Threads 275 Million Users & Meta AI 500 Million; Microsoft-Win 10 Users $30 for Year Security Updates; Zoox Co-Founder—Tesla Self-Driving Tech Doesn’t Work; Dropbox Chops 20% of Staff

With the announcement of good earnings…with third quarter earnings up 19% and net income year over year up 35%, Meta also has announced some big increases in usage of its AI and of Threads. Engadget.com reports that Threads is now up to “almost 275 million” monthly users, according to CEO Mark Zuckerberg. “It’s been growing more than a million sign ups per day,” Zuckerberg said, adding that “engagement is growing too.” Meta AI has now passed the 500 million user mark, and Zuck says they are on track to become the most-used generative AI assistant in the world. Meta AI has only been out about a year, too. 

There is always major resistance when Microsoft finally gets serious about dropping support for an operating system in order to get users to move on to the latest one Redmond offers. According to engadget.com, Windows 10 will see support end on October 14, 2025. Now, Microsoft has thrown laggards a lifeline with an Extended Security Updates program for regular users. If you are one of those, you will be able to buy a one year extension for $30. ESU programs have been in place for a long time for commercial users, but this one is for personal users. Commercial users can buy up to 3 years of ESU support, which takes them to 2028…BUT the commercial licenses double in price every year until 2028. Defender Antivirus will get updates for Windows 10 until at least October 2028. Kicking or screaming or not, Microsoft is going to drag all Windows 10 users to Windows 11. 

In his robotaxi presentation, Elon Musk claimed that Tesla would be launching a robotaxi ride-hailing service in California next year. Now, Zoox co-founder and CTO Jesse Levinson has opined that Tesla won’t be launching anywhere next year. TechCrunch.com says Levinson was quoted as commenting that the “fundamental issue is they don’t have technology that works,” Levinson said Wednesday at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024.” His remarks came at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 yesterday. Levinson went on to say he was differentiating between a driver assistance system that drives most of the time, but requires human intervention “versus a system that’s so reliable and robust that you don’t need a person in it.” He continued, “Our perspective is you really do need significantly more hardware than Tesla is putting in their vehicles to build a robotaxi that is not just as safe, but as especially safer than a human,” he said. Levinson said he believes that Tesla full self driving is “about 100 times less safe than a human if you look at all the metrics that are publicly available.”

In a statement saying it had over invested and underperformed, Dropbox has chopped 20% of their global staff. Arstechnica.com reports that CEO Drew Houston wrote that Dropbox’s core file sync and sharing “business has matured, and we’ve been working to build our next phase of growth with products like Dash,” an “AI-powered universal search” product targeted to business customers. The company’s “current structure and investment levels” are “no longer sustainable.” With several cloud services offering easier large file sharing, it shouldn’t be a big surprise. Box had things to itself for a while, but competition makes for real challenges. 

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now. 


Boston Dynamics Atlas Robot Picks Parts Autonomously; Apple Bows New MacBook Pros with M4 Pro Chips; AI Now Writes 25% of Google’s Code; Reddit Shows First Ever Profit With 100 Million Daily Users

While Elon Musk showed off robots that had to mainly be operated by people behind the scenes, Boston Dynamics plows ahead with their electric version of the Atlas robot. Now, techcrunch.com reports that “The robot is able to detect and react to changes in the environment (e.g., moving fixtures) and action failures (e.g., failure to insert the cover, tripping, environment collision) using a combination of vision, force, and proprioceptive sensors.” This puts Boston’s robot out ahead by a ways form those of Figure, Apptronik, and Tesla. The machine was used to pick parts in an automotive setting. This is logical, since Boston is now owned by Hyundai. Hyundai has also done a deal with Toyota’s research wing, so they are all in on robotics. Large robot units have been used for decades by the auto industry. I can remember in the 1980’s, the CEO of Daimler-Benz (now just Daimler) saying that they used robots to save backs, not replace hands. Even Jelly Belly has robots (one of which tends to leak hydraulic fluid…one of the reasons Boston Dynamics switched Atlas from hydraulic to electric.) Boston claims that Atlas has been improved, and can move accurately and quickly cutting down on unneeded motions as it completes its tasks autonomously. 

Continuing with their week of announcements, Apple today rolled out new 14 and 16 inch MacBook Pro models with the M4 Pro and M4 Max chips. Cupertino also showed an entry level 14 inch MacBook Pro rocking the M4 chip. According to Macrumors.com, the new M4 Pro and Max laptops come with 24 gigs of Unified memory…up from 18 gigs of the prior models. They both have 3 Thunderbolt 5 ports, which has 3 times the bandwidth of the Thunderbolt 4. The M4 Pro has a 14 core CPU, and the Max a 16 core CPU. All 3 new models have an HDMI port…the Pro and Max machines can drive up to 3 monitors. Both have SDXC card slots and Mag Safe charging, as well as a headphone jack…just like my seemingly old M1 MacBook I wrote this on. They are available for preorder now, and will be available Friday, November 8th… starting at $1599.

Google is now using AI to write over a quarter of its new code. That’s what Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai says. PCmag.com notes that all that code has to be reviewed then accepted by engineers…but Google claims it allows engineers to do more and move faster. It is worth mentioning that using a generative AI model to write code isn’t exactly a new idea…an earlier form of it has bene going on for years. One knotty issue…using AI to write code could pose copyright issues or create security flaws if it’s trained on licensed or old code. And some companies using AI-crafted code have already reportedly experienced outages and cybersecurity problems as a result, primarily due to a lack of adequate human oversight. Alphabet’s stock price is up about 2% in the last day, and 36% in the past year, partly based on the promise of AI.

You may not use or be all that aware of Reddit, but a heck of a lot of people are. Reddit just turned its first ever profit, reporting $29.9 million on $348 million in revenue…that’s up 68% year over year. Reddit has been around for 20 years, and never made money, but is now up to nearly 100 million daily users the last few months…exceeding 100 million on a few days. Reddit just went public earlier this year. 

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now. 


Apple Intelligence is Live-Oh Yay; Google Working on an AI Agent for Chrome that Does Everything-Project Jarvis; Microsoft Accuses Google of Astroturfing them in Europe; Lucid Gravity Electric SUV Orders Open Next week

With iOS 18.1 and macOS Sequoia 15.1, as well as iPadOS 18.1, we now have some of the features of Apple Intelligence. After messing with it a bit yesterday afternoon, I am a bit underwhelmed so far, but they noted in the pop ups that it is not nearly complete yet. The one feature I tried out that actually did what was claimed was in editing an email. I wrote a verbose fake email to send to another of my accounts and asked AI to make it more concise. It did fine at that. I tried using it in Text Edit, which I use all the time, but got a not supposed message. Today, I see the little logo, so will have to try it later. The picture editing…like removing unwanted items, works ok, but Android’s is better. I will try to have more later as they activate more features. By the way, there is a wait list to get Apple Intelligence. I signed up…while I was downloading the update to an iPad, I was accepted…the wait was only about 15 minutes!

Google has a Project Jarvis, a hat tip to Tony Stark of Iron Man fame. Androidcentral.com reports that it is supposed to automate simple tasks in Chrome while you are browsing the web. A limited test of Jarvis may be out in December, in conjunction with Google’s rumored release of Gemini 2.0. The Jarvis AI bot apparently can respond to a user’s commands by taking screenshots of their screen. It supposedly does this in order to ‘interpret’ what a user is doing before taking action. For example, Jarvis might click a button for you or fill in text fields with the requisite information. So far, reports have it that Jarvis ‘operates relatively slowly.’ In other words, it is light years away right now from working like Tony Stark’s fictional one in the Marvel movies!

Microsoft has accused Google of funding a proxy campaign designed to discredit it in the eyes of regulatory authorities and policymakers in the European Union and beyond. Engadget.com says this came in a blog post from Microsoft’s Deputy General Counsel. Microsoft claims Google has gone to “great lengths to obfuscate its involvement, funding and control” of the Open Cloud Coalition, a group of “cloud service providers, industry leaders and stakeholders” that says it’s committed to advocating for a “fair, competitive, and open cloud services industry across the UK and EU.” Redmond claims that Google has hired a lobbying agency in Europe to create and fund the organization. The accusations come after Google had reportedly attempted to derail an antitrust settlement Microsoft had negotiated with the Cloud Infrastructure Services Providers in Europe (CISPE). In July, Bloomberg wrote that Google had offered the group €470 million to go forward with litigation against its rival, an overture CISPE ultimately rejected.

Lucid’s Air electric sedans are sure head turners, and are selling decently for a start up. Now Lucid has said they will start taking orders next week..November 7th specifically… for their flagship electric SUV, the Gravity. According to electrek.co, the base price will still be below the promised $80,000, but you won’t be able to get that lower priced model initially. The less pricy Touring model at $79,900 won’t be available until late 2025. The Grand Touring one, which you can order next week, will set you back $94,900. There will eventually be a high performance Sapphire model, but no date given for that one yet.

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.


Apple Bows New M4 iMac; Google Working on Tensor Chip for Pixel Watch; Meta Developing AI Search Engine; Police Shut Down Big Info Theft Operation

Last week, Apple teased an ‘exciting week of announcements,’ and they didn’t mess around…a new M4 iMac was unveiled this morning. 9to5mac.com reports that the freshened iMac not only runs the more powerful M4 chip, but it has new color choices, as well as a nano-texture display option. The base model has 16 gigs of ram, doubling the former model. It can have up to 4 Thunderbolt ports, and comes in new colors…new shades of green, yellow, orange, pink, purple, and blue…and of course, silver. With the M4 chip, and the 16 gigs of ram, the all-in-one Mac will have no problem running Apple Intelligence. The base model starts at $1299 with 16 gigs of unified memory. Preorders are open now, with availability starting Friday, November 8th.  

Google is working on a new custom Tensor chip for the Pixel Watch. The present Watch has been running on off-the-shelf chips from Samsung and Qualcomm. According to 9to5google.com, the Watch 2 and Watch 3 have both been running Snapdragon W5+ chipsets. This chipset from Qualcomm has dramatically improved battery life over the outdated Exynos chip that ran the original Pixel Watch. The Tensor powered Watches could come in 2026. 

Meta is reportedly working on an AI search engine to cut reliance on Google and Microsoft. Theinformation.com says that Meta is designing the search engine and web crawler to return conversational answers about current events to folks using its Meta AI chatbot. Meta currently supplies news, sports and stock info to users that is provided by Google Search and Microsoft’s Bing. Meta may be concerned that either Google or Microsoft may want to pull out of these arrangements, and hopes the AI search engine/chatbot will be able to take their place. 

A coalition of international law enforcement agencies have managed to disrupt two very prolific information thieves that have stolen data from thousands. Techcrunch.com reports that the Dutch National Police, the lead agency, gained full access to the servers used by the Redline and Meta info stealers. Infostealers are a kind of malware designed to extract sensitive information, such as passwords, credit card data, search histories, and the contents of cryptocurrency wallets, from an infected system. Redline has been widely used by crooks, while Meta is a relatively new info stealer (not to be confused with the company of the same name that owns Facebook, Instagram, Threads, and WhatsApp. 

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.


EU Whacks LinkedIn for Ad Tracking; Apple AI Editing Tools-Not As Good By Design; Cops Can Track to Abortion Clinics-No Warrants; Tesla Will Launch Cheaper EVs Next Year

While the US the last few years has been less aggressive with tech firms, the European Union has stepped in aggressively. Techcrunch.com reports that the EU has fined LinkedIn $356 million for tracking ads and privacy breaches. LinkedIn had claimed ‘consent,’ ‘legitimate interests,’ and ‘ contractual necessity,’ based on legal bases for processing peoples’ info…but the Irish Data Protection Commission…under the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation, wasn’t buying any of it. The complaint against LinkedIn originated in France in 2018. The EU has given them 90 days to bring their EU operations into compliance. LinkedIn said in a statement that while they believed they were in compliance all along, they will work to make sure they are under this new ruling by the deadline.

Apple Intelligence features are going to be out to a lot of folks imminently…although you have to sign up and go on a waitlist after the final version of iOS with the features drops next week. Apple has been getting some heat from users of the beta over their photo editing tools not being as good as Android’s. Now, according to bgr.com, Apple’s head of software, Craig Federighi, has said in an interview that this is by design. He keyed on the Clean Up tool. He noted that while many AI tools try to generate new parts of the photo, Apple has chosen not to. “People view photographic content as something they can rely on as indicative of reality,” Federighi said. “It’s important to us that we help purvey accurate information, not fantasy.” 

There is all kinds of software and hardware to track people in the world today. Here’s a scary one…it is a tool law enforcement agencies now have called Locate X. Mashable.com says the software, from data surveillance company Babel Street, has ben known since 2020. What’s new is that police agencies in states like Alabama…which has completely outlawed abortion… have been able to track women traveling out of state for abortions. One tracked a woman from her home to a big box retailer, then to church, and finally to an abortion clinic in Florida…where the software indicated she stayed for 2 hours, before returning to her Alabama residence. A word to the wise to any woman in  a state where the procedure is outlawed now…turn off your phone, or take a burner phone with you out of state. 

Yes, you have to take things Elon Musk promises with a grain of salt…or sometimes, an entire salt mine. With that disclaimer, I turn to engadget.com’s story that Tesla has said in its 3rd quarter disclosure report that it is making preparations for ‘more affordable models,’ ‘its lowest level ever’ at $35,100. Tesla goes on to say they will start production in the first half of 2025, and that “These vehicles will utilize aspects of the next generation platform as well as aspects of our current platforms and will be able to be produced on the same manufacturing lines as our current vehicle line-up.” Tesla did have a decent 3rd quarter, finally ending a 4 quarter streak of missed earnings targets.

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now. 


M4 Mac Launch Soon; Google Messages-New Spam Detection; Anthropic New AI Can Control Your PC; Blade Runner 2049 Producer Sues Musk

The latest from Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman points to Apple dropping its M4 Macs next week. Macrumors.com reports that it will likely be an online event like what Apple did with their ‘Scary Fast’ rollout last October 30th. Most Apple watchers are looking for a 14 inch entry-level MacBook Pro with M4 chip and one more Thunderbolt port than the present model. Also, 14 and 16 inch MacBook Pros with M4 Pro and Max chip options. A freshened iMac is expected in the mix, too. Most of these new units won’t be in customer hands until November…as is typical for an Apple introduction…generally it is a week or 2  before the devices actually ship.

More and more spam and phishing has moved from email to messaging. Now, Google Messages is bowing new features to fight through all this crud. According to androidpolice.com, the new spam detection should help combat dangerous links, there’s a privacy upgrade for international messages, sensitive image warnings, and contact verification, too. Any message that Google Messages thinks might be scammy will give you a warning or automatically move the message into the spam folder. Besides the spam filter, they will block messages or send them to spam if they are from unknown senders and contain links. Google tested this system out in India, Thailand, Malaysia, and Singapore, before rolling the feature out worldwide…which will happen over the next couple months. “Sensitive Content Warnings for Google Messages”  will blur potentially sensitive images before viewing, and there will also be a new warning message when such images are being shared or forwarded. Like Google’s other protections, these scans all happen on-device, which means your privacy is ensured.

In a somewhat unsettling bit of news, Anthropic’s new AI model reportedly can have some control over your PC. Techcrunch.com notes that this was teased last spring, and now the latest upgrade of Claude 3.5 Sonnet can understand and interact with any desktop app. By way of a new ‘Computer Use’ API, which is in open beta, the model can mimic keystrokes, button clicks, and mouse gestures…basically emulating a person sitting at a PC. This is not an entirely new concept…it has been done for decades to an extent….but Anthropic is taking it to a new level entirely. Anthropic is not calling this an ‘agent,’ like Microsoft, Salesforce, or OpenAI….instead dubbing it an ‘action-execution layer.’ 

Previously, Elon Musk had asked the producer of Blade Runner 2049 about using imagery from the film…but he was turned down. Now, producer Alcon Entertainment is suing Elon for using what they call “AI-created images mirroring scenes from Blade Runner 2049, including one featuring a Ryan Gosling look-alike.” Engdget.com reports that the images were used in a slide presentation during Musk’s Cybercab event earlier this month. Alcon says in their complaint that the copied scenes made Elon’s event ‘more attractive to a global audience,’ and that he misappropriated “the Blade Runner 2049 brand to help sell Teslas.” One can imagine that if this suit gets into trial, we will see some interesting imagery in the court exhibits!

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now. 


Disney & Hulu-No More Signups via Apple; Meta Bringing Back Facial Recognition; WhatsApp Rolling Out Direct Contract Storage; AT&T and T-Mobile Oppose Unlocking Rule

When Mel Brooks teased Spaceballs Two, he subtitled it ‘the search for more money,’ in a poke at Star Trek, the Search for Spock. Now, it looks like Disney is cutting some ties with Apple for…you guessed it…more money. Apple, as you no doubt know, gets a 15-30% cut of all money that comes from sales via their App Store. Macrumors.com reports that by not allowing new sign ups through the App Store, and pushing customers to their website, Disney will cut out those subscription fees for in-app purchases. Disney is already raising prices a couple bucks for Hulu and Disney +, and it looks like they intend to keep all of it! Netflix quit letting subscribers buy over the iOS app several years ago. 

If at first you don’t succeed…Meta is bringing back facial recognition, they say with new safeguards. Engadget.com notes that this comes some 3 years after they first tried it, but backed off after a huge backlash. Meta claims the facial recognition will first be used to detect scam ads that use the faces of celebrities or other public figures. If they confirm it as a scam ad, they will block it. Celebrities will be able to opt out of this use. Meta is also testing facial recognition as a method of account recovery. This time around, users will upload a video selfie…a short clip of themselves, and Meta will match that to their profile photo if the user gets locked out of their account. This should work for all personal accounts, but won’t work on a business page at this point…as they don’t include a profile pic of a person. Some privacy advocates are still skeptical, given the last time around. Meta paid out over lawsuits in Texas and Illinois from that last go around…some $650 million in Illinois and $1.4 billion in Texas. 

WhatsApp has been relying on your phones contact book to sync contacts for the platform. Now, techcrunch.com says WhatsApp will allow users to save contacts within the app, where they will live on cloud servers. That way, if you lose a phone or link a new one to your WhatsApp primary number, you will see all your contacts. Also…it gives WhatsApp possession of the data about all your contacts. They won’t mind, right? WhatsApp claims they have a new encrypted storage system for secure contact saving. In addition, they are saying that the storage feature will make it possible to save contacts by usernames. That way, you won’t need to share your phone number when messaging them. Signal and Telegram both already offer a way to share usernames without sharing contact details. 

In the shock of the century, T-Mobile and AT&T have come out in opposition to a proposed plan by the Federal Communications Commission to require the unlocking of phones within 60 days of activation. Arstechnica.com reports that the carriers are claiming that locking phones to a carrier’s network makes it possible to provide cheaper handsets to consumers. “If the Commission mandates a uniform unlocking policy, it is consumers—not providers—who stand to lose the most,” T-Mobile alleged in an October 17 filing with the Federal Communications Commission. The rule has broad support from consumer advocates, who say it will give consumers more choice and lower costs. The carriers have traditionally said that the locking helped them subsidize providing phones at lower costs. It seems more likely that we the consumers are subsidizing our own discounts. Verizon already unlocks phones after 60 days, due to requirements imposed on spectrum licenses it holds. 

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now. 


Microsoft-New Autonomous AI Agents; AirPods Pro Hearing Features; Ford Replacing EV Adapters for Tesla Charging Stations; Google Flights-New ‘Cheapest’ Tab

The Agents are coming, the Agents are coming! Microsoft has rolled out 10 new AI agents for its Dynamics 365 line of business applications. Geekwire.com reports that the tools can complete tasks autonomously in areas including sales, service, finance, and supply chain operations. Microsoft has dropped these in a preemptive strike against Salesforce’s new agents, which will bow on October 25th. Salesforce already has billboards up in San Francisco, touting its own agents. Microsoft showed off theirs at their ‘AI Tour’ presentation in London. Microsoft also said at the event that 60% of Fortune 500 companies are using its Copilot AI tech. Microsoft says it will make its new AI agents available in public preview for Dynamics 365 starting later this year and stretching into early next year. These AI agents come in a few categories:

Sales, including a Sales Qualification Agent and Sales Order Agent, designed to help prioritize leads and automate order intake.

Operations, including a Supplier Communications Agent and Financial Reconciliation Agent, which optimize supply chain and financial processes.

Service, including a Customer Intent Agent and Customer Knowledge Management Agent, designed to improve customer service by automating case management and updating knowledge bases.

Others include a Financial Reconciliation Agent that prepares and cleanses data sets for financial reporting; an Account Reconciliation Agent that automates the matching and clearing of transactions; and a Time and Expense agent for time entry, expense tracking, and approval workflows.

Apple made some fuss at the September hardware event about the AirPods Pro 2 hearing aid features. According to techcrunch.com, which got an advanced pair and the software, the hearing test feature is ‘painless.’ One would hope so! Hearing tests from an audiologist are painless. Instead of speaking to an audiologist or technician, with Apple’s home test you tap the screen when you hear a tone played. The test is visible from the settings menu when you have a pair of AirPods Pro 2 earbuds connected to your phone and in your ears. You may need to turn devices off in your room….the AirPods will even pick up an air purifier. The hearing aid feature will only be available to those who test as having mild to moderate hearing loss. One real issue that might put hearing impaired users off…real hearing aids have no problem making it through a full day on a charge. The AirPods Pro 2 can only make it 4-6 hours on a charge, before returning them to the charging case to charge back up. At $249, they are much cheaper than dedicated hearing aids, but 4-6 hours then no use for a little while may be a deal breaker. 

Ford had offered EV customers free NACS adapters for Tesla Superchargers. Now, the blue oval company is telling folks to stop using them. Engadget.com says there is a ‘potential issue’ that could reduce charging speeds and even cause charging port damage. Ford will send a replacement adapter ‘in the coming weeks,’ and customers will need to send back the defective ones…all at no charge to the customers. A number of other companies have made adapters for Superchargers, which use the NACS standard. So far none of them have issued recalls like Ford. 

Google Flights has a new ‘Cheapest’ tab. Bgr.com reports that it will display the cheapest routes for your trip..but may involve more work and more creative itineraries. In other words, you may save by longer layovers, taking red-eyes, or ‘self-transfers,’ a euphemism for rechecking your bags. You also may need to use multiple carriers or booking sites. That said, if you are in invariant skinflint, who squeezes every nickel until the buffalo poops, this is for you.

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now. 


FTC-Click to Cancel Rule; Google ‘Cancels’ Popular Ad Blocker on Chrome; Boston Dynamics & Toyota Research Institute Partner on Atlas Humanoid Robot; UCSD Surgeons Assisted by Apple Vision Pro Headsets

We have all been through it…a big hassle, sometimes taking hours, to cancel a subscription after a free trial. As a friend of mine always says, ‘That’s how they getcha!’ Now, the Federal Trade Commission has finalized a rule aimed at stopping businesses from making you jump through endless hoops to cancel a subscription after the free trial. Under the rule, any subscription that can be signed up for online must be able to be canceled online. And cancellation paths for in-person sign-ups must be just as easy, offered either by phone or online. The new rule tells businesses to keep ‘three guardrails in mind.’ First, customers cannot be required to talk to a live agent or chatbot to cancel if that wasn’t required for sign-up. Next, any phone cancellation methods cannot include charges and must be offered during normal business hours. And finally, canceling services in person must always be optional. Now, let’s hope they actually enforce this rule!

Google has been on a tear, trying to get people to see their ads…whether on search results or YouTube…across all their platforms. Now, it’s Chrome’s turn. According to mashable.com, Google has turned off popular ad blocker extensions uBlock Origin, MDN Search, and Neat URL. This all comes as Chrome moves from Manifest V2 to Manifest V3. There are options for Manifest V3 if you use AdBlock, AdBlock Plus, AdGuard, and uBlock Origin. If you would rather not hassle with trying to configure to keep the ads blocked or at least volume down, switch to Firefox, and select Duck Duck Go as your search engine. You can also try Microsoft Edge….but the former is really cleaner if you want to go the most ad free possible. 

While Elon Musk was trotting out robots that are nearly fully human operated and not autonomous at all, Boston Dynamics…which makes real robots…has teamed up with Toyota Research Institute to bring AI-based robotic intelligence to the electric Atlas humanoid robot. Techcrunch.com notes that the partnership will leverage work that TRI has done around large behavior models…which are not terribly unlike Large Language Models like that of ChatGPT. The lab has been able to get robots to 90% accuracy when performing household tasks like flipping pancakes through overnight training. Hell, I could try all night, and mess up flipping a pancake! TRI says that while machine learning takes millions of training cases, they have been able to reduce physical training of a robot down to only dozens of training cases…sometimes even less than that. Boston Dynamics just unveiled its design for the electric Atlas in April. The electric designation differentiates the robot from its larger, hydraulic namesake, Trust me, you wouldn’t want one of those robots possibly leaking caustic hydraulic fluid in your house! Toyota Research and Boston Dynamics have a goal of making a true general purpose machine. Rosie from The Jetsons…you’re up!

Regular followers of this report are well aware of my opinion of the preposterously priced but great Apple Vision Pro headsets. Now, Surgeons at UC San Diego have found them very helpful for minimally invasive surgery. Macrumors.com reports that while the headsets are pricy for you and I, they are pretty cheap compared to most gear hospitals buy in trying to keep or make us healthy. Surgeons have now done over 20 minimally invasive operations wearing the headsets. They are saying the headsets are ‘more transformative’ than robotic devices used to assist. Think about it… laparoscopic surgeries, where the docs send a camera through a small incision, and have to guide it and do the procedure while craining their necks to watch on a video screen. That can’t be helpful. Unlike previous headsets, the Apple ones have such accurate displays, that the surgeons can do the procedure while keeping their heads in a more normal position. That has to help with accuracy! They normally also have to look away to refer to CT scans, and to monitor vitals. Now, all of those things can appear on the panoramic display of the Vision Pro. This application is really a game changer…and one that will make a difference in the outcomes for patients…to say nothing of saving doctors from a literal pain in the neck that could cause mistakes!

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.


New Amazon Kindles-Including Color; YouTube Rolling Out New Miniplayer & Updates; Threads Option-Shows When You Are Online; Taiwan Semiconductor to Build More Chip Plants in Europe

Amazon has announced new Kindles, including a first…a new color model. Theverge.com reports that the Kindle Colorsoft Signature Edition…which is a lot like the updated Paperwhite with a color screen…is priced at $279.99 and you can preorder now. It ships on October 30th. It is still based on E Ink’s Kaleidoscope tech, but uses an entirely new display stack as compared to other Kindles. The new tech also allows for faster page turns. Kevin Keith, who runs Kindle products for Amazon said “All the things you think about with Kindle — high resolution, long battery life, fast page turns, good fluidity — we weren’t willing to sacrifice those.”  The goal was to offer a color screen that still looked just as good as the Paperwhite in black and white, and he’s convinced Amazon got there. Amazon also freshened the Kindle and Kindle Paperwhite. The Paperwhite gets a bigger screen that is totally flush with the bezels, and the entry level model gets a pop of color and speed improvements. The standard Paperwhite is increased in price by 10 bucks and is now $159.99. the Signature Edition is $199.99, and is identical to the entry level model, but has 32 gigs of storage, optional wireless charging, and an auto-adjusting front light. The entry level Kindle has a new dark mode and is 25% brighter with improved contrast. It starts at $109.99, up $10 from the previous model.

The YouTube app on both Android and iOS is getting a new MiniPlayer. According to 9to5google.com, instead of a second bar above the bottom bar with a tight rectangular crop, play/pause, and an x, the new player looks like a picture-in-picture window. The video appears above with a close button in the corner, and a strip at the bottom with controls. You can resize the window if you like. YouTube also rolled out some playlist updates, and the ability to create custom thumbnails using your own images or with AI. 

Threads has added an ‘activity status’ now, to let you choose to let people know when you are online…as well as see when accounts you follow are online if they choose to disclose that. Theverge.com says the feature is being pitched as a  “way to help you find others to engage with in real-time.” At least that is what Threads head Adam Mosseri is pitching. The activity status will show up next to your profile picture in the feed and on your profile. It is off by default, by the way.

We have followed the progress of new chip plants from TSMC…Taiwan Semiconductor….here in the US. Now, thenextweb.com notes that they are planning to expand further in to Europe, too. TSMC broke ground in August on a plant in Dresden, Germany. The German government will kick in half the funding with 5 billion Euros in aid. Right now, Europe makes about 10% of the world’s supply of semiconductors, but most are older school…not the advanced ones made in Taiwan or even here in the US. Most of what will be made in the German plant will be for automotive and industrial use. TSMC didn’t comment on where other facilities may go, saying they wanted to get the ones being built up and running first. This one should be producing by 2029.

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.