Tech Brew Ride Home - Galaxy Unpacked
Episode Date: February 25, 2026The new Galaxy S26 lineup is here. Remote control for Claude is here. But is Anthropic about to wash its hands when it comes to working with the Pentagon? Could Stripe buy PayPal. Oh, and speaking of ...AI and war, you might not want to hear how often AI chose thermonuclear war when it was asked to play a wargame. I tried the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra and need the Privacy Display feature on my iPhone ASAP (ZDNet) Gemini is getting its first agentic capabilities (The Verge) Exclusive: Hegseth gives Anthropic until Friday to back down on AI safeguards (Axios) Anthropic digs in heels in dispute with Pentagon, source says (Axios) Anthropic just released a mobile version of Claude Code called Remote Control (VentureBeat) Payments Processor Stripe Expresses Interest in PayPal (Bloomberg) AI Models Deployed Nuclear Weapons in 95% of War Game Simulations, Study Finds (Implicator.ai) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to the TechBoo ride home for Wednesday, February 25th, 2026. I'm Brian McCullough today. The new Galaxy
S-26 lineup is here. Remote control for Claude is here, but is Anthropic about to wash its hands
when it comes to working with the Pentagon. Could stripe buy PayPal? Oh, and speaking of AI and war,
you might not want to hear how often AI chose thermonuclear violence when it was asked to play a war game.
Here's what you miss today in the world of tech. Unpacked this afternoon, Samsung announced the
Galaxy S-26 and S-26 Plus, featuring a Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 for Galaxy chip set,
starting at $899 and $1,99 respectively, which it should be noted represents a $100 price hike.
They also launched the $179 Galaxy Buds 4 and $249 Buds 4 Pro, keeping the AirPods-esque design
with better battery life and noise canceling, available March 11th.
But the headline is, of course, the $1,299 plus Galaxy S26 Ultra with a new privacy display feature that limits the screen legibility,
an all-new agentic AI, improved night mode, and more.
Quoting ZDNet.
From the pixel-level privacy display feature to an all-new agentic AI and improved night mode videos,
the Galaxy S-26 Ultra seems like a solid upgrade over its predecessor,
I used it for an hour ahead of launch, and here's why I think it's a bigger upgrade than the last two generations.
Last year, Samsung slashed the weight of its Galaxy S-25 Ultra, but the handset wasn't comfortable to hold or use for long durations.
The flat sides with sharp edges were an ergonomic nightmare, and I'm glad Samsung has fixed it to an extent.
The new Galaxy S-26 Ultra has a similar design to its predecessor.
You get flat edges, rounded corners, minimal bezels on the display, and buttons on the right side.
However, it feels more comfortable to hold and is a big step up from the Galaxy S25 Ultra.
Samsung says the new Galaxy S26 Ultra is its slimmest ultra yet.
It is shaved off a decent 0.3 millimeters and thickness, landing at a respectable 7.9 millimeters
at 214 grams.
It is also the lightest mainstream big phone.
To compare, it is thinner and lighter than the Apple iPhone 17 Pro Max at 8.75 millimeters and 233 grams,
and the Google Pixel 10 Pro XL at 8.5 millimeters, 232 grams.
These numbers contribute to a more comfortable in-hand experience.
In my brief time with the phone, it was easier to manage with a single hand than the Galaxy
S25 Ultra.
Samsung's new flagship phone has a 6.9-inch QHD plus Ammelad display with a 120-hertz
dynamic refresh rate.
It features Corning Gorilla Armor 2 for protection from drops and scratches and retains its
less reflective coating. I love the low reflective panel, but my new favorite feature is the
privacy display. It is built on the pixel level and has a very thoughtful implementation.
Privacy display is built for times when you don't want bystanders to see what's on your screen.
Samsung has placed wider angle pixels and narrow pixels next to each other on the Galaxy
S-26 Ultra to control how they emit light. In comparison, its predecessor just had the
wider angle pixels which emitted light in every direction. With the
The privacy display turned on, the system uses only its new narrow pixels to transmit light
at a 90-degree angle straight to your eyes.
This limits the legibility of your screen so no one can see it from a side angle.
This new feature should come in handy when you're on the go, in cafes or in any public
space.
It can be turned on easily through the Quick Settings panel.
I love its implementation because Samsung allows you to customize when it works.
You can have it turned on for the whole screen at all times when entering pins and passwords,
for specific apps and at particular times of day using routines.
For instance, if you select privacy display to turn on for your messaging app like WhatsApp
and you receive a pop-up notification, it will trigger only for that specific area.
So a bystander could be looking at your screen and yet won't be able to see the message notification, end quote.
And also there's this, quoting the verge.
Google's Gemini AI is getting one step closer to being more like an actual assistant,
Starting with some pixel 10 phones and the Samsung Galaxy S-26 series, Gemini will be able to hail an Uber or put together a DoorDash order on its own.
It's called Task Automation, and it starts with a prompt to Gemini, something like Get Me an Uber to the Palace of Fine Arts.
Gemini then launches the app in a virtual window on your device and goes through the process step by step.
You can watch it all happen with options to stop the automation or take control if necessary, or you just let it run in the background while Gemini does.
does its thing. The assistant will notify you if it needs your attention to choose between two options
or if something you asked it to look for is out of stock. Once your ride or grocery card is all set,
Gemini will alert you to take a look and submit the final order yourself. So how exactly is
Gemini putting together your burger order? The demos I saw were based on Gemini 3,
opening the app and using reasoning to click through the various steps, find the right options,
and consider alternatives. But app developers can also expose certain actions using MCP or Android
app functions framework. Google's been laying the groundwork for the latter since at least
2024, where neither of those things exist, the idea is that Gemini will get in there and figure it out
by itself. We see it as a series of technology stacks, none of which the user really cares about.
They just want it to happen. A Google representative explains, we think it's important to
support all of those so that over time you can have an assistant that can complete all kinds of
different tasks for you. So in a future where Gemini takes the wheel and uses your apps for you,
isn't there a possibility of this rubbing app developers the wrong way? Doesn't Uber want the chance
to remind me that I can save a bunch of money by signing up for Uber One? This technology is happening,
the Google representative says, and the question for the developer community is,
how do we figure out the right ways to embrace it together? End quote.
Earlier this week, Anthropic met with the U.S. Department of Defense, and apparently it did not go
well. Sources tell Axios that the DOD told Anthropic it will invoke the defense production
Act or label Anthropic a supply chain risk if Anthropic does not give it unfettered access to
Claude by Friday. Quote, Defense Secretary Pete Hegsef gave Anthropic CEO Dario Amo Dai
until Friday evening to give the military unfettered access to its AI model or face harsh
penalties, Axios has learned. The Pentagon wants to punish Anthropic as the feud over AI
safeguards grows increasingly nasty, but officials are also worried about the consequences of losing access
to its industry-leading model Claude.
The only reason we are still talking to these people is we need them and we need them now.
The problem for these guys is they are that good, a defense official told Axios ahead of the meeting.
Anthropic has said it is willing to adapt its usage policies for the Pentagon, but not to allow
its model to be used for the mass surveillance of Americans or the development of weapons that
fire without human involvement.
Anthropics Claude is the only AI model currently used for the military's most sensitive work.
A senior defense official said the meeting was not warm and fuzzy at all.
Another source told Axios it remained cordial with no voices raised on either side and that
Hegzeth praised Claude to Amadai.
Heg Seth told Amadai he won't let any company dictate the terms under which the Pentagon
makes operational decisions or object to individual use cases.
In a sign of how seriously the Pentagon is taking this dispute,
Heg Seth was joined in the meeting by Deputy Secretary Steve Feinberg,
Undersecretary for Research and Engineering Emil Michael,
Under Secretary for Acquisition and Sustainment Michael Duffy,
Hegsses chief spokesperson Sean Parnell
and General Counsel Earl Matthews,
the Pentagon's top lawyer, end quote.
And quoting Reuters,
Artificial Intelligence Lab Anthropic has no intention
of easing its usage restrictions for military purposes,
a person familiar with the matter said on Tuesday,
adding talks continue after a meeting to discuss its future with the Pentagon.
During the meeting,
Hegsteth delivered an ultimatum to Anthropium
to Anthropic, get on board, or the government would take drastic action people familiar with
the matter said. The options included labeling Anthropic as a supply chain risk or have the Pentagon
invoke a law, the Defense Production Act, that would force Anthropic to change its rules, the people said.
The Pentagon did not immediately respond to a comment request. An Anthropic spokesperson said,
Tuesday's meeting, quote, continued good faith conversations about our usage policy to ensure
Anthropic can continue to support the government's national security mission in line with what our
models can reliably and responsibly do. Hegeseth said the Pentagon would either invoke the Defense
Production Act to compel Anthropic to comply with its demands or deem the company a supply chain risk,
a determination typically imposed on companies from foreign adversaries. This could upend
Anthropics business with other companies that do business with the U.S. government.
This specific scenario is unprecedented and will almost certainly trigger a raft of downstream
litigation if the administration takes adverse action against Anthropic here, said Franklin Turner,
a government contracts lawyer at MacArthur and English, end quote.
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Speaking of them, here's some Anthropic news you can use if you want to check on your AI
runs when you're away from your computer and have that whole thing take over more of your free time, I guess.
Anthropic has begun rolling out remote control for Claude Code,
letting users control a session begun in the terminal from the ClaudeCode mobile app or the
Web. Quoting Venture Beat. The feature allows developers to initiate a complex task in their terminal
and maintain full control of it from a phone or tablet, effectively decoupling the AI agent
from the physical workstation. Currently, remote control is available as a research preview for
subscribers on the Claude Max tier. While access for Claude Pro at $20 a month, users is expected
shortly, the feature remains a high-end tool for power users and is notably absent from
team or enterprise plans during this initial phase.
access the feature, users must follow this guide and update to Claude Version 2.1.52 and execute the
command-clawed remote control or use the in-session slash command-slash-rc. Once active, the terminal
displays a QR code that, when scanned, opens a responsive, synchronized session in the
Claude mobile app. The messaging behind the release centers on the preservation of a developer's
flow state. In his announcement, Zweben framed the update as a lifestyle upgrade rather than just
a technical one, encouraging users to take a walk, see the sun, walk your dog without losing your flow.
This remote control is not a cloud-based replacement for local development, but a portal into it.
According to official documentation, the core value is that Claude keeps running on your machine,
and you can control the session from the Cloud app.
This ensures that local context, file system access environment variables and model context protocol
MCP servers, remain active and reachable even if the user is miles away from their desk.
Claude code remote control functions as a secure bridge between your local terminal and Anthropics
Cloud interface, which provides the Anthropic AI models Opus 4.6 and Sonnet 4.6 that power Cloud
code. When you run the command, your desktop machine initiates an outbound connection to
Anthropics API for serving the models, meaning you aren't opening any inbound ports or
exposing your computer to the open web. Instead, your local machine pulls the API for instructions.
When you visit the session URL or use the Clod app, you are essentially used.
using those devices as a remote window to view and command the process still running on your
computer. Your files and MCP servers never leave your machine, only the chat messages and
tool results flow through the encrypted bridge, end quote.
Could Stripe buy PayPal? Quoting Bloomberg, strike, which is closely held and is among the
industry's most valuable companies, has expressed preliminary interest in a potential acquisition
of the digital payments pioneer or its assets the people said, asking not to be identified
because the matter is private. Founded in the late 1990s, PayPal was an early mover in digital payments.
It has since struggled with modernizing its payment technologies as rivals such as Apple and Alphabet have seized market share.
Stripe, founded by brothers Patrick and John Collison, has become one of the industry's most coveted players.
Early Tuesday, Stripe announced that it had reached a $159 billion valuation in an employee tender offer.
PayPal has had obviously a tough time over the past few years, and the landscape has changed quite a bit with Apple
pay and Google Pay and everything like that. Collison Strape's president said in an interview this week,
I can't talk about any, you know, M&A hypotheticals, but they've definitely had a tough time.
The company's fourth quarter profit and revenue missed analyst estimates, according to results
for the period that also showed a continued slowdown in payment volume, end quote.
There had been rumors that PayPal has been attracting takeover interest after a stock slide over
the last year wiped out almost half of PayPal's market value.
Finally today, this is fun, quoting implicator.aI.
Three of the most powerful AI models on the market reached for nuclear weapons in nearly every crisis,
a King's College London research team threw at them, according to a paper published on the
archive by Kenneth Payne.
OpenAI's GBT 5.2, Anthropics Claude Son at 4, and Google's Gemini 3 Flash played 21 war games
against each other over 329 turns.
They wrote roughly 780,000 words explaining why they did what they did.
No model ever chose to surrender, new scientists reported Tuesday.
The findings arrive as defense ministries and intelligence agencies worldwide test AI systems for crisis decision support.
The nuclear taboo doesn't seem to be as powerful for machines as for humans.
Payne told new scientists.
The researchers designed a three-phase cognitive architecture that force models to reflect on the situation,
forecast their opponent's next move, and then separately, choose a piece.
public signal and a private action. The two didn't have to match. That split made deception measurable.
Claude's on at four once 67% of its games and dominated open-ended scenarios with a 100% win rate.
The researchers labeled it a calculating hawk at low escalation levels, Claude,
matched its signals to its actions, 84% of the time, patiently building trust.
But once stakes climbed into nuclear territory, it exceeded its stated intention 60 to 70% of the time.
opponents never adapted to this pattern.
GPT 5.2 earned the nickname Jekyll and Hyde.
Without time pressure, it looked passive.
Chronically underestimating opponents, it signaled restraint and acted restrained.
Its open-ended win rate was 0%.
Then deadlines entered the picture.
Under temporal pressure, GPT 5.2 inverted completely, winning 75% of games and climbing to an
escalation level it had previously refused to touch.
In one game, it spent 18 turns building a
reputation for caution before launching a nuclear strike on the final turn. Gemini 3 Flash played
the madman. It was the only model to deliberately choose full strategic nuclear war reaching that
threshold by turn 4 in one scenario. Game theorists have a name for the strategy Gemini adopted
the rationality of irrationality, act crazy enough, and opponents second guess everything. It worked,
sort of. Opponents tagged Gemini not credible 21% of the time. Claude got that label just 8%.
Someone launched a nuke in 20 of the 21 games.
Stack the 780,000 words of reasoning those models produced and you'd need a dolly to move them.
What those pages actually say, though, complicates the 95% headline.
Models treated the tactical-to-strategic divide as a meaningful firebreak.
Tactical nuclear use happened routinely.
Full strategic nuclear war was rare, occurring only three times, all under deadline pressure.
The researchers suspect reinforcement learning from human feed.
back the alignment technique used on all three models produced GPD 5.2's baseline restraint,
but the deadline experiment showed something uncomfortable. RLHF didn't build a wall against escalation,
more like a speed bump, and the models drove right over it when the clock ran low.
From a nuclear risk perspective, the findings are unsettling, said James Johnson at the University
of Aberdeen. Johnson studies how AI changes nuclear strategy. The scenario that worries him most is
simple. Two AI advisors egging each other on escalation piling up in seconds and the officer in the room
still reaching for a coffee. Nervous defense officials should note the next number. When one model
deployed tactical nuclear weapons, the opposing model de-escalated just 18% of the time. Nuclear use
typically provoked counter-escalation, not retreat. AI won't decide nuclear war, but it may shape
the perceptions and timelines that determine whether leaders believe they have one, Johnson said,
end quote. I'm tempted to put a clip from the movie War Games here, but since I'm late,
putting this out because of the unpacked event, just imagine it.
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