Tech Brew Ride Home - Nvidia Earnings And Nano Banana
Episode Date: August 28, 2025Nvidia’s earnings are ok, but maybe showing signs of normalizing. Copilot for your TV. A blockchain for your cloud. I catch you up on that whole Nano Banana image AI craze sweeping the internet. And... a summary of the Pixel phone reviews. Links: Nvidia beats on top and bottom lines as company expects breakneck AI spend to continue (CNBC) Microsoft expands Xbox Cloud Gaming to Game Pass Core and Standard subscribers (The Verge) Microsoft’s Copilot AI is now inside Samsung TVs and monitors (The Verge) Google Cloud is developing its own blockchain for payments, currently in private testnet (The Block) Google Gemini’s AI image model gets a ‘bananas’ upgrade (TechCrunch) Nothing busted using professional photos as Phone 3 samples (The Verge) Google Pixel 10 Pro review: the best AI phone on the market (The Shortcut) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to the Tech Brew
Right Home for Thursday, August 28th,
2025, I'm Brian McCullough today.
InVidia's earnings are okay, but maybe showing signs of normalizing.
Copilot for your TV, a blockchain for your cloud.
I catch you up on that whole nanobanana image AI craze
sweeping the internet and a summary of the pixel phone reviews.
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Although NVIDIA's Q2 earnings came in above many analysts' expectations,
warning signs of a potential slowdown in AI spending unsettled some investors, nudging
NVIDIA's stock down roughly 3% in after-hours trading, though. As I write this, I see the stock
is nudging into positive territory as trading begins this morning.
InVIDIA delivered strong quarterly growth, revenue and profits beat estimates, and net income
surged about 59% reinforcing the company's vital role in AI hardware supply chains.
Yet, caution also weighed heavily on sentiment. Its data center revenue,
despite climbing around 56% year over year and making up around 88% of total sales,
fell slightly short of the anticipated $41.3 billion at $41.1 billion.
Meanwhile, China-related challenges persisted.
InVIDIA didn't ship any H-20 chips, tailored, again, specifically for the Chinese market last quarter,
due to tighter U.S. export restrictions, although it indicated $2 to $5 billion in potential shipments of those chips.
this quarter if tensions ease. The company forecasted about $54 billion in revenue for the fiscal
third quarter through October, aligning with street consensus, but missing more bullish
expectations of over $60 billion. This forecast, which notably excludes any H20 revenue from
China, signaled a deceleration following a two-year AI-driven boom. From the earnings call,
Business Insider flagged five major takeaways. Number one, H-20 chip uncertainty. Shipments to China
remain unresolved. CFO Colette Cress noted that revenue from potential $2 to $5 billion in
H20 chip sales isn't included in the guidance. More on that in a second. Also, there was a bit
of a modest sales outlook. Despite strong results, Nvidia tempered growth forecasts suggesting that
momentum is cooling there. Also, they wanted to highlight the massive AI infrastructure opportunity
that's still ongoing. The company sees $3 to $4 trillion in AI infrastructure spending by
2030 presenting a significant long-term growth runway. They also want you to know that robotics is their
future. Demand for compute in robotics is accelerating, they said. The new Jetson AGX-Thore platform is gaining
traction among developers. Also, there are those next-gen-gen-rubin ships coming. NVIDIA is on track
to begin volume production of its Rubin architecture in 2026, promising continuity in innovation and
product cadence. But Bloomberg underscored NVIDIA's lackluster forecast suggesting the modest revenue
Outlook, even though it is aligned with the consensus estimates, signals a slowdown following
exceptional AI-fueled growth. Quote, the results showed hints that spending by giant data center
operators, quote, could tighten at the margins if near-term returns from AI applications remain
difficult to quantify. E-marketer analyst Jacob Bourne said in a note. InVedia also noted that the
U.S. government hasn't yet codified its plan to take a 15% cut of revenue from China AI chip sales,
and it acknowledged risks to enacting that policy.
Quote, any request for a percentage of the revenue by the U.S. government may subject us to litigation,
increase our costs, and harm our competitive position and benefit competitors that are not subject to such arrangements,
NVIDIA said in a filing, end quote.
Actually, as promised more on that, quoting Bloomberg again,
the U.S. government hasn't indicated how it will put regulations in place that require the chipmaker
to make the payments, NVIDIA said, late Wednesday.
discussions between Nvidia and the government are ongoing, according to Chief Financial Officer Collette Kress.
If the plan isn't codified, NVIDIA should be able to proceed with China sales without paying the commission,
Cress said in an interview. We have been communicating, she said. If nothing shows up, I've got licenses.
I don't have to do this 15% until I see something that is a true regulatory document, end quote.
Interesting. Anyway, NVIDIA remains bullish overall. Global spending on AI infrastructure, such as data centers and
high-performance computing systems is projected to reach $375 billion this year and climbed
to $500 billion next year.
Long-term demand for Nvidia's next-generation products, including that Rubin architecture and
its expanding footprint and robotics and edge computing continues to bolster optimism about
its growth trajectory.
Still, analysts warned that Nvidia's staggering ascent to a $4 trillion market cap has raised
the bar for investor expectations.
The combination of slightly softer data center performance, muted guidance, and uncertainty
in key international markets has introduced a note of caution suggesting that the era of unbroken,
hyper-accelerated growth could be transitioning to a more measured phase.
For markets that have been treating Nvidia as a proxy for the health of the entire AI industry,
this quarter's results signal both resilience and maybe the first hints of normalization
in what has been the entire economy's hottest sector.
Microsoft is expanding Xbox cloud gaming to GamePass's core and standard subscribers
dropping the GamePass Ultimate requirement and testing more PC game access.
Quoting the verge, Microsoft currently restricts access to Xbox Cloud Gaming
to Xbox GamePass Ultimate to get cloud access, meaning you have to pay 1999 a month
to get access to XCloud.
Xbox Insiders can now start testing the ability to stream cloud games included with
GamePass Core and standard subscriptions.
As part of this insider experience, Xbox GamePass Core and standard subscribers
will be able to stream cloud playable games included with their subscription or select cloud playable
games they own, explains the Xbox Insider team. The expansion of Xbox Cloud Gaming to more GamePass
tiers comes just a week after Microsoft hinted at more affordable and accessible ways to access
Xbox Cloud Games. Microsoft was also previously working on a separate dedicated version of
Xbox Cloud Gaming. Microsoft has also hinted in the past that there could even be
eventually a free version Xbox Cloud Gaming in exchange for ads.
Microsoft is also expanding PC game access to GamePass Core and standard subscribers.
As part of testing, Xbox Insiders subscribe to GamePass Core or Standard,
will for the first time gain access to PC versions of select titles,
giving you even more flexibility and the choice to play on a PC or Windows handheld,
says Microsoft.
If you want to try out Xbox Cloud Gaming and PC games on GamePass Core or Standard,
you can join Microsoft's Xbox Insiders program and then visit Xbox.com slash play to access cloud games
or the Xbox app on Windows for the additional PC titles, end quote.
Samsung has rolled out Microsoft's co-pilot AI assistant to its 2025 lineup of TVs and monitors,
letting users ask for movie suggestions, plot recaps, and more.
Quoting The Verge.
On TV, Copilot takes on a friendly animated presence that resembles the opalescent copilot
appearance Microsoft showed off last month, though in a color that makes it look more like a personified
chickpea. The beige blob will float and bounce around your screen while its mouth moves in line with
its responses. Copilot will automatically appear on supported Samsung TVs where you'll find it
within the Samsung Tysen OS home screen, Samsung Daily Plus, and click to search. You can also access
Copilot by using a voice command or selecting it with your remote. From there, hit the mic button on your
remote and you can start speaking to copilot. Microsoft notes that you can sign into the app for a more
personal co-pilot experience that allows the AI assistant to reference your previous conversations and
preferences. Copilot is rolling out now on Samsung's 2025 TVs, including micro-rgb, Neo-QLED,
OLED, the frame models, as well as the M7, M8, and M-9 smart monitors. Microsoft has previously
announced plans to bring co-pilot to LG TVs as well, end quote.
Google Cloud says its universal ledger, a layer one blockchain for financial products, is in a private test net, and plans to reveal more details at a later date, quoting the block.
Google Cloud is building its own blockchain network named Google Cloud Universal Ledger, or G-C-U-L, for the financial sector, according to Rich Widman, Google Cloud's Web3 head of strategy, who announced this on Tuesday.
Widman wrote in a LinkedIn post that G-CUL aims to provide financial institutions with a performant,
credibly neutral blockchain platform that enables Python-based smart contracts.
Besides bringing to bear Google's distribution, G-CUL is a neutral infrastructure layer,
Widman said in the post.
Tether won't use circles blockchain and Aiden,
probably won't use Stripes blockchain, but any financial institution can build with G-CUL.
G-C-U-L is currently in a private test.
and further details will be revealed at a later date, according to Widman's post.
Google Cloud officially described GCL as a new service for the financial market accessible
through a single API and programmable to enable payment automation and digital asset management.
The company also stated that GCLL was designed with a focus on compliance and will operate
as a private permissioned system.
While Widman described GCL as a layer one network, the permissioned and private nature
of Google Cloud's upcoming blockchain has resulted in community skepticism, with some arguing that
it should not be mistakenly described as a decentralized blockchain.
Google Cloud had previously announced the GCL initiative in March in collaboration with the
CME group where CME was piloting solutions on the platform for use in wholesale payments
and asset tokenization, end quote.
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Look, I pride myself in trying to catch everything in tech that matters,
but sometimes I do drop the ball.
And in the case of nanobanana, the thing that has taken over the internet this week,
I failed you.
I dropped the ball.
So to catch up, earlier this week, Google revealed it was behind.
the viral nanobanana image model and launched it as Gemini 2.5 flash image with finer edit controls
in the Gemini app. There's also an API and more, and yes, the image quality is very, very,
very good. Quoting TechCrunch, Gemini's new AI image model is designed to make more precise
edits to images based on natural language requests from users while preserving the consistency
of faces, animals, and other details, something that most rival tools struggle with.
For instance, ask ChatGPT or XAI's grok to change the color of someone's shirt in a photo,
and the result might include a distorted face or an altered background.
Google's new tool has already drawn attention in recent weeks.
Social media users raved over an impressive AI image editor in the crowdsourced evaluation platform,
LM Arena.
The model appeared to users anonymously under the pseudonym Nanobanana.
Google says it's behind the model, if it wasn't already obvious from all the banana-related hints,
which is really the native image capability within its flagship Gemini 2.5 Flash AI model.
Google says the image model is state-of-the-art on LMARina and other benchmarks.
We're really pushing visual quality forward as well as the model's ability to follow instructions,
said Nicole Bridgettova, a product lead on visual generation models at Google DeepMind in an interview with TechCrunch.
This update does a much better job making edits more seamlessly,
and the model's outputs are usable for whatever you want to use them for, said Bridgettova.
And that's really the thing. If you've tried this out, it basically obviates the need for
Photoshop or any other sort of editing software entirely. It's not just about saying, hey, make
me a photo of a penguin riding a bicycle. It's about doing any of the edits you would turn
to Photoshop to do with such granular control that you can be like, change the color balance
of this photo, cut out this thing over here, change the color over there, or even change the
full wardrobe of that guy there.
It's really and truly impressive.
This is not a good look, quoting the verge.
Tech brand nothing has been caught passing off stock images from professional photographers as samples taken by its recently announced phone three.
Five sample images that nothing claimed were captured by the device were actually licensed photos taken with other cameras.
The photographer behind one of the images has anonymously confirmed to the verge that it wasn't taken using the phone three and that nothing
had purchased the image license via the Still's Stock Photo Marketplace.
The Verge has seen the EXIF file for the anonymous photographer's image
and can confirm it wasn't captured using the phone 3.
According to the data, it was taken in 2023,
long before the phone 3 was released this year.
The five photographs were featured on an in-store demo unit of nothing's phone
and include shots of a spiral staircase, a car headlight, a glass, a window,
and a woman looking towards the camera, all of which are available to license.
through stills. Roman Fox, another photographer who captured the car headlight, also confirmed
to Android Authority that nothing had paid for his image, which was taken in 2023 using a Fuji film
XH2 camera. Nothing demo samples were accompanied by the message, Judge for yourself,
here's what our community has captured with phone three. In a statement posted on X,
nothing co-founder Akis Evangilitas says the stock images featured on live demo units were
placeholders that should have been updated. Nothing is, quote, actively rectifying the situation,
according to Evangelitis, describing the fakery as an, quote, unfortunate oversight with no ill intent.
An initial version of the LDU live demo unit needs to be submitted with placeholders around four
months before launch to be implemented and tested as we ramp towards mass production, said Evangiletus.
Once we enter mass production, those placeholder images are replaced with photo samples
through a new version of the LDU, along with final product renders and videos.
In this case, it was brought to our attention that some live demo unit stock imagery
was not updated.
Licensing photos that were never intended for public use is a little perplexing,
especially given that nothing's previous process involved using photos that were actually
shot using the company's older phones.
This isn't the first time that a phone company has been caught using fake photography
examples, but you would think that nothing would have learned from those previous mistakes,
end quote. Finally today, the reviews of the Pixel 10 are out. I'm going to focus on the 10 Pro models,
the flagship models. The pixel fold reviews still seem to be under embargo. Anyway,
reviewers agree the Pixel 10 Pro maintains a familiar, refined aesthetic similar to its predecessors
with no dramatic design overhaul, but the new phones benefit from brighter displays and modest
battery improvements. While some reviewers see the unchanged design as a safe,
rather than stale move. The overall build still reflects flagship craftsmanship, apparently.
Under the hood lies Google's TensorFlow G5 chip and folks say pro variants feel notably snappier
with less overheating and smoother multitasking than past pixel phones. Camera hardware remains strong.
The pro models retain high-quality sensors and advanced zoom options. The pro-res zoom,
a generative AI feature boosting 30x plus zoomed shots, delivers impressive detail in some
cases, though, some reviewers, including the Verge, say results can feel a bit artificial at times.
Battery life receives mixed feedback. The Pixel 10 Pro contributes incremental gains. Some folks say,
but other reviewers, like the shortcut, highlight the fact that the XL model at least can
last nearly two days. As for all the AI bells and whistles, Magic Q apparently stands out
for its contextual suggestions, such as offering to share an address from Gmail and a text
conversation, operating entirely on device, if you'll remember, for improved privacy.
Other AI-led tools include that camera coach, magic editor, journaling prompts, and an AI
translation system that mimics a speaker's voice.
While MagicQ frequently hits the mark, other features are somewhat reactive at best,
they say, sometimes amusing, but not always genuinely useful.
The conclusion from sampling the reviews from The Verge, the shortcut, expert reviews,
and gadget, and a few YouTube videos is that.
The Pixel 10 Pro refines the pixel formula with faster, smarter, AI, improved charging, and a solid camera suite.
Its AI features like Magic Q and ProResZoom shine, though some feel more experimental than essential.
If you value on-device AI and polished incremental upgrades, it's a strong contender, but not a revolution.
And if you currently have a Pixel 9, apparently you're probably fine, not upgrading.
Nothing more for you today. Talk to you tomorrow.
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