Happy New Year from Bloombergâs Global Technology team. Thereâs much to be excited about this year. But first...Todayâs must-reads:⢠Aldiâs
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Happy New Year from Bloombergâs Global Technology team. Thereâs much to be excited about this year. But first... Todayâs must-reads: ⢠Aldiâs UK shops faced a [rush](of customers looking for an energy drink promoted by YouTube stars Logan Paul and KSI
⢠Huawei says itâs [overcome]( US restrictions and âbusiness as usualâ is back
⢠Tim Wu, who [helped shape]( President Joe Bidenâs antitrust agenda, will leave the White House Jan. 4 Cheers Weâre kicking off another year with a look ahead to the technology we canât wait to get our hands (and brains) on in 2023. EV charging infrastructure During a recent trip to visit family in Texas, I rented an electric car for the first time (a Fiat, not a Tesla). I quickly discovered a big problem: There [arenât enough charging stations](. One listed on a map wasnât there; another I found didn't work. In the US, EV charging is one of many renewable energy projects set to get a big funding boost next year from the [federal government]( and states like [California](. Ideally, that should bring far more reliable stations and comfort those of us looking to ditch gasoline. â[Mark Bergen](mailto:mbergen10@bloomberg.net) Nuclear fusion Can there be any answer here other than [nuclear fusion](? Even on the off-chance that scientists havenât figured everything out by the summer, the action is going to be in energy, from [weird battery technologies]( to the debate over how to use the kind of nuclear power plants that already exist. In the climate change era, this is also the place where tech breakthroughs can enable really massive societal changes. These next few [cold months in Europe]( are going to be just another reminder of the stakes. â[Joshua Brustein](mailto:jbrustein@bloomberg.net) Diablo IV After 10 yearsâ wait, the latest iteration of Activision Blizzard Inc.âs dark and brooding action role-playing series Diablo is my most anticipated game of 2023. I absolutely canât wait to visit Diablo IVâs horror-filled landscape and dungeon-dive with a party of friends. â[Cecilia DâAnastasio](mailto:cdanastasio@bloomberg.net) Cheaper and plentiful gadgets Iâm looking forward to a new flat screen TV, a faster router, new high-definition monitors, more memory for my computers, more memory cards for my camera â all at much more reasonable prices and available when I want to buy. How? The chip industry has lurched from shortages into one of its periodic gluts. Great news for consumers, especially after the last two years or so. â[Ian King](mailto:ianking@bloomberg.net) Brain computers Brain-computer interfaces have been around for years, but 2023 should bring a critical mass of breakthroughs. [Elon Muskâs Neuralink Corp.]( and a rival called [Paradromics could win approval]( for a clinical trial of its device in humans. Synchron already has a [small human trial]( up and running. So does Inner Cosmos, which plans to [share some early data]( by yearâs end. Neuroscientists hope BCIs can help treat a swath of disorders, ranging from paralysis to depression. Go, brain chips and human cyborgs. â[Sarah McBride](mailto:smcbride@bloomberg.net) Nintendo Power-Up Bands My kids are completely obsessed with Super Mario right now. We will obviously see the movie, and weâre planning a trip to Super Nintendo World in Hollywood after it opens this year. Theyâre stoked to get Power-Up Bands, which communicate wirelessly with creatures and coin blocks around the park. Itâs a pricey gadget for something weâll only use for a day, but that comes with the territory of theme parks, I guess. Letâs-a go! â[Mark Milian](mailto:mmilian@bloomberg.net) Climate tech breakthroughs United Nations climate talks in Egypt failed to produce stronger commitments to curb the use of fossil fuels, and that was depressing. But even in this tough financial environment, thereâs still cash ready to be put to work in climate innovation. Iâm looking forward to seeing tech like batteries, hydrogen and carbon capture, utilization and storage get the support needed to develop and scale. â[Jennifer Ryan](mailto:jryan13@bloomberg.net) Appleâs long-awaited headset Apple Inc. is hard at work on a [headset that blends augmented and virtual reality](, and weâre expecting to finally catch a glimpse of it in 2023. The device has been in the works for years â one of Appleâs legendary ânext big thingsâ â and should vault the company into head-to-head competition with Meta Platforms Inc. But the headset is just a stopgap product on the road to Appleâs true goal: creating a pair of lightweight AR glasses that could eventually replace your phone. â[Nick Turner](mailto:nturner7@bloomberg.net) Better e-bikes I love biking, but I am also A) lazy and B) afraid of death. Wider e-bike adoption promises to ameliorate both problems: electric assistance for hills and [more cyclists]( to support safer bike lane construction. E-bike sales surpassed $760 million last year, up 15% from 2021, according to NPD Group. And companies like VanMoof are slated to debut sleek, new models. E-bikes will offer a greener, funner way to travel in 2023 â as long as they donât [catch fire](. â[Anne VanderMey](mailto:avandermey@bloomberg.net)
The big story The FTX debacle prompted Matt Levine to write [a postscript]( to âThe Crypto Story,â his takeover of Bloomberg Businessweek that ran about two weeks before Sam Bankman-Friedâs exchange imploded. Its failure amounts to a double betrayal of confidence in crypto because FTX had billed itself as a stabilizing force. More regulation could be the salvation, but itâs not inevitable that anyone else will want crypto to work.  Get fully charged The tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 [lost](about a third of its value last year as technology stocks emerged as some of the most vulnerable to rising rates. Turns out 2022 was the worst in more than a decade for global equities and bonds, and the start of 2023 may prove to be a bumpy one. Twitterâs server outage shows the [consequences](of Elon Muskâs cost-cutting drive. Thatâs not all: reductions in cleaning crews and office space consolidation have left the smell of takeout food and body odor to linger. And some staff have resorted to bringing their own toilet paper to the office. The 10 best video games of the year [show]( that when blockbusters get postponed, independent studios can rise to the challenge. Follow Us More from Bloomberg Get Bloomberg Tech weeklies in your inbox: - [Power On]( for Apple scoops, consumer tech news and more, every Sunday
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