How GPS Actually Works, from Space to Your Phone
The map in your pocket depends on a constellation of satellites, atomic clocks and a surprising dose of Einstein's physics. The way…
Technology Editor · PQR News
technology, AI, consumer tech, cybersecurity, and internet policy
Samuel Reyes is the Technology Editor at PQR News, overseeing coverage of artificial intelligence, consumer technology, cybersecurity, and the policy debates that shape how technology is built and governed. His desk is built around a simple aim: to explain how the systems people rely on every day actually work, and what the choices behind them mean for ordinary users.
Reyes treats technology reporting as a translation problem. The field is thick with jargon and marketing language, and he sees his job as cutting through both. Whether the subject is how encryption keeps a message private, what a machine-learning model is really doing, or how a data breach unfolds, he pushes his writers to explain the mechanism clearly enough that a non-technical reader comes away genuinely understanding it — not merely reassured that someone else does.
He is deliberately even-handed about technology's promise and its costs. He resists both breathless hype and reflexive alarm, asking his desk to describe what a tool can and cannot do, who benefits, and what the real trade-offs are. On contested questions of internet policy — privacy, platform regulation, the governance of AI — he wants the genuine positions laid out fairly, so readers can weigh them, rather than a single verdict handed down from the newsroom.
Accuracy on his desk means resisting the easy exaggerations the industry invites. He is firm that capabilities should be described as they actually are, that figures must be genuinely established rather than invented, and that claims about how a technology works should be true and verifiable. He is careful with security topics in particular, where imprecision can mislead people about real risks. Every piece closes with real, checkable sources.
Reyes favours evergreen explainers over the churn of product launches and news cycles, building durable references that stay useful as specific gadgets and versions come and go. He is drawn to the questions a thoughtful reader keeps returning to — how something works, why it matters, what to make of it — rather than to the momentary spectacle of the latest release. His guidance to writers is practical and steady: answer one clear question, define your terms, ground every claim in something real, and never let cleverness get in the way of clarity.
4 articles · editorial@pqrnews.com
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