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3 underrated (HBO) Max movies you should watch this weekend (December 13-15)
Tag: tech
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3 underrated (HBO) Max movies you should watch this weekend (December 13-15)
Need something good to watch this weekend? Then stream these (HBO) Max movies starring Bruce Willis, Liam Neeson, Robert Pattinson, and others. -
F-Secure Total review: affordable antivirus solution lets you build custom plan
I went hands-on with F-Secure Total, a low-cost customizable antivirus solution to find out how well it protects your computer from malware.Originally appeared here:
F-Secure Total review: affordable antivirus solution lets you build custom plan -
Save $250 on the active-focused Garmin Fenix 7X Pro today
The Garmin Fenix 7X Pro is a great high-end smartwatch which is better than the Apple Watch Ultra in many ways. It’s currently on sale at Garmin.Go Here to Read this Fast! Save $250 on the active-focused Garmin Fenix 7X Pro today
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Save $250 on the active-focused Garmin Fenix 7X Pro today -
3 great Hulu movies you need to stream this weekend (December 13-15)
Dancing, romance, period drama, and a dark comedy are all in the cards among the three great Hulu movies that you need to stream this weekend.Go Here to Read this Fast! 3 great Hulu movies you need to stream this weekend (December 13-15)
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3 great Hulu movies you need to stream this weekend (December 13-15) -
Hayley Atwell to reprise her role as Agent Carter for Avengers: Doomsday
Hayley Atwell is returning to Marvel. The actress will reprise her role as Agent Peggy Carter in Avengers: Doomsday.Go Here to Read this Fast! Hayley Atwell to reprise her role as Agent Carter for Avengers: Doomsday
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Hayley Atwell to reprise her role as Agent Carter for Avengers: Doomsday -
Fun for the holidays: This Sony PSVR2 bundle is $250 off
The Sony PlayStation VR2 Horizon Call of the Mountain bundle is down to just $350 right now at Best Buy. Here’s why it’s a good buy.Go Here to Read this Fast! Fun for the holidays: This Sony PSVR2 bundle is $250 off
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Fun for the holidays: This Sony PSVR2 bundle is $250 off -
OpenAI published more of Elon Musk’s emails if that’s something you want to read
OpenAI published receipts, in the form of a long timeline of emails, texts and legal filings, illustrating that Elon Musk’s injunction to prevent OpenAI from converting into a for-profit company runs counter to what he wanted in 2017. Essentially, OpenAI is providing even more evidence to the fact that its former co-founder wanted the AI startup to become a for-profit company and make him CEO.
You should read the whole blog to get all of the details (and get a sense for how billionaires email) but the gist is that in 2017, Musk and OpenAI came to an understanding that the then non-profit needed to become a for-profit to “advance its mission” and seemingly capitalize on the public interest earned from its AI beating professional Dota 2 players in one-on-one matches. According to OpenAI, Musk proposed a new board structure where he “would unequivocally have initial control of the company,” which OpenAI was opposed to. That led to the disagreements between Musk and OpenAI leadership, and him ultimately leaving the nonprofit’s board in 2018. xAI, Musk’s AI startup that’s a direct competitor to OpenAI, was started in 2023.
It’s pretty clear what OpenAI is trying to do here. Musk first sued OpenAI in March 2024 over the company’s dealings with Microsoft and the belief they violated its non-profit status. He dropped the suit not long after OpenAI published a blog with emails that suggested Musk wanted OpenAI to either merge with Tesla or make him CEO. OpenAI’s new blog expands on all those details with new material and seems set up to achieve a similar effect.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/openai-published-more-of-elon-musks-emails-if-thats-something-you-want-to-read-225614986.html?src=rss
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OpenAI published more of Elon Musk’s emails if that’s something you want to read -
Bosch signs agreement for up to $225 million in CHIPS Act funding
Bosch is the latest recipient of (preliminary) CHIPS and Science Act funding. The company signed a non-binding agreement with the US Commerce Department and could receive up to $225 million in funding.
Lest you think Amazon’s gruff crime solver somehow got a piece of the action, Bosch is also a German multinational corporation that makes… just about everything under the sun. (That even includes a stink-removal machine!) The company recently accelerated its silicon development, buying TSI Semiconductors in 2023 and finalizing the deal early this year. But instead of focusing on cutting-edge silicon for computers, phones and AI, Bosch specializes in chips for the auto industry.
The company plans to use the funds on the Roseville, CA facility it acquired in the TSI deal. The company will invest up to $1.9 billion to convert the plant into one that spits out silicon carbide (SiC) semiconductors, which are used to boost the efficiency of EV driving and charging. Bosch expects the first 200mm wafers to come off the line there in 2026.
“The Roseville investment enables Bosch to locally produce silicon carbide semiconductors, supporting US consumers on the path to electrification,” Paul Thomas, president of Bosch in North America and Bosch Mobility Americas, wrote in a statement.
Bosch’s Roseville, CA silicon plant BoschIn addition to boosting America’s primacy in the chip industry, the CHIPS Act’s other goal is job creation. The White House says the proposed funding would create up to 1,700 jobs, including 1,000 in construction and 700 in manufacturing, engineering and R&D.
“Today’s agreement catalyzes nearly $2 billion of private investment and the creation of over 1,700 jobs, while investing in a critical technology relied upon on by our defense and auto industry,” wrote Natalie Quillian, the White House Deputy Chief of Staff.
In November, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), the world’s leading advanced chip maker, was the first to have its CHIPS Act grants (to the tune of $6.6 billion) finalized. Other recipients include Intel (although its funding was recently cut), HP, Samsung, GlobalFoundries, Texas Instruments and Rocket Lab.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/bosch-signs-agreement-for-up-to-225-million-in-chips-act-funding-211031263.html?src=rss
Go Here to Read this Fast! Bosch signs agreement for up to $225 million in CHIPS Act funding
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Bosch signs agreement for up to $225 million in CHIPS Act funding -
Google’s NotebookLM Audio Overviews will now let you call in with a question
Google’s NotebookLM made a pretty big splash with its AI-generated podcast feature Audio Overviews, and before the year is out the app is getting another upgrade. As part of a larger redesign of Google’s AI notebook tool, Audio Overviews are now interactive.
After generating an Audio Overview based on the sources you’ve uploaded, Google says you’ll be able to play the recording in a new “Interactive mode (BETA).” Clicking “Join” at any point in that new playback screen will get the AI hosts to call on you to ask a question, which they’ll answer live while you’re listening back. Google cautions that the feature is still experimental and that hosts might pause awkwardly or introduce new inaccuracies while answering questions, but it seemed to work well in a brief test. I was able to create a NotebookLM project trained on articles about NotebookLM, and while asking a question did seem to slow the whole Overview down, the AI hosts were able to smoothly incorporate an answer into the rest of the show.
Alongside these new expanded features, NotebookLM is getting a bit of a visual overhaul. The interface is now split into three sections, a “Studio” panel where AI-generated content like Audio Overviews, study guides, and FAQs live, a central “Chat” panel for asking questions about your sources to Google’s AI, and a “Sources” panel on the left for managing what sources NotebookLM pulls from. It’s a pretty clean setup, and being able to collapse a panel when you’re not using it keeps things from getting cluttered.
Google is also using these updates as a way to introduce its first pass at monetizing NotebookLM. A new NotebookLM Plus premium subscription is available to Google Workspace and Cloud customers as a Gemini add-on, and will give you the ability to generate up to 20 Audio Overviews per day, create up to 500 AI notebooks, and add up to 300 sources per notebook. That translates to an additional $20 per user per month for Workspace subscribers. Starting next year, NotebookLM Plus benefits will also be rolled into the Google One AI Premium subscription.
GoogleNotebookLM started as an internal Google experiment called Project Tailwind, but quickly blossomed into one of the more reasonable applications of Google’s Gemini AI model thanks to its grounding in sources you upload, rather than the web and whatever scraped material Gemini was originally trained on. It’s capable of working with anything from web articles to YouTube videos, but its Audio Overviews have proven to be one of its most popular features.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/googles-notebooklm-audio-overviews-will-now-let-you-call-in-with-a-question-210700150.html?src=rss
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Google’s NotebookLM Audio Overviews will now let you call in with a question -
A US Congressman tried (and failed) to fake his Spotify Wrapped for political gain
There are some things you just don’t do in certain parts of the US. You don’t use inferior salsa during a cattle drive in Texas. You don’t eat pizza with a knife and fork in New York City. You don’t yell “Belichick is a big, fat cheater!” in a crowded Boston bar (even if it happens to be true).
And if you’re in New Jersey or just America in general, you NEVER take the holy name of Bruce Springsteen in vain in ANY manner. So it’s bewildering why one New Jersey representative would even think about faking his listening habits when it comes to The Boss.
9to5Mac spotted a curious looking post on X from US Rep. Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ). The congressman shared what appeared to be his Spotify Wrapped playlist for the year, with one list consisting of Springsteen’s classic tracks like “Glory Days” and “Thunder Road” and the other filled with tracks from various hip hop stars. He tried to cement his esteem for Springsteen in his post by saying his “first ever concert was at Meadowlands to see The Boss!” Well, it didn’t take long for the internet and anyone who’s ever used Spotify to figure out that he faked the whole list just to kiss up to his constituents.
Yikes… pic.twitter.com/bTEkSodA9u
— Sebastian (@SebastianRios68) December 9, 2024
Gottheimer’s list included such glaring mistakes as inconsistent font sizes, improper spacing between the albums on his lists and the fact that both lists were titled “Your top songs” even though one only had Springsteen albums. He didn’t even use the same font type or size for all of his track and album entries.
So how did Gottheimer handle this musical faux pas with the press? He dug in his heels on his Springsteen tracks and blamed his two kids for the rest. He admitted to NJ Advance Media that he made a fake Spotify Wrapped list but says the tracks on each list are accurate because he shares an account with his children because that’s easier than going back in time and setting up a family plan.
“This would be my Spotify Wrapped if I didn’t share my account with my 12 and 15-year old kids,” Gottheimer told the outlet. “While it’s Springsteen all day for me — don’t get me wrong, I still love listening to Taylor Swift!”
Gottheimer has since taken the post down and replaced it with a list of his most listened to Springsteen tracks. He’s trying to save face because he’s in a heated race for governor and if you want a solid shot at moving into New Jersey’s governor mansion, then you need to make your love for The Boss known far and wide across the Garden State. If Gottheimer is also going for the “Dad who makes his kids cringe at their music choices” vote, then he’s a lock.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/a-us-congressman-tried-and-failed-to-fake-his-spotify-wrapped-for-political-gain-205516508.html?src=rss
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A US Congressman tried (and failed) to fake his Spotify Wrapped for political gain