From Apple’s New CEO John Ternus to NASA Upgrades and More! | Tech News

Wind the week down with the latest major shifts in the world of tech and media. From Apple’s incoming new CEO, John Ternus, to upgrades at NASA and more, we have you covered. Check out the biggest news in the world of tech!

Dreame Tries to Become More Than a Vacuum Brand

Dreame is making a very American-style push for attention, using a pricey Super Bowl ad and a splashy San Francisco launch on April 27 to introduce itself as something much bigger than a robot vacuum maker. The company’s stated ambition is to build a “people-home-car” ecosystem, with a roadmap that stretches from cleaning gadgets and appliances to cars, chips, and even satellites. That kind of leap is either visionary or wildly chaotic, which is honestly part of the intrigue. For North American consumers, the bigger story is that a relatively unknown smart home brand wants to compete across multiple product categories at once, all under one AI-heavy app and ecosystem. It is a reminder that the smart home race is no longer just about thermostats and speakers. It is becoming a battle over who gets to own the entire connected lifestyle.  

 

Apple’s Coming Leadership Shift Signals a New Chapter Under John Ternus

Apple is heading into a major transition, with The Verge reporting that Tim Cook will step down in September and current hardware chief John Ternus will take over as CEO. The article frames the moment as more than a leadership handoff between Cook and Ternus. This transition moves Apple further away from the era when its executive bench was closely shaped by Steve Jobs himself. That makes this less about one executive leaving and more about Apple entering a genuinely new phase of identity. For the broader tech industry, it raises familiar questions about what the next decade under Ternus, at Apple, will bring. Will the Ternus era be defined by operational steadiness, bold hardware bets, or a deeper push into AI and services? Even for a company built on polish and control, this is the kind of transition that can subtly change everything. Silicon Valley loves to call every shift “historic,” but the approaching Ternus era actually feels like it might earn the word.  

 

Govee Gives Outdoor Lighting a Solar-Powered Twist

Govee has introduced its first solar-powered outdoor string lights, bringing a small but smart upgrade to the backyard tech category. The lights use a 6W solar panel with an integrated 4,800mAh battery, and the company says a single full day of sunlight can recharge them. There is also a USB-C fallback for gloomier weather, which is a nice acknowledgment that the sun does, in fact, ghost people. The product is available now for $99.99 and includes eight color-changing bulbs stretched across a 34-foot cable. On paper, it is a modest product launch, but it fits a larger trend of everyday home tech getting more self-sufficient and energy-conscious. Not every innovation has to roar; sometimes it just glows on the patio.  

 

Microsoft Pushes Copilot Deeper Into Office Workflows

Microsoft is rolling out Copilot Agent Mode inside Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, making it the default experience for Microsoft 365 Copilot and Premium subscribers. The company had previously described this style of interaction as “vibe working,” but the practical point is that Copilot is becoming more active inside documents instead of simply hovering nearby as a suggestion box. Microsoft says the upgraded system is better at following instructions and handling multi-step edits without losing the user’s intent. A sidebar will show each action in real time, while Excel can add formulas and tables directly, and PowerPoint can update existing decks while preserving company templates. That is a meaningful shift from AI as assistant to AI as operator. Office work may still be office work, but Microsoft is clearly trying to make it feel less like drudgery and more like delegation. 

 

Threads Wants Live Conversation, Not Just Live Posting

Meta is launching Live Chats on Threads as a way to let users join public group conversations. The new feature will let users stay connected during major cultural moments in real time. The feature is beginning in the NBAThreads Community during the Playoffs and Finals. Likewise, creators, media personalities, and league voices are helping drive the discussion. Meta says Live Chats will include profile rings to show when a conversation is live, along with real-time polls, countdowns, typing indicators, and live scores to keep chats synced with the action. More communities are expected to get the feature over the coming months, and Meta has already teased additions like co-hosting, play-by-play updates, lock screen widgets, and the ability to share chat messages to the main feed. The bigger idea here is obvious: social platforms are still chasing the electricity of live events. Threads wants to be where people watch the moment unfold and talk over it at the same time.  

 

NASA Is Upgrading the ISS With More Powerful Laptops

Astronauts aboard the International Space Station are getting new HP ZBook Fury G9 mobile workstations. The rades are part of a broader hardware refresh. NASA said the crew would first replace network servers and then activate the upgraded laptops. HP says the custom ISS configuration includes updated features like an Intel Core Ultra 9 vPro HX processor and among other additions. The machines also needed a NASA-specific power solution. The ISS primarily runs on DC power rather than the AC setup used in homes and offices on Earth. The station is now moving on from older HP ZBook Fury G2 systems. There is a little poetry in the fact that even space needs an IT refresh. With the ISS slated for de-orbit in 2030, these may be some of the station’s last major laptop upgrades.