Amazon Bows AI Alexa Plus; Zillow Alums Launch HouseWhisper for Agents; VW ID.4 #3 EV in US; Apple Fixing ‘Trump’ Racist Dictation Bug
Posted: February 26, 2025 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: AI, Apple, iPhone, News, technology Leave a commentAmazon is rolling out its generative AI version of Alexa. Theverge.com reports that if things go as planned, it should make it easier to control your smart home or get info quickly with less hassle. Some of the new abilities coming to Alexa Plus include doing things for you — you’ll be able to ask it to order groceries for you or send event invites to your friends. Amazon says it will also be able to memorize personal details like your diet and movie preferences. You will still activate Alexa Plus with the same wake word…Alexa. (For those who are watching this and I just activated your A-Lady…sorry about that!) The plus version has vision capabilities…it can take pictures and analyze images, as well as read a study guide and test you on answers. Amazon first teased this Plus version about a year and a half ago. Amazon is counting on getting their generative AI into their smart speakers before any of their competitors…there are plenty of those now, but not really on smart speakers yet. Apple is still wrangling with upgrading Siri with AI, and Google has yet to launch a Gemini powered assistant on their smart speakers.
A trio of alums from Zillow Group have kicked off a new startup that will focus on using AI to help ease the administrative overload that weighs some agents down. According to geekwire.com, the three are CEO Luis Poggi, who was VP of product and engineering at Zillow, Spencer Rascoff, former CEO and co-founder of Zillow, and Alex Kutner, a former Zillow engineering leader. The startup is called HouseWhisper, and it came out of stealth mode this week after hauling in $10 million in funding. According to the trio, HouseWhisper is a conversational AI that acts as the ultimate 24/7 personal assistant, helping agents stay organized with help on following up with clients, scheduling, CRM updates and more. Agents can call, text or send a voice memo to a number and interact with HouseWhisper’s AI as they would with any human assistant. The system has been in beta for 8 months, and is being tested out by some 4,000 agents around the country.
After a fumble last year that stopped delivery for a while due to faulty door handles, the Volkswagen ID.4 has roared back. Electrek.co notes that sales dropped 55% last year after the door handle disaster, but now, VW sold almost 5,000 ID.4 models last month, up 653% year over year for January…and vaulting it to the #3 selling EV in the US…only trailing the Tesla Model Y and Model 3. If VW stays on this pace, they should sell about 60,000 ID.4 EVs this year. By the way, the Honda Prologue was the #4 selling EV, and the Tesla CyberTruck was fifth. Overall, EVs amounted to 102,000 models sold in January, that is up 30% over January 2024.
A bug in Apple’s built-in dictation feature on iPhones showed up over the weekend. When a person spoke the word racist, the phone briefly interpreted it at ‘Trump.’ The name showed up in the text of the Messages app momentarily, before being corrected to the actual word that was spoken….racist. Macrumors.com reports that the name didn’t show up every time, but it did show up more often than other words. There are videos of the bug on TikTok and other platforms. Apple claims that the issue is due to a phonetic overlap between the two words, even saying that ‘racist’ and ‘Trump’ do have similar sounds. Riiiight. Former Apple Siri team member John Burkey said ‘This smells like a serious prank.’ I agree with that! At any rate, Apple is working on a fix.
I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.
Microsoft’s Big Quantum Breakthrough; Google Pulls Gemini from Main iOS Search App; AI’s Fake Cases-Getting Lawyers Fired; Another New Chip Coming from Apple
Posted: February 20, 2025 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: AI, Apple, Artificial Intelligence, chatgpt, technology Leave a commentIn what may turn out to be a much bigger deal than any AI, Microsoft has announced a huge breakthrough in quantum
computing. Microsoft says it has developed a new quantum processor based on a novel state of matter, giving it a clear path to achieve quantum computing’s long-term promise of solving some of the world’s most difficult problems. “We believe this breakthrough will allow us to create a truly meaningful quantum computer not in decades, as some have predicted, but in years,” wrote Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella in a LinkedIn post about the news. Redmond has been working on quantum computing for almost 20 years…in fact, that program is the longest-running R&D program in the company. Microsoft’s work produces much more accurate quantum computing than others. They have placed eight topological qubits on a chip dubbed Majorana 1, after the Italian physicist who proposed the particles back in 1937!
Google has pulled Gemini from its main search app on iOS. According to TechCrunch.com, the aim is to get users to download the standalone Gemini app instead, which would allow Google to more directly compete with other consumer-facing AI chatbots like ChatGPT, Claude, or Perplexity. However, the change could also risk reducing Gemini’s reach as Google’s app is already used by millions, and many are not motivated enough to download other new mobile applications. A lot of people aren’t excited about having to use the additional app, but one benefit is that you can have live conversations with the AI assistant via Gemini Live.
Last year, there was a flap in legal circles as an attorney used AI to write a brief he submitted to the court, and the artificial intelligence came up with ‘artificial cases’ to support his position. The court and opposing counsel noticed the fake cases, and he was fined and dressed down. Arstechnica.com notes that now we have a situation with Morgan and Morgan, which bills itself as ‘America’s largest injury law firm.’ Morgan was involved in a suit against Walmart over a claimed defective hoverboard toy…which caused a house fire. The lead attorney from Morgan, Rudwin Ayala, submitted a filing, and Walmart’s attorneys couldn’t find any trace of eight cases cited in it…except on ChatGPT! The attorney was removed from the case, and Morgan ended up paying Walmart’s attorneys for wasted time chasing down the fake cases. Some attorneys have been fired over this sort of use of AI. I recently took a couple of continuing legal education courses, and they stressed quite strongly that you have to look up any cases AI presents in a legal filing you intend to use…and make damned sure they are actual cases, and not some imagined ones from ChatGPT, Claude, or other AI models!
Yesterday, along with the iPhone 16e, Apple bowed its new C1 modem chip…making the entry-level iPhone the first to run on Apple’s in-house designed modem. Now, 9to5 mac.com reports that analyst Ming-Chi Kuo is predicting another new Cupertino-designed chip, and he says it will be in all the new iPhone 17 models. Apparently, besides their C-1 modem, which is allowing Apple to ditch Qualcomm, Apple has been working on their own Wi-Fi chip to replace the Broadcom ones the present iPhones use. Even though all the new iPhones will have this new Apple Wi-Fi chip, only the so-called ‘slim’ iPhone 17 will use the C-1 modem that just debuted in the iPhone 16e. Analyst Kuo says the Apple Wi-Fi chip should ‘enhance connectivity across Apple devices.’ He didn’t clarify if that just meant from one Apple device to another, or also to your router and other devices. It looks like within a year or 2, Apple will be running iPhones on nearly entirely their own silicon…with the exception of memory chips.
I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.
Google Maps to Rename Gulf of Mexico for Trump; Apple’s Big Release of Year; Waymo Starts Testing Robotaxis on LA Freeways; Google Store Adding ‘Verified’ Badge to VPN Apps
Posted: January 28, 2025 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Apple, News, Tech, technology, Waymo Leave a commentIn a stunning and embarrassing move, Google Maps will rename the Gulf of Mexico the ‘Gulf of America,’ in order to appease new president Donald Trump. 9to5google.com reports that the rest of the world besides the US will see both Gulf of Mexico and ‘Gulf of America.’ The name of Mount Denali in Alaska will also revert to Mount McKinley. Again, non-US users will see both names. Google says it has had a ‘longstanding practice to use official government sources.’ Expect to see these ridiculous changes soon. I can sense the laughter from the rest of the world right now.
Apple’s big release of the year may not be an iPhone Air or whatever they decide to call the skinny phone. Some Apple watchers think the big push will be the new home unit, being dubbed the ‘HomePad’ instead. According to bgr.com, the gadget will have a 7 inch screen and can be attached to a wall or a base with built in speakers. Such a device will be a major expansion into the home hub market for Apple. Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman thinks it will be smaller and cheaper than an iPad and will run its own operating system. With an A18 chip in it, it will be significantly more powerful than the HomePods, which run on an Apple Watch chip.
Little by little, they keep expanding the territory. Now, Waymo’s robotaxis in Los Angeles are moving from city streets to the metro’s famous…or infamous…freeway system. Techcrunch.com says to expect to see the Alphabet-owned robot vehicles on I-10, 110, 405, and 90 for the time being. The cars will NOT have a safety driver behind the wheel! At first, they will only be transporting company employees, but plan to expand to the general public. Waymo has already been running on highways in the Bay Area on Peninsula and San Francisco freeways.
The Google Play store is adding ‘Verified’ badges of consumer facing VPN apps. 9to5google.com notes that the store already introduced a ‘Government’ badge last year, so this is something of an expansion of that. Google says the VPNs have an ‘independent security review’ in the Data safety section. A banner will also appear in search results. The new ‘Verified’ badge with shield and checkmark will show up next to the app rating and above the install button. Google has a list of requirements the VPN must meet to get verified.
I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.
TikTok Exec Order-Online Stores Still At Risk; Diabetic-Weight Loss Drugs Top List for Price Negotiations; Samsung Unpacked is Tomorrow; Apple Drops to 3rd Place in China
Posted: January 21, 2025 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Apple, China, News, Tech, technology Leave a commentAs expected, Donald Trump signed an executive order granting an extension to TikTok so it can stay in the US until it finds a US buyer. Theverge.com notes that the law passed and signed gave President Biden an option to extend the time by 90 days, but he didn’t do so. The Trump executive order really doesn’t do anything…the law passed doesn’t actually ban TikTok and never did. It does ban the app stores from offering it or updates to it, so it will work when the operating systems are updated. So far, The app stores haven’t started allowing downloads again, as the executive order is very likely illegal, and the fines for the Apple and Google stores could run up to $850 billion. Trump might be able to certify to Congress that TikTok has agreed to sell…which it has not, and then the 90 day extension might be triggered. It would be lying to Congress, but until a court found the certification invalid, Apple and Google would probably be safe. Stay tuned, this is going to get crazy!
After the first round of negotiations reducing prices on 10 high cost drugs took place last August, and those went down in price anywhere from 38 to 79 percent. we are ready for round two. This group of 15 drugs could see prices dropped, but not until 2027. According to arstechnica.com, topping the list are diabetes and weight loss drugs Wegovy and Ozempic. Right now, Wegovy runs about $1350 a month, and Ozempic is about $1000. Even chopping those prices by half would save the government a ton on Medicare drug expense. Note that the drug companies have sued over negotiation process required in the Inflation Reduction Act.
Samsung Unpacked is tomorrow at 10am Pacific. We should see a preview of the three big models…the S25, the S25+, and the S25 Ultra. As always with Samsung, techcrunch.com says there has been a flood of leaks. One that just hit indicates that there will be either a slight price increase or none at all. That’s some pretty good news. Galaxy AI will be a big star of the show. One possible announcement is a successor to the Galaxy Ring, but that is a bit sketchy. We will have a recap of all the major announcements tomorrow after the Unpacked event.
Apple has dropped to third place in the Chinese smartphone market 4th quarter, after being the top line up to then. Macrumors.com reports that iPhone shipments in China dropped by 18.2% year to year in 4th quarter…giving Apple a 17.1% market share. Chinese makers Huawei and Xiaomi were #1 and#2 with 18.1% and 17.2% market share respectively. Apple watchers think one major reason for the falloff by Cupertino’s phones is the lack of Apple Intelligence in China. Apple hasn’t put their AI on the phone due to Chinese regulatory constraints. Overall, the China smartphone market had a 3.2% decline year over year.
I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.
Smartphone Sales Uptick in 2024; Biden Proposes Export Controls on GPUs; Apple Watch SE Gets Refresh; Government Turns Down Tesla Big Rig Charge Station Money Request
Posted: January 13, 2025 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Apple, News, Samsung, Smartphone, technology Leave a commentThe year 2024 showed a sales uptick in smartphones after a tough 2023. Smartphone sales overall grew by 4% year over year. Androidauthority.com reports that Chinese maker Xiaomi had the top growth, increasing market share by 1%. Both Apple and Samsung saw their 2024 market share drop by 1%. Xiaomi does not have a footprint in the US, either, which makes the increase more notable. Samsung and Apple still lead the smartphone market globally…Samsung with 19% market share, and Apple with 18%. Apple sales in China were apparently hurt by the lack of AI features in that country on the iPhone 16 Pro models. Counterpoint Research sees Generative AI capabilities being on some 90% of smartphones that sell for over $250 by the year 2028.
The Biden administration has revealed what it is calling its ‘AI diffusion rule,’ which is intended to restrict the export of GPUs that are most coveted for AI applications. Although it does not mention the nation by name, it’s widely viewed as a means to prevent China from outpacing the US in AI development. According to engadget.com, there are 3 licensing tiers. The first is unrestricted, and that’s for the US domestic market and 18 strategic allies. The second tier will have caps on computing power, and that will be for most countries. The third tier includes China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea. The government will effectively bar sales of the most powerful GPUs in those nations. The Semiconductor Industry Association objects to the rule making, as does AI chip industry leader NVIDIA. It’s not clear that the incoming Trump administration will let the rule survive.
Apple will launch an updated SE Watch later this year with an updated look. Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman says that it is likely that the design may be more in line with the 2021 Watch Series 7…but it is possible it will be completely different…Apple is apparently considering a plastic case for the Watch SE…which could be available in a rainbow of bright colors. Think of the old iMac computers. The Watch 11 and Ultra 3 models will keep the present look but will get some upgrades. The Ultra 3 will probably get satellite connectivity and both the 11 and the Ultra 3 will likely get high blood pressure detection..not exact numbers, but just a warning to the wearer. The blood pressure feature was supposed to be out for the Watch 10, but was delayed.
The Department of Transportation has turned down a request by Tesla for $100 million in funding for big rig EV charging. Techcrunch.com reports that $636 million in funding will be split by 49 applicants for EV charging infrastructure. Tesla has only produced a small number of electric big rigs in Texas, and is building out their facility in Nevada to make the electric trucks…which they first showed 8 years ago in 2017. The company wants to build 9 semi-truck charging stations between its former headquarters in the Bay Area and its present one near the southern border of Texas. There will probably be a third round of funding released from the bipartisan infrastructure law, which originally allocated $2.5 billion in funds for charging infrastructure. Presumably, the incoming Trump administration will want to dole out more money to Tesla.
I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.
Bluesky Tests Trending Topics; Galaxy Ring 2 May Bow Soon; Why Apple Won’t Build a Search Engine; Next Gen Meta Ray-Bans May Get Small In-Lens Screen
Posted: December 26, 2024 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: AI, Apple, News, Tech, technology Leave a commentAs they press forward in building out an app strikingly similar to the old Twitter, Bluesky is now testing out a trending topics feature. Techcrunch.com reports that the feature showed up in beta on Christmas Day. It is available on both the desktop and mobile versions of the platform. Look for it on the right sidebar on the desktop, and on mobile, you can tap the search button to look for them. Threads rolled out trending to US users on March, and now is in Japan, but the Bluesky beta is available worldwide.
We may be seeing a Galaxy Ring 2 at Samsung’s January Unpacked event, in addition to the Galaxy S25 phones and perhaps new AR glasses. According to androidpolice.com, some ring improvements may include more size options, better sensors, smarter AI, and better battery life. If the Ring 2 does make an appearance, don’t expect it to be immediately available…the OG ring took several months to hit stores after being unveiled. If the Ring 2 gets a couple extra sizes, say 14 and 15… it would match ring leader Oura.
One thing Apple has always relied on others for is a search engine…notably Google, which has paid a ton of money to be the default one on Apple devices…some $20 billion a year as revealed in legal actions. Why hasn’t Apple rolled their own? 9to5mac.com says Apples Eddy Cue has given 3 reasons why Cupertino won’t do that. Cue says first off, Apple is focused on other growth areas…he notes it would cost billions and take many years. Second, Cue points out the ongoing movement in AI, and says it would be economically risky to divert cash from that into a search engine. Finally, he says that to have a viable search engine, you have to build a platform to sell targeted advertising, which he notes isn’t a core business of Apple….and would go against Apples longstanding privacy commitments.
The next iteration of Meta’s Ray-Ban smart glasses may have a couple of nice adds…a ‘small in-lens’ screen and a wristband controller. Zdnet.com reports that the display would introduce an AR component to the glasses with a holographic interface while capturing your surroundings with a pass-through display that may be controllable with a wristband sensor. It’s a sensible step up from the current smart glasses model, which only allows for audio-based interactions and photo and video-taking. Right now, it looks like the earliest we may see these added features is 2027, but Meta has said that these are two of the most requested features.
I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.
Apple Planning Face ID Doorbell; Google Objects to DOJ’ s Interventionist Antitrust Remedies; X Jacks Up Premium Subscriptions; Honda & Nissan Look to Merge in 2026
Posted: December 23, 2024 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: AI, Apple, business, News, technology Leave a commentMany times over the years, Apple has been late to the party, but has gone on to dominate categories of tech gadgets. The iPhone, of course, is the classic example. Now, 9to5mac.com reports that Cupertino is working on a Face ID compatible smart home doorbell cam, shades of the Ring. The device would offer “advanced facial recognition”, and integrate wirelessly with smart home locks. As a user of both Apple HomeKit and Ring, I have to say it would be cool to have my door cam integrated into HomeKit, but right now, it’s hard to imagine how an Apple device would really do a better job than the Ring does. The door lock thing is cool…unlock your door by scanning your face…but I don’t have an electronic door lock. I have a neighbor who does, but that is one area I just haven’t ‘technified.’ A lock can be picked, but the thief has to be right there…not a ways away like with a hack. Apple may have the thing on the market by the end of next year.
Google has come out blazing as they have floated their own proposal in the antitrust case from the US Department of Justice that argues that Google must sell off its Chrome Browser. According to techcrunch.com, Google says the DOJ proposal reflects an ‘interventionist agenda’ that “goes far beyond what the Court’s decision is actually about.” As an alternative, Google proposes that it still be allowed to make search deals with companies like Apple and Mozilla, but they should have the option to set different defaults on different platforms (for example, iPhone vs. iPad) and in different browsing modes.
In a move that is certain to vastly increase his user base, Elon Musk is raising prices for ad-free Premium Plus on X from $16 to $22 a month. If this was a Tom Swiftie, that would have ‘he said sarcastically’ after it! At any rate, engadget.com reports that the 37.5% price hike will kick in by January 20th, and will be for the US, Europe, the UK, Canada, and Australia. X has lost an estimated 2.7 million active users in the past 2 months, while new rival Bluesky has doubled in size in that same time period. This does not seem to be the move of a business genius…but I could be wrong.
In a move that would create the world’s third largest car maker, Honda and Nissan plan to merge in 2026. Arstechnica.com reports that Honda would take the lead in the deal. The two firms already had a strategic partnership for software and electrification. Nissan has been in an alliance with France’s Renault and Japan’s Mitsubishi. Both are taking a wait and see attitude on the Honda-Nissan deal. If approved, the deal should be finalized by this coming June, with the new company formed by August 2026.
I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.
Google Bows Amazing Quantum Chip; Apple-Playstation Support for Vision Pro & Cellular for Macs; Diamond Battery Could Run Low Power Items for Eons; TikTok Asks Appeals Court for Temp Block of Sale-or-Ban Law
Posted: December 9, 2024 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: AI, Apple, Quantum computing, Tech, technology Leave a commentGoogle has just revealed its latest quantum computing chip…Willow. Gizmodo.com reports that Google claims the new chip can perform calculations in five minutes that would take the world’s fastest supercomputers 10 septillion years. For reference, the universe isn’t even 14 billion years old—a fraction of a fraction of that timescale. Quantum computers operate and calculate in a manner that is fundamentally different from regular or so-called classical supercomputers. They won’t be a desktop or portable item any time soon or ever though….quantum computing requires a lab environment with temperatures near absolute zero to work! Google sees some commercial applications for their quantum computing as being within the next 3 to 5 years now instead of decades away.
Apple has some interesting things in the works, according to 9to5mac.com, and Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman. One is that they are planning to support VR game controllers, and have approached Sony about supporting PlayStation games on the headset. You would still need third party controllers, although th field of view in the Vision Pro would be amazing. Apple is also looking at bring cellular to the Mac for the first time. As they move to their now modems and away from Qualcomm, the Mac might join iPhones and iPads, as well as Watches with their own cellular connection. This could reportedly happen by 2026.
British scientists have successfully created the world’s first carbon-14 diamond battery…which could run low energy devices like satellite communication equipment for over 5,000 years. Thenextweb.com notes that the battery is made of the radioactive isotope carbon-14, encased in a thin layer of synthetic diamond. As the carbon-14 decays it emits electrons. The diamond acts like a semiconductor, converting these electrons into electricity. Since carbon-14 has a half-life of 5,700 years, scientists expect the battery to last for millennia. Besides satellites, the diamond batteries could power pacemakers, hearing aids, watches, computer chips — any low-power device in environments where frequent battery replacement isn’t feasible. Shortwave radiation from the decaying carbon-14 doesn’t pose a risk — it is fully absorbed by the diamond casing, the researchers said. The battery can also be recycled at the end of its life — if anyone is still around by then!
TikTok and parent company ByteDance have filed an emergency motion with a federal appeals court asking it to temporarily block the law that would ban the app in the US unless the social network divests from Chinese ownership by January 19. The companies are asking for the hold in order to give the Supreme Court a chance to assess the case. Techcrunch.com reports that more than 170 million people in the US are on the app monthly or more. As a back up, TikTok is also appealing to president-elect Trump, who had promised voters he would save the app if elected.
I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.
Samsung’s Upcoming Smart Glasses; Apple HomePod with Smart Display Late ’25; 12 Days of ‘Shipmas’ from OpenAI; Amazon Unveils New Nova AI Models
Posted: December 4, 2024 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: AI, Apple, Smart home, Tech, technology Leave a commentAlong with their latest, greatest Galaxy smartphones to be shown in January, reports have Samsung at least teasing their first smart glasses. Zdnet.com reports that they will look a lot like Meta’s Ray-Bans, but a bit thicker and heavier. They will come with the expected voice assistant and audio playback, but also are expected to have additional features like gesture recognition and the ability to make payments. They won’t have a built in augmented reality display, though…and it’s unclear if they will feature cameras. an official launch is expected in July.
There has been plenty of buzz about Apple bringing out a smart home display. Right now, it looks like this will happen in the third quarter of 2025, with a reveal at WWDC in June. According to macrumors.com, there have been several versions tested by Apple…one we reported on was a 6-7 inch display on a robot arm, and another was a wall mountable iPad-like display. It is entirely possible that both these form factors could come out. A new HomePod smart speaker will have Apple’s A18 processor and will support Apple intelligence. My gen two HomePods use an Apple Watch processor like the first generation had, so no chance of those running Apple Intelligence…which I could care less about, since I only use them to play music and control home automation like lights, cameras, and outlets. Apple is going conservative on these HomePod units….only about 500,000 units are planned.
In one of the dorkiest marketing moves in a long time, OpenAI has announced the 12 Days of ’Shipmas.’ I have a former colleague who worked with Sam Altman years ago, and this now confirms what he said about Sam being a dork. Theverge.com notes that the announcements will include OpenAI’s long-awaited text-to-video AI tool Sora and a new reasoning model. The days start tomorrow, December 5th. One holiday related announcement may be a new Santa-inspired voice for ChatGPT. Ho, ho, ho! Merry Shipmas, boys and girls.
More from the hype-o-sphere surrounding all things AI…Amazon CEO Andy Jassy took the stage yesterday at the AWS re:Invent get together, and announced a new set of AI foundation models called Nova. The Nova models represent one of the biggest attempts yet by the tech giant to make its mark in AI. The company is seeking to overcome the perception that it was slow out of the gate in the early days of the generative AI revolution. Geekwire.com reports that the Nova family includes:
* Amazon Nova Micro, a text-only model that delivers low-latency responses at low cost.
* Amazon Nova Lite, a low-cost multimodal model for processing image, video, and text.
* Amazon Nova Pro, a multimodal model that combines accuracy, speed, and cost for a wide range of tasks.
* Amazon Nova Premier, which Amazon describes as “the most capable of Amazon’s multimodal models for complex reasoning tasks and for use as the best teacher for distilling custom models.” Premier will be available in the first quarter of next year, according to Amazon.
* Amazon Nova Canva for image generation
* Amazon Nova Reel for video generation.
I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.
SpyLoan Malware-Infected 8 Million Androids; GoBlue’s New App-Track Your Bluesky Stats; Apple Touts Privacy But Allegedly Spies on Own Staff; Intel CEO is Out After 3 Years and No Turnaround
Posted: December 2, 2024 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: AI, Apple, apple-intelligence, iPhone, technology Leave a commentIt’s rare, but sometimes a bad app will get into the Google Play Store or Apple’s App Store. Androidpolice.com reports that McAfee has spotted issues with SpyLoan apps. These shady loan apps use social engineering tricks to target Android users worldwide. So far, 15 of these apps have been found, going after people in South America, Southern Asia, and Africa. They all share similar code and systems, stealing data and sending it to command-and-control (C2) servers. Most of these apps hide behind fake names and logos that look like real financial institutions. Some of the apps have been promoted on social media platforms. Google has removed most for the moment, and thankfully, none are big US financial institutions. Generally, they steal as much personal info as possible, they try to extort or blackmail users. Stick with your mainstream bank or credit union, and don’t fall for any come ons from emails or ads on social media!
Bluesky is ramping up remarkably fast considering the flood of users that have signed up. They have expanded staff, and are rolling out features, but don’t have quite the tools you might want to track your following. A new app called GoBlue is stepping in to fill the gap. According to techrunch.com, the app has a simple interface for tracing your own Bluesky analytics in an iOS dashboard. Right now, GoBlue just offers some basic tools to track metrics like new followers, comments, likes, and reposts. They show up as bar charts on the app’s home screen, and you can track by day, week, month, or year. If you want full access using the app, it’s a one time fee of $19.99 or a monthly fee of $3.99 a month or annual for $14.99 a year.
Apple is famously secretive about upcoming products and services, and has always bragged about the level of privacy they offer users. That privacy level is not extended to employees, however. Appleinsider.com says an Apple employee is suing the company, claiming that it forces staff to give up personal privacy, and demands that it be allowed to use surveillance even when they are at home. The employee, Amar Bhakta, works in ad tech at Apple, and has been with them about 4 years. Once they use a personal device and personal iCloud account as part of their work, Apple allegedly requires employees to agree to the company monitoring everything.”If you use your personal account on an Apple-managed or Apple-owned iPhone, iPad or computer, any data stored on the device (including emails, photos, video, notes and more), are subject to search by Apple,” the lawsuit claims Apple’s policies state. While there may be elements in the full suit that have yet to be made public, everything listed so far is common practice — even if it sounds draconian. Every place I’ve worked in the last 25 years has been able to track your info on company-issued devices or look at anything you stored on a company server. I think Mr. Bhakta is going to have an uphill battle trying to win this against Apple.
Intel’s board has apparently showed its CEO of less than 4 years the door, after he failed to turn the company around. Arstechnica.com reports that Pat Gelsinger is stepping down. Intel CFO David Zinsner and Client Computing Group Head Michelle Johnson Holthaus will share the title of interim CEO while the board does a search for new CEO. Gelsinger has also left his board seat. Gelsinger had worked at Intel since he joined the company at age 18.
I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.

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