Snap-Light Consumer AR Glasses in ’26; Threads is Getting DMs; EVs with 3,000 Mile Range on the Horizon; Apple White Paper- Power of New Generation AI Wildly Oversold

Snap is preparing to sell lightweight, consumer AR glasses in 2026. That’s the word from techcrunch.com. They will be called Specs. Snap’s Specs will feature many of the same augmented reality and artificial intelligence capabilities that are available on the company’s developer-facing smart glasses, the Spectacles 5. However, the company says the Specs will be smaller and lighter — ideally making them more innocuous to wear in public than their extremely large predecessors. So far, no word from Snap on pricing, or on how they plan to sell the glasses. If they are lightweight, work well, and don’t look goofy…Snap will have really pulled off something great in the smart glasses race. 

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has announced that Threads will start testing its own direct messaging this week…which you will be able to use without leaving the platform. According to theverge.com, the testing will start in Hong Kong, Thailand, and Argentina, then expand to other nations. Users will see a separate inbox for Threads DMs, without having to connect to their linked Instagram account. At this point you will still have to have an Instagram account to use Threads. Maybe one day, they will split the baby, so to speak.

In a huge leap forward, a couple of researchers in South Korea have come up with a way to reduce silicon swelling in traditional EV battery designs. Bgr.com says that the better tech may take us from the 200-300 miles per charge to somewhere in the area of 3,000 mile range! That’s not all…using graphene in the batteries, they have shown that you can fully charge in something like 75 seconds…with no degradation in capacity for over 1,000 recharges. If this tech scales up, we may see truly revolutionary range in electric vehicles…and smartphones you won’t ever stress about running down the battery and being out of contact. 

Apple has put out a research paper that some are nodding in the affirmative over…like myself, while others are stunned. Theguardian.com notes that the paper  all but eviscerating the popular notion that large language models (LLMs, and their newest variant, LRMs, large reasoning models) are able to reason reliably. well-known venture capitalist Josh Wolfe went so far as to post on X that “Apple [had] just GaryMarcus’d LLM reasoning ability” – coining a new verb (and a compliment to me), referring to “the act of critically exposing or debunking the overhyped capabilities of artificial intelligence … by highlighting their limitations in reasoning, understanding, or general intelligence.” What Apple did was show that the leading models like ChatGPT, Claude, and Deepseek may “look smart – but when complexity rises, they collapse”. In short, these models are very good at a kind of pattern recognition, but often fail when they encounter novelty that forces them beyond the limits of their training, despite being, as the paper notes, “explicitly designed for reasoning tasks.” The Cliff’s Notes takeaway for you…relax…Artificial Intelligence and robots won’t be taking over…at least not yet. 

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


Meta Will Pay $1.4 Billion to Texas Over Facial Recognition; Auto Makers Still Selling Driver Data; Twitch Gets TikTok-Like Refresh; Instagram Creators Can Make Own AI Chatbots

Meta has settled with Texas over the use of facial recognition on Facebook…to the tune of $1.4 billion. Reuters.com reports that the huge fine resolves a lawsuit dating from 2022 that claimed that the “Tag Suggestions” feature on photos uploaded to Facebook violated the state’s Capture or Use of Biometric Identifier Act and Deceptive Trade Practices Act. It’s the largest settlement ever resulting from an action brought by a single state, according to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton. Meta admitted no wrongdoing in the settlement. 

Automakers continue to sell your driving data, and some Congressmen have complained to the Federal Trade Commission about the practice. According to mashable.com, Senators Ron Wyden and Ed Markey sent a letter to the FTC, asking the commission to investigate the continued practice of car manufacturers collecting and then selling the driving data of its customers — which includes information like the exact time, distance, speed, and braking behavior of every auto trip. This data is then offered to insurance companies. So if your insurance mysteriously went up with no tickets or accidents, this could be why. the Senators said in their letter that “Companies should not be selling Americans’ data without their consent, period. But it is particularly insulting for automakers that are selling cars for tens of thousands of dollars to then squeeze out a few additional pennies of profit with consumers’ private data,”

Twitch is getting a new look that looks a lot like TikTok. Theverge.com says the new app is rolling out on Android and iOS. The main change is that it will now open on a feed of content you might like, instead of on the ‘Following’ tab. This is also what Threads and others have done to try to drive people to their algorithm based feeds. More than 50% of Twitch users ‘primarily’ watch on their phones. The app is supposed to make it quote “easy to find streamers that you already love while also exploring and discovering new streamers.”

Soon, if you send a direct message to a big Instagram creator, you may hear back from an AI bot they have made. Engadget.com reports that Meta is rolling out its AI Studio, and the tool box will allow Instagram creators to make an AI persona that can answer questions and chat with their followers and fans on their behalf. Meta says the new creator AIs are meant to address a long-running issue for Instagram users with large followings: it can be nearly impossible for the service’s most popular users to keep up with the flood of messages they receive every day. Meta claims that the creators’ AI will function as ‘an extension of themselves.’

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


After a Year,Threads Has 175 Million Users; Noplace-New Twitter/MySpace-Like Platform for Gen Z; Tesla EVs Finally getting YouTube Music; Michigan Building first US Smart Highway

In just a year, Threads…the Meta answer to X, has reached 175 million monthly active users. CEO Mark Zuckerberg made the announcement today. Theverge.com reports that although that is a strong number, Threads has yet to report its daily numbers. This may mean they are still getting a lot of traffic from users than haven’t yet become regulars. On the other hand, X hasn’t shared comparable metrics since he took over Twitter and…changed it, to put it nicely. It may be pie in the sky CEO hype, but Zuckerberg claims that Threads may become Meta’s next billion dollar app. Right now, it runs at a loss, though. Apparently, they are thinking about starting ads next year. 

Yes, it’s yet another social media platform…and one which claims to ‘bring the social back to social media.’ According to techcrunch.com, the new app is called noplace, and it is aimed at Gen Z. It has rocketed to the top of the Apple App Store. What’s the draw? The platform is something of a mashup of Twitter and MySpace. The idea is for users to be able to connect with friends or with people who have shared interest. It is colorful, customizable profiles that allow people to share everything from relationship status, to what they’re listening to or watching, what they’re reading or doing, and more.Although aimed at Gen Z and younger users, noplace (no capitalization…that kind of says younger generations right there) will add extra moderation to users under 18. The platform has built their own internal dashboard for just that purpose. It doesn’t use algorithms, they claim, but leverages AI to drive suggestions and curation. Time will tell if the notoriously fickle Gen Z crowd will continue to embrace noplace.

Tesla is adding YouTube Music and Amazon Music as native apps by a software update. Androidpolice.com says the update is 2024.26, and it should start rolling out soon to Models S, 3, X, & Y. Some cars have both Apple’s Car Play, and Android Auto…I have one of those…but lately, some manufacturers are doing a one or the other thing. Meanwhile, always dancing to a different drummer…or maybe a drum machine…Elon Musk won’t use either one, opting from the start for the home brew Tesla OS. Tesla vehicles already support Spotify, Apple Music, Slacker, Tidal, and TuneIn. 

Michigan is making a 3 mile section of I-94 into the first US smart highway. Engadget.com reports that an Alphabet backed startup has started building it out. It will use cams and sensors to talk to connected cars…any autonomous or semi-autonomous car…really, most any with built in guidance systems. The state will get data, and divers will get traffic updates, weather, and stranded vehicle info…as well as other congestion advisories. The pilot program roadway is between Ann Arbor and Detroit. The plan is to extend it to 40 miles in the future. 

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


TikTok Unveils New App Whee; Threads Launches API for Developers; Apple Watch 10-Thinner with Bigger Screen; US Sues Adobe Over Fees

Without fanfare, TikTok has dropped Whee, its new Instagram-like app. Androidpolice.com reports that although the app resembles Instagram, it has a bit more of a personal touch…for sharing photos with friends and family only. It is only out in select countries on Android at the moment, but worldwide release may be coming. The app has a simple interface, with just tabs for camera, feed, and messages. With ByteDance already having the Notes app out…which is also Instagram-like, it’s not clear if Whee will stay as is, or eventually be rolled into Notes as a function for keeping pictures friends and family only. 

Meta has finally launched its long-due API for Threads, so that developers can build around it. According to techcrunch.com, Mark Zuckerberg posted that “The Threads API is now widely available and coming to more of you soon.” With the new API, developers can publish posts, fetch their own content, and build reply management tools. Meta will also allow developers to tap into analytics, with measurements like the number of views, likes, replies, reposts, and posts. 

Just yesterday, we reported on Apple going for making everything from iPhones and MacBooks thinner…again. Watches were also in their sights for a reducing plan. Now, macrumors.com finds that analyst Ming-Chi Kuo says the Apple Watch 10 will not only be thinner, but will also get a bigger screen. Kuo says the smaller watch will go from 41 mm to 45mm…the size of the current larger watch. The bigger watch will get its screen increased from 45mm to 49mm. As for the Apple Watch Ultra, it will stay ‘roughly the same’ size this year…but may get a new dark or black case color option. As we reported months ago, Apple may be changing to a magnetic band attachment system…which will not only allow for the thinness and bigger screen, but also a bigger battery. It’s unclear if the new band system will be out this fall…we’ll just have to wait and see about that.

The Department of Justice has sued Adobe, saying in a complaint that it has been hiding expensive fees and that it makes it difficult to cancel a subscription. Theverge.com reports that the DOJ filing says Adobe “has harmed consumers by enrolling them in its default, most lucrative subscription plan without clearly disclosing important plan terms.” The suit alleges Adobe “hides” the terms of its annual, paid monthly plan in the “fine print and behind optional textboxes and hyperlinks.” The DOJ goes on to say that in doing so, the company fails to properly disclose the early termination fee incurred upon cancellation “that can amount to hundreds of dollars.” Recall just recently we reported the popup about changes to Adobe’s terms of service, where you couldn’t get rid of the box without checking yes…even to delete the app!

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


Meta Platforms Melted down Tuesday; Former Twitter CEO & Others Sue for Severance; X Calling Feature Warning; ChatGPT Now Reads Answers Out Loud

Meta’s platforms had a major meltdown Tuesday morning. Untold teeming masses were locked out of Facebook, Instagram, and Threads. In fact, on Threads, nothing would load at all. Theverge.com reports that the crash started around 10am Eastern. Some people were locked out of their Meta Quest headsets, too. Facebook just logged users out of their accounts, with them unable to log back in. As with Threads, Instagram users just could’t refresh their feeds at all. Meta communications head Andy Stone had to resort to posting about the outage on Threads rival X, writing that the company is “aware people are having trouble accessing our services” and that Meta is “working on this now.” A similar Meta outage took place in 2021 when a configuration issue brought down access to Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp for several hours. All seems to be fixed now, so everyone hearing or reading this has presumably gotten their social media fix for today! 

A couple of items of X news. First off, a group of former Twitter execs, including former CEO Parag Agrawal, are suing Elon Musk for millions in unpaid severance benefits. According to engadget.com, the tab is around $128 million. The suit claims that the CEO alone is owed some $57.4 million. The legal action cites Musk biographer Walter Isaacson’s account of the events, which explains that Musk rushed to close the Twitter deal a day early so he could fire the executives “for cause” just before their final stock options were set to vest. According to Isaacson, Musk bragged that the legal maneuver saved him about $200 million. At this time, X has not responded to calls for it to comment about the lawsuit.

In the second piece of X news…which is more news you can use…Elon Musk turned on the platform’s new calling feature with no real notice or fanfare. TechCrunch.com says with audio and video calling on by default, the platform leaks your IP address to anyone you talk with…and it is difficult to figure out how to limit who can call you. The best thing to do for now is to go to settings, and slide the little calling switch to off until they get this worked out. If you see it in the upper right of your app, you can click on the phone icon and go to the calling feature directly and switch it off. X calling may become useful, but for now, protect yourself until they get this cleaned up. 

Apparently, it’s not enough to have Alexa, Siri, Google, and the rest talking to us. Now, OpenAI has added a Read Aloud feature for ChatGPT. Theverge.com notes that you have your choice of 5 voice options, too. The Read Aloud feature is available on the web version, and well as iOS and Android. It speaks 37 languages and will automatically detect the language of the text it is reading. By the way, it is available in both GPT-4 and GPT-3.5. You can also set up the chatbot to always respond verbally when replying to prompts. 

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