YouTube Goes After TikTok With Longer Shorts; Google Lens Now Lets You Search With Video; Tesla Dropped its Cheapest Model; Amazon to Hire Quarter Million for Holidays

YouTube has expanded the length of YouTube Shorts. So maybe now they are YouTube Bermuda Shorts? Ok, enough with the snark. Shorts will now be able to be up to 3 minutes long. Techcrunch.com reports that YouTube is hoping to be more competitive with TikTok now. TikTok, though, already allows videos of up to 10 minutes when recording, and uploads of up to an hour. It also makes participating in trends easier for users. YouTube says the new Shorts player is designed to streamline the look of these short videos, making the creator’s content stand out by placing it front and center in the user interface. The addition of templates by YouTube will allow creators to more quickly jump on trends. You will be able to tap a ‘Remix’ option in a Short, then choose ‘Use this template’ to make your own video. The race continues to be trendy. Hey, these tech reports are on YouTube and they are generally short…but trendy….nope…I’m afraid I missed the boat on that! I’ll just try to keep YOU up on tech trends!

Google Lens is now letting you search with video. Previously, you could search with just a picture. In addition, you can use your voice to ask about what you are seeing. According to theverge.com, the new feature will bring up an AI Overview and search results based on the video’s contents and your question. It is rolling out in Search Labs on both Android and iOS today. This is a feature Google promised and previewed at I/O in May. Google Lens is also updating its photo search feature with the ability to ask a question using your voice. To try it, aim your camera at your subject, hold down the shutter button, and then ask your question. Note that the voice part is only available in English for the time being.

With Elon Musk’s lates hype fest coming right up…with more on the robotaxis that have been promised for several years…Tesla has dropped its entry level car. The EV maker has stopped selling the Model 3 Standard Range Rear-Wheel Drive. Engadget.com notes that it had had a price of $39,000. Now, the cheapest Tesla will be the Model 3 Long-Range Rear-Wheel Drive version at $42,500. Tesla gave out their third quarter numbers yesterday, delivering 462,890 units between July and the end of September. This was short of analyst expectations of 469,000 vehicles. 

As brick and mortar stores do for the holidays, and as online retailers also have done for a number of years now, Amazon is gearing up for the holidays….and planning to hire a whopping 250,000 workers. Geekwire.com says this will at least match their hiring effort for the holidays last year, so they expect a robust holiday selling season. The online giant has also announce a buck and a half boost in pay to $22 per hour for US hourly workers, and for seasonal workers, the rate will be $18 an hour or more.  Full time seasonal workers will have health care benefits from day one on the job. Amazon claims that seasonal work is often a path to long-term employment…although long term is relative. Amazon is known for a strong ‘churn’ of employees leaving due to the conditions in the warehouses.

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


Meta Scraped Every Australian Account to Train AI; Sony PS5 Pro…Cha-Ching; Google Will Give Search Context Via Link to Internet Archive; Proposed Data Center UNDER San Francisco Bay

If you use Meta’s AI on Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, or Threads, you may get more of a  ‘shrimp on the barbie’ flavor in your replies. Engadget.com reports that Meta scraped data on every one of their Australian users to train its AI! After initially denying this, Meta’s global privacy director Melinda Claybaugh had to cop to it…apparently they scraped every photo and text back to 2007 from every user…unless the user had set their posts to private. Right now, Meta isn’t offering Australians an opt-out option like it does for European Union users. Meta did say they didn’t and won’t scrape the accounts of those under 18, but it will use the info the kids post on their parents’ or guardians’ accounts.

Sony did make its brief announcement about the PS5 Pro yesterday. There wasn’t really much new to report except the price…Sony surprised analysts with a $699.99 price…making the Pro their most expensive console ever. The PS3 adjusted for inflation would be $779 with added disk drive, by the way. According to theverge.com, the Pro still may be the ticket if you aren’t up to building your own PC gaming machine. In addition,  the easy plug-and-play model, simplified UI, and hassle-free warranty process are all big benefits over having to build or find a good prebuilt PC and then deal with Windows and driver updates. Consoles sell in their millions because they’re far more consumer-friendly than PCs. If you can’t see that price point, look into rolling your own…or see if you don’t have a friend who can do it for you on the cheap. 

In an effort to add more context to search results, Google will now link results directly to The Internet Archive to help add historical context to the links in your results. 9to5google.com says the new feature is live as of today. In order to access The Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine links through Google Search you will need to click the three dots menu button that shows up by all search results, then click in ‘More about this page.’ The Internet Archive is a nonprofit research library that stores and preserves giant chunks of the web for easy reference later. 

A data center at the bottom of San Francisco Bay? That’s what a couple of entrepreneurs are thinking, and their company NetworkOcean plans to submerge a small capsule filled with GPU servers into the Bay within a month. Arstechnica.com reports that they think this will help solve the thirst of data centers for water and electricity. The founders contend that moving data centers off land would slow ocean temperature rise by drawing less power and letting seawater cool the capsule’s shell, supplementing its internal cooling system. A couple flies in the ointment: scientists who study the hundreds of square miles of brackish water say even the slightest heat or disturbance from NetworkOcean’s submersible could trigger toxic algae blooms and harm wildlife.There is also the issue that no agencies that oversee the bay have heard of this plan, let alone issued the needed permits. Of course NetworkOcean is crying ‘over regulation.’

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