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Tech Today & Cyrus: Tech Billionaires Clash Over AI Future & New AI Laptops Launch In India

Tech Today & Cyrus: Tech Billionaires Clash Over AI Future & New AI Laptops Launch In India

Business Today
Business Today
  • New Delhi,
  • May 19, 2026,
  • Updated May 19, 2026, 11:37 AM IST

In this episode of Tech Today, We take you deep inside week three of the explosive Elon Musk vs. Sam Altman legal war. What started in 2015 as a shared, idealistic non-profit mission to build open-source AI for humanity has devolved into a bitter trillion-dollar courtroom circus fueled by leaked texts, billionaire egos, and allegations of massive corporate betrayal. We break down both sides of the coin: Musk’s claim that he was the "useful idiot" bankrolling a charity that was effectively stolen to enrich billionaires, versus Altman’s defense that the sheer mathematics and multi-billion-dollar computing costs of building AGI made a for-profit pivot inevitable.

 

We review the bombshell courtroom testimonies from former CTO Mira Murati’s video exposing internal "chaos" to Greg Brockman’s jaw-dropping $30 billion personal stake, and look ahead to the three potential verdicts that could reshape the tech monopoly forever.

 

Plus, the AI hardware race hits Indian shores! We get a first look at HP’s complete 2026 AI ecosystem, separating actual utility from marketing hype. From premium laptops boasting up to 80 TOPS of local AI processing power to a highly portable desktop hidden entirely inside a keyboard, we unpack the specs, battery claims, and Indian pricing.
First Look: HP’s 2026 AI Lineup

 

OmniBook Series: We break down the flagship OmniBook Ultra (boasting up to 22.75 hours of battery life), the mainstream OmniBook X, and the student-friendly OmniBook 3 & 5.

 

OmniPad 12: HP's 2K detachable Android tablet aimed at hybrid flexibility, starting at ₹44,999.

 

EliteBoard G1a: A mind-bending Windows 11 desktop built entirely inside a portable keyboard, powered by AMD Ryzen AI.

 

Smarter Tech: A look at the HP Z Captis 3D material scanner for design professionals and new AI-powered printers that intelligently strip ads from webpages.

 

Should the most powerful AI technology on Earth belong to everyone as a public utility, or are private tech monopolies the only realistic path forward? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below! 

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