Nintendo raises console prices in the US: Nintendo quietly increased the price of its original Switch console from $299.99 to $339.99 – the first such hike since the Switch’s 2017 launch theverge.com. The Switch OLED and Switch Lite models jumped by $50 and $30 respectively theverge.com. Nintendo said the move was “based on market conditions,” coming just after similar price raises in Canada and a new wave of U.S. import tariffs theverge.com. In fact, President Donald Trump signed an executive order days earlier imposing new “reciprocal” tariffs – including a 20% levy on electronics from Vietnam, where Nintendo produces most Switch units theverge.com. The tariff squeeze is also hitting other gadgets: Fujifilm recently jacked up camera prices by hundreds of dollars, with Canon signaling it may follow theverge.com. Analysts warn these protectionist policies could continue to drive up consumer tech prices through the fall theverge.com.
Major telecom acquisition on deck: Connecticut-based Amphenol is in advanced talks to acquire CommScope’s broadband connectivity and cable division in a deal reportedly worth about $10 billion (including debt) telecom.economictimes.indiatimes.com. The Wall Street Journal broke word of the negotiations on Sunday, suggesting the transaction could be finalized as soon as Monday barring any last-minute snags telecom.economictimes.indiatimes.com. The CommScope unit – its largest by sales and income – makes infrastructure for broadband and cellular networks telecom.economictimes.indiatimes.com. This would mark Amphenol’s second big bite of CommScope: last year it bought CommScope’s outdoor wireless and antenna businesses for $2.1 billion telecom.economictimes.indiatimes.com. Industry watchers say the move reflects booming demand for network gear as carriers expand fiber and 5G, and could position Amphenol as a dominant supplier in the telecom infrastructure space. (Neither company has publicly confirmed the report yet, and Reuters notes both declined comment so far telecom.economictimes.indiatimes.com.)
China Mobile inches toward HKBN takeover: China Mobile, the world’s largest wireless carrier, announced it has acquired an additional 14.4% stake in Hong Kong broadband operator HKBN for HK$1.08 billion (≈$138 million) reuters.com. The purchase nearly doubles China Mobile’s total holding to about 30% of HKBN reuters.com. China Mobile’s Hong Kong unit bought 213.6 million HKBN shares from a private investor group, which virtually exits its position (down from 15.5% to just 1%) reuters.com. Notably, China Mobile had first expressed interest in acquiring HKBN two years ago reuters.com. While this deal stops short of a full takeover, it tightens China Mobile’s grip on one of Hong Kong’s largest telecom operators. Analysts say it could be a strategic step toward eventually folding HKBN into China Mobile’s empire – aligning with Beijing’s push to consolidate tech assets. For now, HKBN continues to operate independently, and there’s no official word on further acquisition plans.
Ransomware hits enterprise VPNs: Cybersecurity researchers are warning of an alarming new attack vector targeting corporate VPN appliances. According to Arctic Wolf Labs, the Akira ransomware gang is breaching organizations via SonicWall SSL VPN devices – even those fully patched with multi-factor authentication – suggesting a zero-day vulnerability in the VPN software securityaffairs.com securityaffairs.com. Multiple intrusions in late July showed threat actors accessing SonicWall VPNs and swiftly deploying ransomware. “Available evidence points to the existence of a zero-day vulnerability,” the Arctic Wolf report noted, as some victims were compromised despite strong passwords and TOTP-based 2FA securityaffairs.com. In response, researchers advise companies to disable SonicWall VPN services until a patch is available securityaffairs.com. SonicWall says it’s investigating and urged users to enable all security services and rigorously restrict VPN access. Expert take: “This looks serious – a VPN exploit that bypasses authentication is basically an open door for ransomware,” commented an analyst at Krebs Stamos Group, adding that firms using SonicWall must be on high alert until the flaw is fixed. (So far, there’s no evidence of data theft, but the pace of the attacks has surged since mid-July securityaffairs.com.)
Filling the silicon skills gap: Facing a looming talent shortage in its semiconductor industry, Taiwan is rolling out innovative programs to groom the next generation of chip engineers reuters.com reuters.com. This week, Reuters highlighted a summer “Chip Camp” organized by U.S. design firm Synopsys in Hsinchu, where teens from eight countries donned bunny suits to tour cutting-edge chip fabs reuters.com. It’s part of a broader push as Taiwan confronts a fast-declining birthrate and surging global demand for chips. “Growth in Taiwan’s semiconductor industry has been quite rapid, faster than what our schools can produce in terms of engineering talent each year,” said Leuh Fang, chairman of Vanguard International Semiconductor reuters.com. To attract overseas students, top universities like NTU have launched English-language semiconductor degrees, and TSMC is even backing exchange programs to train German engineers in Taipei reuters.com. Initiatives are targeting kids as young as 10 with chip science video games and interactive lessons reuters.com. Synopsys Taiwan chairman Robert Li stressed the urgency: “There is an urgent need to strengthen STEM education from an early age… we must act here first” given the demographic headwinds reuters.com. These efforts, officials hope, will nurture the “future workforce” to keep Taiwan’s chip powerhouse humming reuters.com.
Space tourism keeps soaring: Blue Origin successfully completed a suborbital launch from its West Texas site, sending a private crew of six passengers past the edge of space early Monday space.com. The mission (New Shepard NS-34) lifted off at 7:30 a.m. ET and marked Blue Origin’s sixth crewed flight this year – and 14th overall since inaugurating commercial service space.com. The identities of this flight’s space tourists haven’t been widely publicized, but past New Shepard manifests have included everyone from high-paying customers to contest winners. After a 10-minute journey that gave the civilian crew a few minutes of weightlessness 100 km above Earth, the booster and capsule landed safely back in the desert. Blue Origin’s cadence of launches is accelerating, highlighting the growing demand for space tourism. Industry experts note that with Virgin Galactic also flying customers and SpaceX planning private orbital trips, commercial space travel is moving from novelty toward mainstream. (Tickets for Blue Origin flights have been estimated in the $1–2 million range, though exact pricing remains secret.) The company says it aims to increase launch frequency further in 2026 to meet its extensive waitlist.