Go Here to Read this Fast! Marvel Rivals’ winter update adds new skins and a limited-time mode
Originally appeared here:
Marvel Rivals’ winter update adds new skins and a limited-time mode
Go Here to Read this Fast! Marvel Rivals’ winter update adds new skins and a limited-time mode
Originally appeared here:
Marvel Rivals’ winter update adds new skins and a limited-time mode
Go Here to Read this Fast! NASA orbiter captures one last image of retired InSight lander on Mars
Originally appeared here:
NASA orbiter captures one last image of retired InSight lander on Mars
Originally appeared here:
Techinline offers 20% off SetMe’s Professional plan for the first year: Try free now
Go Here to Read this Fast! Two 98-inch TCL TVs are 50% off today at Best Buy and Walmart
Originally appeared here:
Two 98-inch TCL TVs are 50% off today at Best Buy and Walmart
Snap is changing up its program that allows creators to make money from shortform videos. The company announced a new monetization program that will allow the app’s influencers to make money from Spotlight videos that are one minute or longer by earning a share of their content’s ad revenue.
The change will streamline Snap’s monetization features across Spotlight, its in-app TikTok competitor, and Stories, where Snap first launched its revenue sharing feature. It also means the company will end its Spotlight Reward Program, the creator fund-like arrangement that paid creators directly. That program will be discontinued January 30, 2025, with the new monetization arrangement taking effect February 1.
Snap announced the update as TikTok moves closer to an outright ban in the United States. The ByteDance-owned service is currently facing a January 19, 2025, deadline to sell or be banned f the Supreme Court doesn’t intervene. In its announcement, Snap notes that Spotlight viewership is “up 25% year-over-year” and that “there is a unique and growing opportunity for creators to monetize this format in the same way they do with Stories.”
Under the new “unified” program, creators are eligible to earn money from Spotlight videos or Stories if they meet the following requirements:
-Have at least 50,000 followers.
-Post at least 25 times per month to Saved Stories or Spotlight.
-Post to either Spotlight or Public Stories on at least 10 of the last 28 days.
-Achieve one of the following in the last 28 days:
-10 million Snap views
-1 million Spotlight views
-12,000 hours of view time
Some of those metrics are a bit higher than Snap’s previous requirements for Stories, which set the bar at only 10 Story posts a month. But, as TechCrunch notes, the new threshold is much higher for Spotlight creators, who could previously earn money from the company’s creator fund with only 1,000 followers and 10,000 unique views. The change also pushes creators to make longer content for Spotlight as they can no longer be paid for videos shorter than one minute.
If TikTok does end up being banned, Snap will be one of several platforms trying to lure creators to its product. And while the app is known primarily for its private messaging features, the company says that the number of people posting publicly has “more than tripled” in the last year, and that it will be “evolving and expanding the total rewards available to creators” going forward.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/snap-will-expand-ad-revenue-sharing-to-creators-on-spotlight-193029473.html?src=rss
Go Here to Read this Fast! Snap will expand ad revenue sharing to creators on Spotlight
Originally appeared here:
Snap will expand ad revenue sharing to creators on Spotlight
The Ray-Ban Meta Smart Glasses already worked well as a head-mounted camera and pair of open-ear headphones, but now Meta is updating the glasses with access to live AI without the need for a wake word, live translation between several different languages, and access to Shazam for identifying music.
Meta first demoed most of these features at Meta Connect 2024 in September. Live AI lets you start a “live session” with Meta AI that gives the assistant access to whatever you’re seeing and lets you ask questions without having to say “Hey Meta.” If you need your hands-free to cook or fix something, Live AI is supposed to keep your smart glasses useful even if you need to concentrate on whatever you’re doing.
Live translation lets your smart glasses translate between English and either French, Italian, or Spanish. If live translation is enabled and someone speaks to you in one of the selected languages, you’ll hear whatever they’re saying in English through the smart glasses’ speakers or as a typed transcript in the Meta View app. You’ll have to download specific models to translate between each language, and live translation needs to be enabled before it’ll actually act as an interpreter, but it does seem more natural than holding out your phone to translate something.
With Shazam integration, your Meta smart glasses will also be able to identify whatever song you hear playing around you. A simple “Meta, what is this song” will get the smart glasses’ microphones to figure out whatever you’re listening to, just like using Shazam on your smartphone.
All three updates baby-step the wearable towards Meta’s end goal of a true pair of augmented reality glasses that can replace your smartphone, an idea its experimental Orion hardware is a real-life preview of. Pairing AI and either VR and AR seems to be an idea multiple tech giants are circling, too. Google’s newest XR platform, Android XR, is built around the idea that a generative AI like Gemini could be the glue that makes VR or AR compelling. We’re still years away from any company being willing to actually alter your field of view with holographic images, but in the meantime smart glasses seem like a moderately useful stopgap.
All Ray-Ban Meta Smart Glasses owners will be able to enjoy Shazam integration as part of Meta’s v11 update. For live translation and live AI, you’ll need to be a part of Meta’s Early Access Program, which you can join right now at the company’s website.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ar-vr/meta-is-rolling-out-live-ai-and-shazam-integration-to-its-smart-glasses-192602898.html?src=rss
Go Here to Read this Fast! Meta is rolling out live AI and Shazam integration to its smart glasses
Originally appeared here:
Meta is rolling out live AI and Shazam integration to its smart glasses
If you’ve been waiting patiently to try ChatGPT Search, you won’t have to wait much longer. After rolling out to paid subscribers this fall, OpenAI announced Monday it would make the tool available to everyone, no Plus or Pro membership necessary, “over the coming months.”
At that point, all you need before you can start using ChatGPT Search is an OpenAI account. Once you’re logged in, and if your query calls for it, ChatGPT will automatically search the web for the latest information to answer your question. You can also force it to search the web, thanks to a handy new icon located right in the prompt bar. OpenAI has also added the option to make ChatGPT Search your browser’s default search engine.
At the same time, OpenAI is integrating ChatGPT Search and Advanced Voice mode together. As you might have guessed, the former allows ChatGPT’s audio persona to search the web for answers to your questions and answer them in a natural, conversational way. For example, say you’re traveling to a different city for vacation. You could ask ChatGPT what the weather will be like once you arrive, with the Search functionality built-in, the chatbot can answer that question with the most up-to-date information.
To facilitate this functionality, OpenAI says it has partnered with leading news and data providers. As a result, you’ll also see widgets for stocks, sports scores, the weather and more. Basically, ChatGPT Search is becoming a full-fledged Google competitor before our eyes.
OpenAI announced the expanded availability during its most recent “12 Days of OpenAI” livestream. In previous live streams, the company announced the general availability of Sora and ChatGPT Pro, a new $200 subscription for its chatbot. With four more days to go, it’s hard to see the company topping that announcement, but at this point, OpenAI likely has a surprise or two up its sleeve.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/chatgpt-is-getting-ready-to-roll-its-search-tool-out-to-everyone-184442971.html?src=rss
Go Here to Read this Fast! ChatGPT is getting ready to roll its Search tool out to everyone
Originally appeared here:
ChatGPT is getting ready to roll its Search tool out to everyone
In perhaps the least surprising news of the past six weeks, President-elect Donald Trump reportedly plans to roll back President Biden’s electric vehicle and emissions policies. Reuters reports that the incoming president’s transition team has recommended cutting off support for EVs and charging stations while boosting measures to block cars, components and battery materials from China.
The transition team’s other reported plans include new tariffs on all battery materials globally, boosting US production of battery materials and negotiations with allies for exemptions. They’re also said to plan on taking money allocated for building charging stations and making EVs more affordable and redirecting them to sourcing batteries and their required minerals from places other than China. In addition, they reportedly want to axe the Biden administration’s $7,500 tax credit for consumer EV purchases.
The plans would let automakers produce more gas-powered vehicles by reversing emissions and fuel economy standards, pushing them back to 2019 levels. Reuters says that would lead to around 25 percent more emissions per vehicle mile than the current limits. It would also lower the average car fuel economy by about 15 percent.
Climate scientists have stressed the importance of transitioning from gas-powered cars to EVs in reducing carbon emissions and fending off the most ravaging scenarios for the planet. Greenhouse gases, including those from vehicle emissions, build up in the atmosphere and warm the climate. That leads to a cascade of effects in the atmosphere, on land and in oceans — some of which we’re already seeing.
As for tariffs, economists have said Trump’s plans would likely spur multiple trade wars as countries retaliate with tariffs on American goods, disrupt supply chains and pierce the heart of America’s post-World War II alliances. “If we go down the tariff war path, we’re going down a very dark path for the economy,” Mark Zandi, the chief economist of Moody’s Analytics, told The New York Times in October.
The Biden administration has championed climate legislation like the Inflation Reduction Act, which allocated $369 billion for green initiatives, and EPA rules that require automakers to ramp up EV sales.
Meanwhile, Trump has called climate change a “hoax.” In May, he reportedly told a group of oil executives that he would immediately reverse dozens of Biden’s environmental rules while blocking new ones from being enacted. His asking price for such deregulation was that they raise $1 billion for his campaign. (Thanks, Citizens United!) So, while the reports about his transition team’s plans are still a gut punch to those who care about leaving the planet in a habitable state for future generations (and slowing the effects we’re already seeing), they aren’t exactly shocking to anyone paying attention.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/transportation/evs/trump-reportedly-plans-to-reverse-bidens-ev-policies-182206662.html?src=rss
Go Here to Read this Fast! Trump reportedly plans to reverse Biden’s EV policies
Originally appeared here:
Trump reportedly plans to reverse Biden’s EV policies
T-Mobile and Starlink are marching forward with their plan to offer cell service via the latter’s satellites. The companies received FCC approval for the project last month, and now the provider is opening up registrations for anyone who wants to beta test the creatively dubbed T-Mobile Starlink direct-to-cell satellite service.
The first beta test is slated for 2025. It will focus on text messaging at the outset. Voice and data connectivity is slated to become available at a later date. Any T-Mobile postpaid voice customers with a compatible device can sign up for the free beta. There are limited spots available, however, and the provider says it’s prioritizing first responder agencies and individuals for the program.
T-Mobile Starlink was previously granted emergency approval for a temporary activation to bolster communications during hurricanes Helene and Milton. “Even without the full constellation in place, customers with capable devices were able to receive critical emergency alerts and send and receive messages when satellites were overhead,” T-Mobile said. “The system proved helpful for many that lost mobile and/or broadband access and provided critical data that will help further refine service.”
With the help of Starlink, T-Mobile is planning to provide coverage to the 500,000 square miles of US land that’s not covered by terrestrial cell towers. The direct-to-cell satellite constellation is designed to integrate into T-Mobile’s existing network with the idea that it’ll work like regular cell service. Eventually, the provider says, T-Mobile Starlink will be “available in most outdoor areas where you can see the sky.”
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/mobile/t-mobile-opens-beta-test-signups-for-its-starlink-satellite-cell-service-175926913.html?src=rss
Go Here to Read this Fast! T-Mobile opens beta test signups for its Starlink satellite cell service
Originally appeared here:
T-Mobile opens beta test signups for its Starlink satellite cell service
The 2024 version of the Beats Pill is currently down to a record-low price of $100 from $150. This is part of a larger Beats promotion, which includes other Beats Pill models, Beats Solo 4 headphones and Beats Fit Pro true wireless earbuds.
The 2024 Beats Pill has a maximum speaker output of 100 watts, which is enough for outdoor listening. To help with the bass levels, the woofer can now displace 90 percent more air volume to deliver a fuller bass compared to the previous model. Beats doesn’t ignore the higher frequencies either, as the Pill has great highs and mids without much distortion even at higher volumes.
The 2024 Beats Pill has an IP67 rating against water and dust, making it suitable for outdoor use. The battery lasts a maximum of 24 hours, depending on how loud you’re playing your music. To prevent you from accidentally dropping it, the speaker comes with a removable lanyard.
The Beats Pill can be paired with another unit to produce a stereo effect, separating the left and right channels out to separate Pills. Besides Stereo mode, there’s Amplify mode, which plays the same audio through both speakers at the same volume.
Also, we listed the Beats Pill as one of the best portable Bluetooth speakers. It’s even capable of playing lossless audio through a USB-C connection.
Follow @EngadgetDeals on Twitter and subscribe to the Engadget Deals newsletter for the latest tech deals and buying advice.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/deals/the-latest-beats-pill-is-50-off-right-now-171539806.html?src=rss
Go Here to Read this Fast! The latest Beats Pill is $50 off right now
Originally appeared here:
The latest Beats Pill is $50 off right now