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  • Warner Bros. ‘Superman’ opening weekend box office hits $122 million

    Warner Bros. ‘Superman’ opening weekend box office hits $122 million

    David Corenswet stars are Superman in Warner Bros.’ “Superman.”

    Warner Bros. Discovery

    “Superman” soared into theaters this weekend, snapping up an estimated $122 million in domestic ticket sales and launching a new era of DC superhero flicks.

    The film marks the first theatrical debut of James Gunn and Peter Safran since they became co-heads of Warner Bros. Discovery’s DC Comics film and TV unit in late 2022. The pair has developed a 10-year plan to reinvigorate the studio’s franchises across TV and film, including fresh spins on Superman and Batman.

    “The road to success for DC has been a circuitous one over the years and now under the auspices of James Gunn and Peter Safran, the impressive opening weekend performance of ‘Superman’ allows DC Studios to hit the reset and chart a new course with this film providing the spark to ignite future success for the storied brand,” said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst at Comscore.

    The domestic haul of “Superman” ranks as the best performance of a solo-billed Superman film ever, outpacing 2013’s “Superman: Man of Steel,” which took in $116 million during its first three days in theaters, according to Comscore data.

    Only four DC films have performed better during their first three days in theaters — “Batman v. Superman” opened to $166 million, “The Dark Knight Rises” captured $160 million, “The Dark Knight” brought in $158.4 million and “The Batman” tallied $134 million.

    “Superman is fulfilling its promise as another welcome hit for the summer box office, while also serving as an effective launch pad for James Gunn’s new era of DC Studios,” said Shawn Robbins, director of analytics at Fandango and founder of Box Office Theory.

    Internationally, “Superman” generated $95 million in ticket sales, bringing its estimated global opening to $217 million.

    Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC. NBCUniversal owns Fandango.

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  • Galaxy Z Fold 7 is a refinement to Pixel 9 Pro Fold’s reinvention

    Galaxy Z Fold 7 is a refinement to Pixel 9 Pro Fold’s reinvention

    Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold 7 is an impressive jump for the company’s book-style foldable, delivering a needed upgrade and some major improvements. But if we’re looking to crown the biggest upgrade in foldable history, I think Google’s Pixel 9 Pro Fold still earns that title.


    This issue of 9to5Google Weekender is a part of 9to5Google’s rebooted newsletter that highlights the biggest Google stories with added commentary and other tidbits. Sign up here to get it delivered to your inbox early!


    The Galaxy Z Fold 7 is a major, overdue upgrade for Samsung’s foldable. It’s drastically thinner and now matches the best in the world, while addressing almost every other complaint from past generations. A better camera, a wider cover display, a bigger inner screen, etc. Save for the stagnant battery size, Galaxy Z Fold 7 is better in virtually every way.

    And in my use of the device so far, I’m super excited about that.

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    The best foldables on the market for the past couple of years have been from the like of Oppo and Honor and, while they’re fantastic in their own right, they’re not sold in large portions of the globe, and their software experiences certainly aren’t appealing for a huge number of people. That’s why the Pixel 9 Pro Fold has been my daily driver, because my alternatives were either iffy software from those brands, or underwhelming hardware from Samsung.

    Samsung deserves a lot of credit for the year-over-year upgrade Fold 7 is delivering, but I think Google still deserves more credit for its work last year.

    Moving from the original Pixel Fold to the the Pixel 9 Pro Fold was effectively like if Samsung had skipped directly from the Galaxy Z Fold 3 all the way to the Fold 7. Google’s first device was surprisingly good for a first attempt, but it had some clear downsides in that rough inner display, constant overheating issues, and the unorthodox form factor. Google addressed quite literally of that with the sequel, with Pixel 9 Pro Fold delivering the form factor everyone wanted with its big display, traditional cover screen aspect ratio, and improved chipset. Samsung is similarly addressing a ton of issues, but the issues on last year’s Galaxy Z Fold 6, and even the Fold 5 before that, weren’t nearly as impactful as the ones Google was dealing with.

    To put it succinctly, the Galaxy Z Fold 7 is a device full of refinement, where Pixel 9 Pro Fold was a complete reinvention.

    Is that to say Samsung’s upgrade is somehow bad or underwhelming? Not at all! As a customer, I’m thrilled, but I also want to acknowledge that Google, despite its inexperience, did more last time around.

    That said, Google is preparing to launch Pixel 10 Pro Fold with little to no major improvements. I don’t think that matters much, really, as the Pixel and Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold 7 will have enough differences to still give each other some healthy competition. Samsung has a more impressive form factor, but Google (probably) has a more affordable price. With $200 separating each other, these devices can absolutely coexist without stepping on each other’s toes. Of course, that wouldn’t be a problem anyway, considering we’re talking about a tiny portion of the smartphone market in the first place, and then talking about one of the smallest (but growing) players in that market.

    What do you think?


    Pre-orders for the Galaxy Z Fold 7, Flip 7, and Galaxy Watch 8 are now open through Samsung.com with up to $1,100 in trade-in values, plus an additional $50 in Samsung credit when you order through 9to5Google’s links below, but that credit only applies if you check out within 30 minutes.


    This Week’s Top Stories

    Samsung Unpacked

    Samsung hosted its big Unpacked event this week, bringing with it the launch of Galaxy Z Fold 7, Flip 7, Flip 7 FE, and the Galaxy Watch 8 series. See below for our in-depth coverage.

    Android gets new “Canary” releases

    Google is changing up how new Android releases drop (again), with new “Canary” releases that will launch more frequently. They’re not as directly tied to a specific Android version, but they are bringing changes already.

    More Top Stories


    From the rest of 9to5

    9to5Mac: Apple planning new Mac external display, MacBooks, iPads, and more for early 2026

    9to5Toys: Best Buy’s massive Black Friday in July sale now live! Doorbusters, Smart TVs from $75, Apple deals, much more

    Electrek: Tesla slashes prices in Canada despite tariffs as sales basically go to 0


    Follow Ben: Twitter/X, Threads, Bluesky, and Instagram

    FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.


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  • I tried this Linux distro that looks like Windows, is made by a Microsoft engineer, and is based on Ubuntu

    I tried this Linux distro that looks like Windows, is made by a Microsoft engineer, and is based on Ubuntu

    Moving from Windows to Linux isn’t as hard as you might initially think, but you’d be forgiven for having some worries. Switching to a totally different desktop environment is hard, especially when some of the apps you’re used to may not be available.

    Well, while something like Ubuntu or Linux Mint already makes the transition fairly easy, there’s another solution that makes things even easier — AnduinOS. This relatively new Linux distribution is developed by a Microsoft engineer (who doesn’t work on Windows), and it’s just about perfect if you’re thinking about switching from Windows, as it makes everything feel familiar. I’ve been using it for a few days, and I have to say, I’m in love with it.

    Based on Ubuntu, but better

    Enhanced in the right ways

    AnduinOS is a Linux distro that’s largely based on Ubuntu, which gives it an extremely solid foundation already. Ubuntu is one of the most user-friendly Linux distros, meaning the setup process and the overall usability of the system is seamless and feels great overall. Much like Ubuntu, ANduinOS is also offered in two flavors, an LTS release (based on Ubuntu’s own LTS branch) and a more short-term release that contains the latest features in exchange for a shorter support period. My experience has been with the latter.

    However, while it’s clearly still Ubuntu under the hood, AnduinOS also packs what you might consider some improvements over Canonical’s distribution. While Ubuntu has been pushing its own Snap packages for software — to the dismay of much of the Linux community — AnduinOS removes the focus from that and adopts the more widely adopted Flatpak, giving you access to tons of Linux apps with easy package management. Of course, as with any Linux distribution, you can still play around and set up different package managers, but Flatpak likely offers the most reliable and consistent experience already.

    Related

    5 reasons I prefer this distro over Ubuntu as a Windows-to-Linux convert

    As a Windows convert, I’ve tried different Linux distros but prefer Zorin over Ubuntu.

    It feels just like Windows

    It’s almost uncanny (in a good way)

    As we’ve already established, AnduinOS is based on Ubuntu, which means it has a lot of the same Ubuntu things, such as the Settings and, of course, the GNOME desktop environment. Now, I knew GNOME was flexible thanks to its extensions, but AnduinOS is an incredible showcase of what can be done with this desktop environment.

    When you boot into the AnduinOS desktop, it might as well just be Windows 11. The desktop background is made to mimic the color scheme and general vibe of Windows 11’s, and it serves that purpose quite well, but it’s everything else that’s truly impressive. Through the use of numerous GNOME extensions, AnduinOS manages to create a taskbar that looks extremely similar to that of Windows 11, merging the “dock” and the status bar Ubuntu is known for into one single UI element, just as you’ve come to expect. Everything is where you’d expect it to be, from the Start menu and open apps, to the weather widget and system tray icons. It’s as perfect a copycat as you can reasonably ask for on Linux, and I love it. It’s not necessarily that I prefer the taskbar to what Ubuntu normally offers, but I love the fact that this is even possible while using the same desktop environment.

    That continues in the Start menu, too, which is also made to look a lot like that of Windows 11, albeit it’s smoother and more responsive, as tends to be the case with a lot of Linux software. There’s a bit more to dive into there, but I want to save that for later.

    It goes down to minute details like the taskbar blurring the desktop background, making desktop icons behave more like windows, adding a tiling assistant that works similarly to Snap Assist on Windows 11, and even a clipboard history. All of this is achieved through GNOME extensions, and unlike Ubuntu, there’s actually an extension manager built right in and easily accessible from the get-go. I would still recommend installing a different extension manager to make it easier to add more customizations, but this is great all the same.

    Related

    I tried Linux Mint as a lifelong Windows user, and the customization blew me away

    Linux Mint is on a whole different level

    Windows style, Linux customization

    We have some actual flexibility here

    What’s truly great about AnduinOS is how it brings together the familiarity of Windows with the incredible customization options of Ubuntu (or Linux in general). Yes, the experience is going to feel just like home when you first boot it up, but just like a home, it’s not truly yours until you make it so, and AnduinOS makes that so much easier than Windows does.

    For starters, the taskbar, which is powered by an extension called Dash to Panel. Simply right-click it and you can head into the Dash to Panel settings to change all kinds of settings. You can autohide the taskbar, adjust the height,, change the width to make it more like a floating dock, move all the taskbar elements to your preferred side of the screen, and much more. You can change things like colors, icon sizes and styles, padding, and much more so the taskbar looks just how you want it. Of course, you can also move it to any edge of the screen, and do a wide range of other changes.

    Then there’s the Start menu (here called Arc menu), which has a very similar story. The default design is very similar to that of Windows 11, but you have a lot of customization options that keep the familiarity while making it something completely different — and better. There are tons of layouts to choose from, with my personal favorite being simply called Windows, which reminds me more of the Windows 10 style, with a list of all apps on the left, and some pinned apps on the right. But you have dozens more options, and then all of those choices can be tweaked with extra settings to change the height of the menu, as well as the width of each panel (depending on the layout you chose). You can change the pinned apps and what folders are shown in the menu, and so much more. The customization options go far beyond anything offered in Windows, even with third-party apps.

    Related

    4 Linux distros you should use instead of upgrading to Windows 11

    Get rid of your Windows bad habit with one of these Linux distros.

    Extensions make it even better

    It’s still GNOME, after all

    One last thing I think is worth highlighting is that AnduinOS can still be customized even further thanks to GNOME extensions. As I mentioned above, I’d recommend installing the Extension Manager to make it easier to find new extensions, and there are a few I installed myself. For one thing, I replaced the included Clipboard Indicator extension with Clipboard History, which is a more modern and smoother option for keeping a clipboard history. Then, I also added Emoji Copy, another extension that restores a feature I love in Windows, that being the emoji panel.

    Finally, I added Tiling Shell, an extension that makes it much easier to manage my open windows, behaving similarly to FancyZones on Windows. I actually use this instead of the built-in Tiling Assistant if I’m on my desktop setup, since it’s way better for my productivity.

    Of course, that’s just the tip of the iceberg. There’s a huge library of extensions that can enhance your AnduinOS experience in different ways depending on your needs.

    Related

    7 GNOME extensions I could never switch to Windows and live without

    These GNOME extensions can completely change the way you use Linux.

    AnduinOS may just be the perfect distro for Windows converts

    There are many great Linux distros worth considering if you want to move over from Windows, but I have to be honest, AnduinOS may just be the one for me. It’s incredibly impressive how close it gets to looking like Windows 11, but the best part is how you can dive deep into the settings and realize that it’s actually so much better, with tons of customization options that let you make your PC truly your own. It’s not only a great transition OS, but it’s also a fantastic introduction to the world of Linux and its customization options.

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  • Prince Harry and King Charles Take First Step Toward Royal Reunion, All We Know About Senior Aides’ Meeting

    Prince Harry and King Charles Take First Step Toward Royal Reunion, All We Know About Senior Aides’ Meeting

    In the strongest hint yet that Prince Harry and King Charles could be ready to mend their strained relationship, senior aides from both sides quietly met in London last week. The meeting, seen as an early step towards healing the royal rift, was first reported by The Daily Mail on Sunday, July 13.

    First meeting in years between senior aides

    On Wednesday, July 9, Meredith Maines, Prince Harry’s chief of staff and communications director, flew in from Montecito to hold talks with Tobyn Andreae, King Charles’ communications secretary. Liam Maguire, who handles UK press for Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, was also present at the private gathering.

    The talks were held at the Royal Over-Seas League, a private members’ club near Clarence House. A source told The Daily Mail there was “no formal agenda” but both sides wanted to open “a channel of communication for the first time in years.”

    The source described the meeting as only “the first step towards reconciliation between Harry and his father, but at least it is a step in the right direction.” The source added, “Everyone just wants to move on and move forward now. It was finally the right time for the two sides to talk.”

    Routine visit or quiet peace talks?

    According to PEOPLE, Meredith Maines’ visit was officially part of her regular duties as Chief Communications Officer for the Duke and Duchess of Sussex. Maines was in London to meet the UK-based communications team, media contacts and senior figures connected to Harry’s patronages.

    Still, the quiet meeting with King Charles’ top aide marks a clear sign that both sides may be ready to ease tensions that have lasted for years.

    The rift within the royal family became public in 2020 when Prince Harry and Meghan Markle stepped back from their roles as senior working royals. The distance grew deeper after bombshell interviews, their Netflix docuseries and Harry’s bestselling memoir, Spare.

    Harry has often spoken about how the couple was treated, sharing his struggles with press intrusion, family disputes and the impact on their mental health. Just weeks before the London meeting, Prince Harry told the BBC, “I would love reconciliation with my family. There’s no point in continuing to fight anymore.”

    While it may take time to fully repair ties, this quiet London summit is the strongest sign yet that the Duke of Sussex and King Charles could be moving closer to finding common ground.

    ALSO READ: Prince Harry to Potentially Extend Invictus Games Invite to Royal Family Members: Is Reunion on Cards?

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  • Wet Leg reflect on whirlwind success and crafting new album ‘Moisturizer’ – Music News

    Wet Leg reflect on whirlwind success and crafting new album ‘Moisturizer’ – Music News

    UK indie rockers Wet Leg recently sat down with Matt Wilkinson on Apple Music 1 to discuss their forthcoming album, Moisturizer, offering insights into their rapid ascent and creative process. Band members Rhian and Joshua candidly reflected on the unexpected triumph of their debut album and the relentless touring that saw them play over 300 gigs.

    Rhian described the experience of their initial success as a whirlwind, stating, “everything is just happening and you’re just taking it day by day. You don’t really have that much time for reflection.” She noted that even after extensive touring, the focus immediately shifted to new material: “When we stopped touring we weren’t like, ‘Okay, let’s take a minute about all those gigs that we played.’ We were like, ‘Okay, what are we going to play when we go on tour again? Let’s make some tunes.’”

    Joshua detailed the writing process for Moisturizer, which took place in a “kid’s playroom” in Southwold. He recounted a spontaneous approach to songwriting, with band members joining each other at various hours. “We did two weeks on, two weeks off, two weeks on. After that, we had too many songs,” Joshua explained, noting they initially had 16 or 17 tracks for the new record.

    The duo also touched upon their experience supporting Harry Styles on tour. Rhian shared her initial reservations about how their sound would be received by his fanbase, but ultimately found the stadium shows “really cosy” due to the open nature of Styles’s fans. Joshua and Rhian observed a contemporary shift in music consumption, where listeners embrace diverse genres without adhering to rigid subculture affiliations.

    Looking ahead, both members expressed a desire to return to touring. Joshua admitted that while a break after their extensive debut tour felt good initially, he soon longed to “get back on the bus.” Rhian concurred, balancing her love for home with her enjoyment of live performances. Rhian also revealed that Moisturizer features love songs, a departure from her earlier songwriting, admitting she was “really, really hesitant” to tackle the theme.

    The full interview with Wet Leg is available on demand with an Apple Music subscription via The Matt Wilkinson Show on Apple Music 1.

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  • Benny Blanco’s surprising confession about Selena Gomez shocks fans

    Benny Blanco’s surprising confession about Selena Gomez shocks fans



    Benny Blanco’s surprising confession about Selena Gomez shocks fans

    Benny Blanco has made a surprising admission about his relationship with Selena Gomez. 

    In a recent episode of the Therapuss With Jake Shane podcast, Blanco revealed that he had never watched the Disney channel sitcom Wizards of Waverly Place, in which Gomez starred as Alex Russo, until after he began dating her.

    The renowned record producer and songwriter, 37, confessed that he was unaware of the show’s details, saying, “I knew she was, like, a kid star, but I had never seen any of it.” He only knew the Wizards of Waverly Place theme song because Billie Eilish used it in her hit song Bad Guy.

    Initially, Gomez was hesitant to watch the show with Blanco, but she later agreed to show him “a few good scenes”. After watching these scenes, Blanco finally understood why Gomez had a strong connection to the show, quipping, “I get it.”

    It’s worth noting that Gomez reprised her role as Alex Russo in the recent reboot Wizards Beyond Waverly Place, and is expected to return for the second season. 

    Blanco’s confession highlights the differences in their backgrounds and how their relationship has helped him understand her experiences and passions.

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  • Planet discovered that causes plasma explosions on its parent star

    Planet discovered that causes plasma explosions on its parent star

    Astronomers discovered a strange exoplanet, HIP 67522 b, that orbiting a star roughly 417 light‑years away. Because the planet’s orbit is just seven days long, the gravitational forces from this orbital path tug at the star until plasma erupts from the surface.

    Researchers now say those eruptions pump extra heat into the planet’s bloated atmosphere, setting it on a course toward a dramatic weight‑loss plan.


    Dr. Ekaterina Ilin of ASTRON, Dr. Katja Poppenhäger of the Leibniz‑Institut für Astrophysik Potsdam, and Dr. Harish Vedantham of ASTRON unraveled this cosmic feedback loop by scouring five years of space‑telescope data.

    HIP 67522 b causes star eruptions

    Most suns spew occasional flare explosions when tangled magnetic fields snap, yet HIP 67522 lights up more often near the moment its innermost exoplanet crosses the stellar disk.

    That timing pins the blame on the planet’s motion rather than on random stellar moods. The research team tracked this smoking gun with NASA’s Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS).

    HIP 67522 b belongs to the family of hot Jupiter gas giants that hug their suns far tighter than Mercury does ours, soaking up fierce radiation.

    Because the planet sits inside the star’s sprawling magnetic field, its own motion drags field lines like stretched rubber bands.

    When these magnetic field lines become twisted and then released, energy is blasted back toward both bodies.

    “ We’ve found the first clear evidence of flaring star‑planet interaction, where a planet triggers energetic eruptions on its host star, ” said Dr. Ilin.

    She noted that the flare‑boosting partnership has persisted for at least three years, long enough to measure its toll.

    A teenager among planets

    Astronomers estimate that the HIP 67522 system is only 17 million years old, a mere adolescent by cosmic standards.

    Youth matters because young stars spin fast, drive stronger magnetism, and shower nearby worlds with charged particles.

    HIP 67522 b inflates to roughly Jupiter’s width even though its mass is lower, suggesting that starlight and particle storms have puffed up its skies.

    James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) observations already hint at an extended shroud of hydrogen escaping the planet, which matches models of photoevaporation.

    “ The planet is essentially subjecting itself to an intense bombardment of radiation and particles from these induced flares,” stated Dr. Vedantham.

    He suspects that self‑inflicted space weather speeds up atmospheric escape, a process that can strip thousands of tons of gas from a planet each second.

    HIP 67522 b is rapidly shrinking

    Computer simulations of star‑planet electromagnetic coupling predict that the extra flare energy pours into the planet’s upper layers, raising temperatures by hundreds of degrees Fahrenheit.

    Heat causes the air to swell, increasing the cross‑section that stellar ultraviolet rays can hit, and leading to a vicious cycle that accelerates mass loss.

    If the current pace holds, HIP 67522 b could shed enough hydrogen and helium to shrink into a mini‑Neptune within 100 million years.

    It may even become a bare, rocky core after that. Such transformations explain why many mature planetary systems harbor small sub‑Neptunes while very close giant planets are rarer.

    Similar run‑away erosion may have sculpted planets like CoRoT‑7 b, where today only a scorched super‑Earth remains. Watching HIP 67522 b in real time offers a front‑row seat to the earlier stages of that evolution.

    Telltale signals from space telescopes

    TESS supplied continuous light curves that revealed minute brightness bumps whenever a flare lit up the surface. European Space Agency’s CHEOPS spacecraft refined the planet’s transit clock, confirming the synergy between orbit and explosion.

    Out of fifteen reliable flares tagged by the team, eleven clustered near the transit phase, a pattern with less than a 1 in 10,000 chance of happening by luck.

    An accompanying radio survey with the Australian Telescope Compact Array saw the star crackle but missed any planet‑powered radio bursts, likely because such flashes were too faint to detect.

    Magnetohydrodynamic models predict that radio signatures scale with planetary magnetic strength, and a bloated gas giant may not host the punchy field required.

    Even so, the optical confirmation alone cements HIP 67522 as the strongest laboratory yet for star‑planet interaction.

    Many more systems like HIP 67522

    Thousands of planets race around their host stars in orbits shorter than ten days, and many of those stars are quieter and older than HIP 67522.

    If a youthful planet can already damage itself through magnetic mischief, older cousins might once have looked very different.

    Flaring star‑planet pairs also complicate the hunt for life. Energetic particles break apart molecules, including water and methane, which are key ingredients that telescopes search for when sizing up habitability.

    Astronomers now plan to aim the Hubble Space Telescope’s ultraviolet spectrograph at HIP 67522 b during future transits, hoping to catch escaping gas in the act.

    Ground arrays such as the upcoming Square Kilometre Array could chase elusive radio sparks, testing the limits of planetary dynamos.

    More reliable data will come as TESS continues its mission and CHEOPS transitions to Europe’s PLATO later this decade.

    By comparing planets of various ages and orbits around their stars, scientists expect to map how magnetic violence writes, and erases, planetary atmospheres.

    This drama that is unfolding in the Centaurus constellation shows that the relationship between a planet and its star is anything but one-sided.

    The study is published in Nature.

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  • Nvidia driver update adds Smooth Motion Frames to RTX 40 GPUs – OC3D

    1. Nvidia driver update adds Smooth Motion Frames to RTX 40 GPUs  OC3D
    2. NVIDIA 590.26 preview drivers introduce Smooth Motion frame generation for GeForce RTX 40 Series  VideoCardz.com
    3. NVIDIA Introduces “Smooth Motion” Frame Generation for RTX 40 Series GPUs in Latest Preview Driver, Proven to Double In-Game FPS  Wccftech

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  • Amazon (AMZN)’s AI Push Could Fuel AWS Growth—And Wall Street Is Finally Noticing

    Amazon (AMZN)’s AI Push Could Fuel AWS Growth—And Wall Street Is Finally Noticing

    Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) is one of the Trending AI Stocks on Wall Street. On July 10, Citizens JMP analyst Andrew Boone raised the price target on the stock to $285.00 (from $250.00) while maintaining a “Market Outperform” rating.

    Firm analysts are of the view that Amazon’s AWS opportunity remains underappreciated.

    “With reach across 100M + U.S. households, supported by a best-in-class logistics network, and ever-widening selection, we believe Amazon’s ability to offer ever faster delivery can continue to unlock demand for additional retail categories and retail growth.

    Amazon (AMZN)’s AI Push Could Fuel AWS Growth—And Wall Street Is Finally Noticing

    “This retail network fuels Amazon’s consumer data which is a key driver of its advertising business that we believe can continue to take share given Amazon’s growing CTV business. Last, and maybe most important, we believe AI is a key driver of digital transformation and that AI can help drive AWS growth to accelerate, as the AWS opportunity remains underappreciated, in our view.”

    Amazon.com Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) is an American technology company offering e-commerce, cloud computing, and other services, including digital streaming and artificial intelligence solutions.

    While we acknowledge the potential of AMZN as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you’re looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock.

    READ NEXT: 10 Trending AI Stocks on News and Ratings and 12 AI Stocks Making Waves on Wall Street.

    Disclosure: None.

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  • Tim Merlier: “It’s nice to battle with Milan”

    Tim Merlier: “It’s nice to battle with Milan”

    “It was quite okay in the bunch today but with the echelons attempts in the finale, I didn’t get any drink in the last 60 kilometres, so I was a bit overheated. Apart from that, it was quite okay today although it was nervous.

    Five minutes and a half was a lot and the pace was quite high. So we participated in the chase. Even Remco [Evenepoel] chipped in. He was really strong. Normally, I help him. But in situations like that, he doesn’t feel the legs and he can move up easily. We tried to protect each other as much as possible in the echelons but I guess he helped me more today than the other way around! He was really disappointed yesterday after my puncture. There’s a great atmosphere in the team and it pays off.

    In the last two kilometres, I found Bert [Van Lerberghe] again, and I’m really confident when I’m on his wheel. I know what he’s gonna do and it makes me relax. I got boxed in a bit but then I managed to go all in and I was able to do my sprint like I wanted to and I’m happy to win my second stage here.

    It’s the second time I manage to beat Milan but he’s a really strong sprinter. It’s just nice we can show a nice battle between the two of us.”

    13/07/2025 – Tour de France 2025 – Étape 9 – Chinon / Châteauroux (174,1 km) – Tim MERLIER (SOUDAL QUICK-STEP) © A.S.O./Charly Lopez


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