You can now play Jeopardy! on your Fire TV Stick. Volley, the developer of the Alexa version of the game show, launched a new edition for Amazon’s streaming device on Thursday. Unlike the voice assistant edition, this one lets you see the clues onscreen, which I have to imagine makes it much more enjoyable. Of course, you also get a familiar view of the 60-year-old show’s iconic game board.
The game is only available through the developer’s new Volley Games app for Fire OS, which requires a $13 monthly subscription. Jeopardy! is exclusively voice-powered, apart from holding the voice button on the Alexa Voice Remote when you want to answer (in the form of a question, of course).
Volley
Although the photo above hints that the game might support local multiplayer, the developer says the feature won’t be available at launch but “will be coming soon.” (However, it’s hard to imagine how that will work without buying extra remotes so everyone can buzz in.) For now, the only way to play with friends is to work as a team or take turns with the remote.
Tesla has reported its first-ever decline in annual deliveries. The total number of deliveries for 2024 hovers at around 1.78 million, but the company delivered 1.81 million vehicles in 2023. Company shares fell by as much as seven percent at the news, but has since rallied a couple of points. This follows similar news from Q1 of 2024, but that was just for a single quarter.
Q4 showed a slight uptick in deliveries, with 495,000 this year and 484,000 in 2023. However, analysts had predicted a more robust final quarter, according to reporting by CNBC. These analysts expected Q4 deliveries to be somewhere in the range of 506,000. Tesla doesn’t publish actual sales numbers in the US, so these delivery metrics are the closest we get.
Numbers are also down in Europe, with a 14 percent decline in 2024 when compared to last year. This is according to registration data from the European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association.
We don’t have a concrete reason as to why Tesla deliveries have started to falter, but there are a myriad of options. The company still hasn’t made a budget-friendly EV, instead focusing its energies on the oft-maligned Cybertruck and dreams of robotic taxis. Patrick George, editor in chief of InsideEVs, told CNBC that Cybertrucks have begun “piling up on used car lots.”
Sales of Tesla’s radical got off to a great start, but they seem to have slowed down.https://t.co/4BWTa21Mrd
The company is also no longer the only EV game in town. It faces steep competition from rival upstarts like Rivian, but also legacy manufacturers. Entities like BMW, GM, Hyundai and Volkswagen have all begun cranking out electric vehicles in large numbers. Finally, there’s the Elon Musk of it all.
Tesla’s stock still finished strong for the year, with a 60 percent increase from 2023. Shares actually hit a new high in December, dwarfing the previous all-time high from 2021.
In other news, I do not understand stocks. Ford, which sold 1.72 million vehicles in the US by Q3, is worth under $10 per share. Tesla is currently trading at $380 per share, all while selling significantly fewer vehicles than Ford and, well, just about every other major automobile manufacturer. Maybe rival stocks would shoot up if the big US auto companies started putting more effort into humanoid robots that don’t actually do anything.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/transportation/evs/tesla-reports-its-first-ever-annual-drop-in-deliveries-163154201.html?src=rss
Ahead of the official start of CES, Samsung has announced a trio of new Odyssey gaming monitors. Of the bunch, the G81SF is the most interesting. Samsung says it’s the first 4K, 27-inch OLED gaming monitor. The panel features a 240Hz refresh rate and 0.03ms gray-to-gray pixel response time.
At 4K and 27 inches, pixel density clocks in at 165 pixels per inch, meaning the G81SF should produce an incredibly sharp image. As Samsung is the main supplier of QD-OLEDs, the G81SF’s panel will almost certainly make its way to other gaming monitors released this year. With CES 2025 about to kick off, some of those could be announced as early as sometime in the next few days.
If you don’t want to sacrifice motion clarity for sharpness, Samsung has you covered there too. The second new Odyssey gaming monitor the company announced, the G60SF, features a 500Hz refresh rate. Resolution is limited to 2,560 x 1,440 on this model, but both the G6 and the G8 detailed above will offer VESA True Black 400-certified HDR performance, so the G60SF will still be great for single player games and exceptional for competitive titles like Overwatch 2 and Valorant, thanks to that 500Hz refresh rate.
Samsung
Rounding out the new Odyssey monitors Samsung announced today is something of a curio and a CES throwback. The 27-inch G90XF has a lenticular lens attached to the front of its panel and stereo camera, meaning you can use it to watch 3D content without wearing 3D glasses. The G90XF includes AI software Samsung says can convert 2D video to 3D, but if we had to guess, the resulting footage won’t look great.
If you primarily use your computer for productivity, Samsung hasn’t forgotten you and the company’s new offerings here aren’t any less interesting. First, there’s the Smart Monitor M9 (M90SF). It features a 32-inch 4K OLED panel that offers True Black 400 HDR performance. It also comes with Samsung’s space-saving Easy Setup Stand, but what separates the M90SF from all the other monitors Samsung announced today are the couple of AI features that come included with it. The first, dubbed AI Picture Optimizer, analyzes the input signal from your PC to automatically adjust the M9’s display settings to produce the best image possible for the content you’re consuming, be that a game, movie or productivity app. The other feature can upscale lower-resolution content to 4K.
Lastly, there’s the ViewFinity S8. It’s not an OLED, but at 37 inches, it’s the largest 16:9 4K monitor Samsung has ever offered. It offers 99 percent sRGB color gamut coverage, a built-in KVM switch and 90W USB-C power delivery. It’s not the most exciting monitor in Samsung’s new lineup, but it should appeal to design professionals who want the biggest possible screen but would rather not deal with the line distortion produced by an ultrawide.
Samsung did not share pricing and availability information for any of the monitors it announced today. Expect those details to come sometime after CES.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/the-first-27-inch-4k-gaming-oled-monitor-is-here-courtesy-of-samsung-155118244.html?src=rss
The US Treasury Department told lawmakers in a letter back in December that its documents and workstations were accessed by an external party in a security breach. It described the attack as “a major cybersecurity incident” and attributed it to a “China state-sponsored Advanced Persistent Threat actor.” Now, The Washington Post has reported that the bad actors infiltrated a “highly sensitive office” within the Treasury in charge of deliberating and administering US government sanctions.
As The Post explains, the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) is in possession of some important information that could be very useful to another country’s government. While the hackers were only able to steal unclassified data, they could still have gotten their hands on the identities of potential sanction targets. They could also have stolen pieces of evidence that the agency had collected as part of its investigation on entities that the government is thinking of sanctioning. Overall, the attackers could have gotten enough information to give them the knowledge of how the US develops sanctions against foreign entities.
In addition to OFAC, the Office of the Treasury Secretary and the Office of Financial Research were also affected by the breach. The attackers infiltrated the Treasury’s systems by gaining access to a key used by BeyondTrust, a cloud-based service that provides the department with technical support.
The US government has attributed numerous cyberattacks on its agencies and American companies to China state-sponsored actors over the years. Just last year, the FBI blamed “PRC-affiliated actors” for a massive hack on US telecom companies. The actors, a group known as Salt Typhoon, reportedly targeted the mobile devices of diplomats, government officials and other people linked to both presidential campaigns. According to The Post, Chinese officials called claims that their country was involved in the attack on the Treasury Department “groundless” and insisted that their government “has always opposed all forms of hacker attacks.”
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/cybersecurity/china-linked-attack-on-us-treasury-department-reportedly-targeted-its-sanctions-office-150033082.html?src=rss
The ink has barely dried on our 2024 highlights roundup (it’s never too late to browse it, of course), and here we are, ready to dive headfirst into a fresh year of learning, growth, and exploration.
We have a cherished tradition of devoting the first edition of the year to our most inspiring—and accessible—resources for early-stage data science and machine learning professionals (wereallydo!). We continue it this year with a selection of top-notch recent articles geared at beginner-level learners and job seekers. For the rest of our readers, we’re thrilled to kick things off with a trio of excellent posts from industry veterans who reflect on the current state of data science and AI, and share their opinionated, bold predictions for what the year ahead might look like. Let’s get started!
2025: Ready, Set, Go!
Top 10 Data & AI Trends for 2025 As the co-founder and CEO of Monte Carlo, few people are as well-positioned as Barr Moses to observe industry shifts and emerging trends—so her annual forecast should definitely be on your to-read list.
Ten Predictions for Data Science and AI in 2025 From Jason Tamara Widjaja, here’s another set of insightful reflections: “My predictions for 2025 attempt to provide a view of the tensions of AI, taking an unpopular but balanced view as someone whose work depends not on selling AI, but on implementing AI well — and living through the consequences of our decisions.”
Causality — Mental Hygiene for Data Science Taking a few steps back from the more nitty-gritty aspects of data science work, Eyal Kazin’s recent deep dive constitutes a “gentle intro” to the intricate art of detecting, interpreting, and applying causality.
100 Years of (eXplainable) AI Beyond the whats and hows of day-to-day work, there are also the whys: why did this model produce these outputs? Sofya Lipnitskaya’s explainer unpacks the history of AI explainability in the context of the recent rise of LLMs.
How to Build a General-Purpose LLM Agent To end on a more hands-on note—and to satisfy the curiosity of all of you who’ve heard the buzz around AI agents—we highly recommend Maya Murad’s step-by-step guide, which can form “the groundwork for designing your own custom agentic architecture” down the line.
Thank you for supporting the work of our authors! As we mentioned above, we love publishing articles from new authors; if contributing to TDS in 2025 is one of your new year’s resolutions—or even if you’ve just recently written an interesting project walkthrough, tutorial, or theoretical reflection on any of our core topics—don’t hesitate to share it with us.
Bitcoin dropped, crashed, and burned – then it skyrocketed. My $50 investment went through the wringer. Here’s how 2024’s halving event and political shifts turned massive losses into unexpected gains.
I invested $50 in Bitcoin in 2022, and it’s been a ride. Here’s how much I have now
Originally appeared here:
I invested $50 in Bitcoin in 2022, and it’s been a ride. Here’s how much I have now
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