Tuesday morning begins with six explosive stories from space, cybersecurity, crypto, and artificial intelligence. NASA's Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope prepares for August 30 launch, OpenAI introduces GPT-5.5-Cyber model for vulnerability hunting, European researchers discover unpatchable usbliter8 flaw in Apple's A12/A13 chips, Franklin Templeton enters crypto with 250 Digital acquisition, Alibaba reaches second place in AI video models with HappyHorse 1.1, and Sakana AI proves bigger isn't always better with Fugu system.
Tuesday morning arrives with a steaming cup of coffee and six explosive stories reshaping the tech landscape. As the sun rises over Florida, NASA's space telescope prepares for its orbital journey. Meanwhile,
OpenAI's security engineers have armed themselves with a new weapon for hunting vulnerabilities, European researchers have opened a door to jailbreakers that can never be closed again, and Wall Street
titans are stepping into the crypto arena with both feet. But that's just the opening act. In Asia, Alibaba stunned everyone by unveiling the HappyHorse 1.1 video model and claiming the second spot globally,
precisely when American and Chinese rivals are either stalled or wrestling with copyright nightmares. And in Tokyo, Japanese startup Sakana AI proved that bigger isn't always better with its revolutionary
architecture. [IMAGE_PLACEHOLDER_1] Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope preparing for launch NASA's Nancy Grace Roman Telescope on the Verge of Space Journey On Saturday, June 22, 2026, NASA's Nancy Grace
Roman Space Telescope arrived at Kennedy Space Center in Florida after years of development and testing. This event marks a milestone in NASA's scientific program, as this telescope is set to join the
new generation of space telescopes including Hubble, Webb, Spitzer, and Chandra. Launch is scheduled for August 30, 2026, meaning just 68 days until one of the year's most significant space events. SpaceX's
giant Falcon Heavy rocket will handle the launch responsibilities. With a field of view 100 times larger than Hubble, Roman is designed to discover exoplanets, investigate dark matter and dark energy,
Read Full Article