mounted iPad-like tablet that can control appliances, manage video calls, and use AI to access apps.

The tech giant will reportedly announce an iPhone "Air" model that will take on the sleek look of the MacBook Air, Bloomberg reported. And Apple will also unveil new iPad Air models and a new version of the budget-friendly iPhone SE, Bloomberg said separately. The new iPhone SE will eliminate the home button and is expected to support Apple Intelligence, according to the report.

OpenAI

OpenAI has been working on GPT-5 for over a year and a half, but the model has been pushed back. It's unclear when exactly it will launch, but there's a chance it might in 2025. The model is expected to have impressive capabilities, surpassing GPT-4's power.

It will be able to complete multi-step tasks and work with audio, video, and text. It will also have a large context window, which would allow it to process larger amounts of text.

Tesla

While Elon Musk doesn't anticipate the Cybercab hitting volume production until 2026, he said in Tesla's third-quarter earnings call that he expects to get regulatory approval in 2025.

During the call, he also said that the company is on track to start producing more affordable EV models in the first half of 2025.

"These vehicles will utilize aspects of the next-generation platform as well as aspects of our current platforms and will be able to be produced on the same manufacturing lines as our current vehicle line-up," Musk said.

Musk also wrote in a post on X in July that Tesla will have humanoid robots in "low production" for the company's internal use in 2025, with high production for external companies in 2026.

Google

In partnership with Samsung and Qualcomm, Google is introducing its approach to mixed reality with the release of the Android XR spatial computing platform. The company said in an announcement that the first device is built by Samsung and codenamed Project Moohan, and will be available to purchase next year.

The device offers typical mixed reality experiences, as well as an integrated Gemini.

"With Gemini, our AI assistant, you can even have conversations about what you're seeing or control your device," the company said in the announcement. "Gemini can understand your intent, helping you plan, research topics and guide you through tasks."

A Google DeepMind spokesperson also said that capabilities from research prototypes like Project Astra, which Google hopes will become a universal assistant, will graduate to Google applications and services. However, there are no plans to make Project Astra generally available itself, the spokesperson said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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