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    An Interview with Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg About AI and the Evolution of Social Media
    An Interview with Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg About AI and the Evolution of Social Media Thursday, May 1, 2025 Listen to Podcast Listen to this post: Good morning, Today’s Stratechery Interview is with Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who obviously needs no introduction; I interviewed Zuckerberg previously in October 2021 and October 2022. Some quick context about this interview: I spoke to Zuckerberg in person at Meta Headquarters on Monday afternoon (which makes this one worth listening to), before the LlamaCon keynote on Tuesday and Meta’s earnings on Wednesday; I was briefed about some of the LlamaCon announcements, and had access to the new Meta AI app. In addition, just before the interview I was informed about Zuckerberg’s interview with Dwarkesh Patel, which is very centered on discussions of AI models, competitors, etc.; I am happy to point you there for more in-depth discussions about Llama model specifics that we didn’t touch on in this interview. What we did discuss were broader themes that place Llama in Meta’s historical context. We cover Meta’s platform ambitions over the last two decades, the evolution of social networking, and how Zuckerberg has changed his thinking about both. We discuss the Llama API and the tension between GPU opportunity cost and leveraging training costs, and why Zuckerberg thinks that the latter is worth paying for, even if the company has to go it alone. We also discuss why Meta AI may actually bring many of Zuckerberg’s oldest ideas full circle, how that ties into Reality Labs, and why Meta ended up being the perfect name for the company. As a reminder, all Stratechery content, including interviews, is available as a podcast; click the link at the top of this email to add Stratechery to your podcast player. On to the Interview: An Interview with Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg About AI and the Evolution of Social Media This interview is lightly edited for clarity. From f8 to LlamaCon Mark Zuckerberg, welcome back to Stratechery. Mark Zuckerberg: Thanks for having me. So the occasion for this interview is LlamaCon, a new Meta developer conference. Before I get to that, I wanted to touch on the history of Facebook conferences. So there was F8 from 2007 to 2019, skipped a couple years, prominent announcements included the original Facebook platform, the Open Graph, Parse, there’s a whole bunch of them. It’s interesting though, the vast majority of these are either dead or massively constrained according to the original vision. If you think about this — I dropped this on you out of the blue… MZ: It’s a great start to the conversation. Is that a disappointment or is that a lesson learned? And how do you think about that? MZ: No. Well look, the original Facebook platform was something that really just made sense for web, and it was sort of a pre-mobile thing. As the usage transitioned from desktop web to mobile, Apple basically just said, “You can’t have a platform within a platform and you can’t have apps that use your stuff”. So that whole thing, which had grown to be a meaningful part of our business — I think by the time that we had our IPO in 2012, I think games and apps were about 20% of our business — but that basically just didn’t have much of a future. So we played with different versions of it around Connect and Sign In to different apps and— Yeah, the one that’s definitely still around is Sign In with Facebook. MZ: Yeah, and there’s some connectivity between that and developers wanting to get installs for their apps and doing things like that. But it just got very thin, and it was one of these things that I think it’s really just an artifact of Apple’s policies that I think has led to this deep bitterness around not just this, but a number of things where they’ve just said, “Okay, you can’t do these things that we think would be valuable”, which I think to some degree contributes to some of that dynamic between our company and theirs. I think that’s unfortunate. I think a more open mobile— But there’s a good argument, I made it back then I think in 2013, that this is a great thing for you, it forced you to become what you became. MZ: Well, maybe I think we would’ve become that and also done more. The number of times when we basically I think could have built different experiences into our apps, but we’re just told that we couldn’t, I think it’s hard to look back and think that that created value for the people we’re serving or who were building for. But anyhow, fast-forward to Llama… Yeah, well there is Meta Connect. Is the metaverse still a thing? MZ: Yeah, no, absolutely. We wanted a whole event where we could talk about all of the VR and AR stuff that we wanted to do. Yeah, that one’s straightforward, that’s clearly a platform. MZ: Part of the reason why we wanted to do LlamaCon is— Yeah, you’re anticipating my question. Where is LlamaCon now, the new developer conference? MZ: They’re just different products. Connect around AR and VR attracts a certain type of developer and a certain type of people who are interested in that, and obviously everything is sort of AI going forward too. Like the glasses, the Ray-Ban Meta glasses are AI glasses, but it’s a certain type of product. And for people who are primarily focused around building with Llama, we thought it would be useful to have a whole event that was just focused on that, so we made LlamaCon. It is actually interesting going through the history with F8 and the platform, because obviously a big part of Llama is that it’s open source, and a big part of why we believe in building an open platform is partially the legacy of what’s happened with mobile platforms and all of, from our perspective, pretty arbitrary restrictions that have been placed on developers. I think that’s one of the reasons why developers really want to use open models. In some ways, it has historically been easier to just get an API from OpenAI or Anthropic or someone, but then you have to deal with the fact that they can just change the API on you overnight and then your app changes, and they can censor what you’re doing with your apps and if they don’t like a query that you’re sending them, then they can just say, “Okay, we’re not going to answer that”, you can’t customize their model as much. So there are all these things that open source allows there that I think we’ve become even more attuned to because of the previous closed platforms that we’ve built on top of that have made us even more wanting to invest in that. But I think that’s why open source AI is taking off in such a huge way. And of course now it’s not just Llama, you have all these different Chinese models too, DeepSeek and others. I predicted that 2025 was going to be the year that open source became the largest type of model that people are developing with, and I think that’s probably going to be the case. That’s kind of how we’re thinking about this overall. The Llama API Well, one announcement, which at least when you were talking to me before, you insist it’s small, but I’m not sure it’s going to be taken that way, is this Llama API, what is it and why come out with it now? MZ: Oh, I don’t think it’s small. It’s not necessarily a business that we’re trying to build. Got it. MZ: Which I think is the main thing that people assume whenever you launch a paid API. The main thing that we hear, people love open source for the reasons that I just said, where they want something that they control, that they can customize, that no one is going to take away from them, that they can use however they want, it’s more efficient, it’s cheaper. All these things that are values. The downside of open source until today is that— No one actually wants to host it. MZ: Is that it takes work to host, right? Yeah. The downside is that it’s much simpler to just make an API call to some established service. Now, there are, of course, a bunch of companies that have made their businesses hosting different models, including open source models, and some of those, I think, are better than others. We went through the Llama 4 launch recently, I think we learned a bunch about how to roll that out. But I think one of the things that didn’t go well was just because we dropped the model and a bunch of the API providers kind of had a bunch of bugs in their implementation, so a lot of the first tests that people had with Llama 4 were using these external API providers that had issues with the implementation. That was pretty recently, though. Did you make the decision that quickly that actually, “No, we need to have a reference API here”? MZ: No, I was more using that as an example. But even as far back as Llama 3, you can find a lot of people talking about online. “Okay, I want an API provider who’s just providing an unquantized version of the 405B. It’s really hard for me to tell what types of quantization or what kind of shortcuts different API providers are taking, the quality is variable, we just want a good source”. So I think that having a broad ecosystem of API providers is good, and a lot of them do really interesting things, like Groq, for example. Basically with their vertical integration of their building custom silicon to do low latency, it’s really a compelling thing. You were talking about Groq, the chip, here, not Grok the AI model. MZ: Yeah, Grok is also interesting, [xAI Founder and CEO] Elon [Musk]’s thing, but I’m talking about the chip company. Their business today, they build the chips, they build a vertically integrated service that offers a really low latency API, it’s really cool. I think having an ecosystem where there are companies like that that can use open source models is great. But I guess just to probably give the topic sentence that I should have given a couple minutes ago when you asked the question, the goal of the Llama API is to provide a reference implementation for the industry. We’re not trying to build a huge business around this, we’re basically trying to make a very simple API that is like vanilla, and people know that it is the model that we intended to build, and that it works, and that you can just drop in your API call for the OpenAI API or whatever else you were using, and you just replace that with the URL for this and that works. Also there isn’t a huge markup, we’re basically offering this at basically our cost of capital. Well, if there isn’t a huge markup, this sounds like it could become a pretty big business, then. MZ: Well, it won’t become very profitable for us. Yeah, I know. You’re out there, “Just maybe this little thing, we’re not going to charge very much for it”, I’m not sure those two things are in line. MZ: What do you mean? Well, if you’re not charging very much for it, why doesn’t everybody just go use yours instead of use it from another cloud provider? MZ: Well, in theory, other companies that have this be their whole business should be able to make more interesting and valuable offerings. So we were talking a second ago about Groq that is building custom silicon to do inference for latency-specific optimization. Right. But a lot of Llama use is on AWS, for example. MZ: Sure. And AWS obviously has the value of, they have this whole breadth of services that you are already using for different stuff if you’re an AWS customer. So if you’re just building an app and you don’t have a lock-in to any cloud, this will be the easiest, cheapest solution? MZ: Yeah. If you want to play with something and you want to know, “Okay, I want to get started with the Llama 4 models, what’s the reference implementation that I know is going to work?”, you can come to this, it will work. And then over time, I would expect that people will play around and optimize for their own use across different services, hosting themselves, whatever kinds of different things once they get to scale. But I think having a reference implementation that’s easy to use is something that the open source ecosystem needs. If someone gets on there and blows up, are you going to say, “You’re getting a little too big, you need to go somewhere else”? MZ: I don’t know, we haven’t thought that through that much. (laughing) TBD? MZ: Yeah, we haven’t thought that through that much. I think one of the things for us in this is that it’s like, “Why haven’t we built an API yet as a business?”. Yeah, that’s my next question. MZ: Why haven’t we built a cloud business overall? Especially if you’re going to look at this and say, “Yeah, you need to gain leverage on your training costs, you’re spending all this money to train Llama, you need to start making money in more ways from that investment”. MZ: Yeah, I think the dynamic around our business that has been interesting is that it has always been a higher marginal return to allocate incremental GPUs to either better recommendations of content and feeds or ads. Yeah, that’s my view. I’ve defended you not having an API for that very reason. MZ: Exactly. So now in this case, we think it’s valuable if Llama grows, and we think that having a reference implementation API is a valuable thing for it growing. So we think that this is a thing that needs to exist, but that economics is why I’m not looking at this as a large business. I think if this ends up consuming a massive, massive number of GPUs, you can make an argument that if it’s profitable, then that’s good and we should just do that and all the recommendation stuff that we do. Right, there’s opportunity costs these days. MZ: And obviously you can’t ever perfectly forecast how many GPUs you should build. So in practice, we’re always making these calculations internally, which is like, “All right, should I give the Instagram Reels team more GPUs or should I give this other team more GPUs to build the thing that they’re doing?”, and I would guess that having an API business is going to be pretty low on the list of things that we want to pull recommendations service GPUs away from towards. But that said, we have a huge fleet, right? Gigawatts of data centers and all that. So having a very small amount of that go towards a reference implementation to help make it simple for people to start using open source AI seems like a good thing to do. But again, that’s kind of the big picture. If someone gets really big, there might be some conversations to be had. MZ: We’ll see, we’ll see. We’ll get there when we get there. MZ: I think in general in this kind of business, you’re happy when people grow big and scale. No, of course. It’s a good problem to have. I just think it’s really interesting to think about this cost issue where you are talking about the concern and why I share that concern is the inference. You can use those GPUs for your own usage, versus them, so there’s a real trade-off here, but the other issue that I just mentioned before is the cost of the training, and you’re spending billions of dollars to train a model, how do you maximize your return on that training? That’s why a lot of investors, I think, like the idea of you doing an API. Another option that’s been rumored out there, lots of other companies are finding benefit from Llama, should they be contributing more to training? Is that something that you are looking to pursue? Are there going to be any takers? MZ: We’ve talked to some folks about that, and so far it hasn’t come together. It may as the cost keeps scaling, but so far it actually seems like the number of efforts actually are still proliferating. Right. MZ: So companies that I would’ve expected would’ve wanted to kind of get on board with Llama as an open source standard and then be able to save costs have actually turned around and spun up new efforts to build up their own models, so we’ll see how that turns out. I’d guess that in the next couple of years, the training runs are going to be on gigawatt clusters, and I just think that there will be consolidation. People are going to bow out at some point. MZ: But look, I’m doing our financial planning assuming that we’re paying the cost of this, so it’s upside if we end up being able to share it with other people, but we don’t need it. Right. MZ: I think that that’s one of the things that is kind a positive for us. And I can kind of take you through the business case, if that’s helpful on this. Meta’s AI Opportunity (Part 1) Well, I do want to ask about your open source strategy generally. On one hand, as an overall observer of the industry, I’m really quite grateful for it, and I think you really opened up the floodgates for this, I think overcame some perhaps well-intentioned, but misplaced reticence about the broad availability of these models. On the other hand, large companies have been major contributors to open source, including Facebook, including Meta. You’ve compared Llama to the Open Compute Project. In that case, you had data centers all over the world adopting your standards, you had hardware makers building to them, all of which accrued to your bottom line at the end of the day and to your point, you’re not a data center provider, so it’s all gravy. I guess the question for Llama is, what are the economic payoffs from this open sourcing, particularly when you think about, “Well, maybe we do want to tune it to ourselves”. Is it just a branding thing? Is it just that researchers like that it’s open source? Particularly the economic part of it. MZ: The decision to open source is downstream from the decision to build it, right? We’re not building it so that we can open source it for developers, we’re building it because it’s a thing that we believe that we need in order to build the services that we want. And then, there’s this whole question of like, “Do you need to be at the frontier? Can you be six months behind or whatever?”, and I believe that over time, you want to be at the frontier. Especially one of the dynamics that we’re seeing around — there are a couple of things. One is that you’re starting to see some specialization, so the different companies are better at different things and focusing on different things, and our use cases are just going to be a little bit different from others. I think at the scale that we operate, it just makes sense to build something that is really tuned for your usage. What are the specifics that are important for you? MZ: This is going to take us a little afield from the question that I was just answering. That’s fine. MZ: I basically think that there are four major product and business opportunities that are the things that we’re looking at and I’ll start from the most simplest and probably the ones that are the easiest to do to the things that are further afield from where we are today. So most basic of the four. Use AI to make it so that the ads business goes a lot better. Yeah. MZ: Improve recommendations, make it so that any business that basically wants to achieve some business outcome can just come to us, not have to produce any content, not have to know anything about their customers. Can just say, “Here’s the business outcome that I want, here’s what I’m willing to pay, I’m going to connect you to my bank account, I will pay you for as many business outcomes as you can achieve”. Right? Best black box of all time. MZ: Yeah, it is basically like the ultimate business agent, and if you think about the pieces of advertising, there’s content creation, the creative, there’s the targeting, and there’s the measurement and probably the first pieces that we started building were the measurement to basically make it so that we can effectively have a business that’s organized around when we’re delivering results for people instead of just showing them impressions. Outcomes, yeah. MZ: And then, we start off with basic targeting. Over the last 5 to 10 years, we’ve basically gotten to the point where we effectively discourage businesses from trying to limit the targeting. It used to be that a business would come to us and say like, “Okay, I really want to reach women aged 18 to 24 in this place”, and we’re like, “Okay. Look, you can suggest to us…” Right. But I promise you, we’ll find more people at a cheaper rate. MZ: If they really want to limit it, we have that as an option. But basically, we believe at this point that we are just better at finding the people who are going to resonate with your product than you are. And so, there’s that piece. But there’s still the creative piece, which is basically businesses come to us and they have a sense of what their message is or what their video is or their image, and that’s pretty hard to produce and I think we’re pretty close. And the more they produce, the better. Because then, you can test it, see what works. Well, what if you could just produce an infinite number? MZ: Yeah, or we just make it for them. I mean, obviously, it’ll always be the case that they can come with a suggestion or here’s the creative that they want, especially if they really want to dial it in. But in general, we’re going to get to a point where you’re a business, you come to us, you tell us what your objective is, you connect to your bank account, you don’t need any creative, you don’t need any targeting demographic, you don’t need any measurement, except to be able to read the results that we spit out. I think that’s going to be huge, I think it is a redefinition of the category of advertising. So if you think about what percent of GDP is advertising today, I would expect that that percent will grow. Because today, advertising is sort of constrained to like, “All right, I’m buying a billboard or a commercial…” Right. I think it was always either 1% or 2%, but digital advertising has already increased that. MZ: It has grown, but I wouldn’t be surprised if it grew by a very meaningful amount. I’m with you. You’re preaching to the choir, everyone should embrace the black box. Just go there, I’m with you. So what’s number two? MZ: Number two is basically growing engagement on the consumer surfaces and recommendations. So part one of that is just get better at showing people the content that’s out there, that’s effectively what’s happening with Reels. Then I think what’s going to start happening is that the AI is not just going to be recommending content, but it is effectively going to be either helping people create more content or just creating it themselves. You can think about our products as there have been two major epochs so far. The first was you had your friends and you basically shared with them and you got content from them and now, we’re in an epoch where we’ve basically layered over this whole zone of creator content. So the stuff from your friends and followers and all the people that you follow hasn’t gone away, but we added on this whole other corpus around all this content that creators have that we are recommending. How do you feel about that? Because I wrote back in 2015 that that’s what you needed to do. But then it was like, “No, we connect people and that’s how we figure things-“ MZ: Let me finish answering this and then can we come back to that? Okay, I want to get into the psyche here. MZ: Well, the third epoch is I think that there’s going to be all this AI-generated content and you’re not going to lose the others, you’re still going to have all the creator content, you’re still going to have some of the friend content. But it’s just going to be this huge explosion in the amount of content that’s available, very personalized and I guess one point, just as a macro point, as we move into this AGI future where productivity dramatically increases, I think what you’re basically going to see is this extrapolation of this 100-year trend where as productivity grows, the average person spends less time working, and more time on entertainment and culture. So I think that these feed type services, like these channels where people are getting their content, are going to become more of what people spend their time on, and the better that AI can both help create and recommend the content, I think that that’s going to be a huge thing. So that’s kind of the second category. I’ll answer your question before we go to the third category. Social Networking 2.0 How do you feel about Facebook being more than just connecting to your friends and family now? MZ: I think it’s been a good change overall, but I think I sort of missed why. It used to be that you interacted with the people that you were connecting with in feed, like someone would post something and you’d comment in line and that would be your interaction. Today, we think about Facebook and Instagram and Threads, and I guess now, the Meta AI app too and a bunch of other things that we’re doing, as these discovery engines. Most of the interaction is not happening in feed. What’s happening is the app is like this discovery engine algorithm for showing you interesting stuff and then, the real social interaction comes from you finding something interesting and putting it in a group chat with friends or a one-on-one chat. So there’s this flywheel between messaging which has become where actually all the real, deep, nuanced social interaction is online and the feed apps, which I think have increasingly just become these discovery engines. Did you have this vision when you bought WhatsApp? Or did you back into it? MZ: I thought messaging was going to be important. Honestly, part of the reason why we were a little bit late to competing with TikTok was because I didn’t fully understand this when TikTok was first growing. And then by using it, I was like, “Oh, okay, this is not just video, this is a complete reconsideration of the way that social media is formulated”. Where just going forward, people are not primarily going to be interacting in line, it’s going to be primarily about content and then, most of the interaction is going to be in messaging and group chat. There’s a line there that I’ve criticized you for at the time, I think you’ve backed away from it, something about being your whole self everywhere. And one of my takes on group chats, in general, is it lets you be different facets of yourself with different groups of people as appropriate. MZ: Yeah, totally. Messaging, I think, does this very well. One of the challenges that we’ve always had with services like Facebook and Instagram is you end up accumulating friends or followers over time and then, the question is, who are you talking to there? Right. MZ: So if you’re a creator, you have an audience that kind of makes sense. But if you’re a normal person just trying to socialize— You really don’t want to go viral. I can promise you that. MZ: No, no. What I’m saying is you basically want to — people want to share very authentically and you’re just willing to share more in small groups. So the modern day configuration of this is that messaging is a much better structure for this, because you don’t just have one group that you share with. You have all these different group chats and you have all your one-on-one threads. So it’s like I can share stuff with my family, I can share stuff with people I do sports with. In the end, you were worried about Google Circles and then you ended up owning it in the end. MZ: It just ended up being in messaging instead of in a feed. Which I think gets us to, if you still want to go through this… I do. Meta’s AI Opportunity (Part 2) MZ: The third big AI revenue opportunity is going to be business messaging. Because as messaging gets built up as its own huge social ecosystem, if you think about our business today, Facebook revenue is quite strong, Instagram revenue is quite strong, WhatsApp is on the order of almost, I think, 3 billion people using it — much less revenue than either Facebook or Instagram. It just stores the soul of Facebook, per our conversation. MZ: But I think between WhatsApp and Messenger and Instagram Direct, these messaging services, I think, should be very large business ecosystems in their own right. And the way that I think that’s going to happen, we see the early glimpses of this because business messaging is actually already a huge thing in countries like Thailand and Vietnam. Right. Where they have workers who can afford to do the messaging. MZ: Low cost of labor. So what we see is Thailand and Vietnam are, I think last time I checked, this may not be exactly right, but I think it was something like they were our number 6 and 7 countries by revenue or something, they were definitely in the Top 10. If you look at those countries by GDP, they’re in the 30s. So it’s like, “Okay, what’s going on?”. Well, it’s that business messaging — I mean, I saw some stuff that I think it’s something like 2% of Thailand’s GDP goes through people transacting through our messaging apps. Yeah. This is one of those things where my being in Asia, I’ve seen this coming for ages and it feels like it’s taken forever to actually accomplish. MZ: So what will unlock that for the rest of the world? It’s like, it’s AI making it so that you can have a low cost of labor version of that everywhere else. So you have more than a hundred million small businesses that use our platforms and I just think it seems pretty clear that within a few years, every business in the world basically has an email address, a social media account, a website, they’re going to have an AI that can do customer support and sales. And once they have that and that’s driving conversions for them — first of all, we can offer that as a product that’s super easy to spin up and that it’s going to be free. We’re not even going to charge you until we start driving incremental conversions. Then like, “Yeah, you just stand this thing up and we’ll just start sending sales your way and you can pay us some fee for the incremental sales”. Once you start getting that flywheel going, the demand that businesses are going to have to drive people to those chats is going to really go up. So I think that’s going to be how we’re going to monetize WhatsApp, Messenger, Instagram Direct, and all that. So that’s the third pillar. And then, the fourth is all the more novel, just AI first thing, so like Meta AI. Eventually, if that grows, it’ll be recommending products, people will be paying for subscriptions and things like that. So Meta AI is around a billion people using it monthly now. I want to ask about Meta AI, but it feels like there’s two more pillars or potential pillars from my perspective. We mentioned the metaverse earlier, I feel like generative AI is going to be the key to the metaverse. Because even just with gaming on a screen we’ve hit a limit on assets, assets just cost too much to create, so that’s going to solve problems there. Then, we also have, it just feels like this entire canvas of people who are in these apps and experiencing it, like I feel like every pixel could be monetized. You see an influencer, every single item in that you could recognize it, know it, have a link to it, whoever the purveyor of that product is signed up. The takeaway here is I feel like — and this is a compliment, not an insult — you’re the Microsoft of consumer. In that Microsoft just wins continuously, because they own that distribution channel and they have that connection to everyone, you own this distribution. To your point, more free time, people spending more time in these apps, there’s so many ways to do this. Why do you also need a chatbot and a dedicated app for that? MZ: Well, I guess if you look at the four categories that we just talked through of the big business opportunities, it’s increasing the ad experience, increasing the consumer experience on engagement, business messaging, which is basically going to build out the business around all our messaging services to the level that we’ve built with Facebook and Instagram. And then, the fourth is just the AI-native thing. So I mentioned Meta AI, because it’s the biggest, it has about a billion people using it today. And you have a new app. MZ: Well, the billion people using it today are across the family of apps, but now, we have the standalone app too. So for people who want that, you can have that. But it also includes stuff like creating content in the metaverse, it’s all the AI-native stuff. So when we’ve done our financial planning, we don’t need all of those to work in order for this to be a very profitable thing. If we really hit out of the park on two or three of those, were in pretty good shape, even with the massive cost of training. But I think that this gets to the question around, in order to really do the world-class work in each of those areas, I think you want to build an end-to-end experience where you are training the model that you need in order to have the capabilities that it needs to deliver each of those things. In all the experience I’ve had so far, you really just want to be able to go all the way down the stack. Meta’s a full-stack company, we’ve always built our own infrastructure and we’ve built our own AI systems, we built our own products. I’m on board with doing your own model. Is there a bit where because it became so popular as an open source project and you’re here at LlamaCon and now, you have developers saying, “Can you make your model do this?”, and you’re like, “Well, we’re actually doing it to…”? MZ: Oh, I see. Yeah, I think that that’s going to be an interesting trade-off over time is we definitely are building it first and foremost for our use cases, and then we’re making it available for developers as they want to use it. The Llama 4 Maverick model was not designed for any of the open source benchmarks, and I think that was some of the reason why when people use it, they’re like, “Okay, this feels pretty good”, but then on some of the benchmarks, it’s not scoring quite as high, but is it a high quality model. Well, if you used the right model, it might’ve scored high. MZ: What’s that? If you use the right model, it might’ve scored high. MZ: What do you mean? Well, there was a little bit of a controversy about a model that was trained specifically for a test. MZ: Oh, well, that’s actually sort of interesting. One of the things that we designed Llama 4 to be able to do is be more steerable than other models because we have different use cases. We have Meta AI, we’re building AI Studio, we want to make it so that you can use it for business messaging, all these things. So it is fundamentally a more adaptable model when it was designed to be that, than what you can do with taking something like GPT or Claude and trying to fine-tune it to the extent that they’ll let you to do a different thing. I guess there was a team that built, steered a version of it to be really good at LMArena and it was able to do that, because it’s steerable. But then I think the version that’s up there now is not optimized for LMArena at all, so it’s like, “Okay, so it scores the way that it does”. But anyway, it’s a good model. The point that you are making I think is right, that as we design it for our own uses, there are some things that open source developers care about that we are not going to be the purveyor of. But part of the beauty of it being open source is other people can do those things. Open source is an ecosystem, it’s not a provider, so we are doing probably the hardest part of it, in terms of taking these very expensive pre-training runs and doing a lot of work and then making that available and we’re also standing up infrastructure to have a reference implementation API now, but we’re not trying to do the whole thing. There’s a huge opportunity both for other companies to come do that and I expect that, just like with Linux, there were all these other projects that emerged around it to build up all the other functionality, and drivers, and all that different stuff that was necessary for it to be useful for all the things that developers wanted. That’ll exist with Llama, too. The Meta AI App Why do you think it’s important to have the Meta AI app? MZ: Well, I think some people just want to use it as a standalone app. What do you think they want to use it for? Is this a do homework app? I find that your observation about more free time and that’s something you can fill, I agree, and in some respects I feel like it’s been a journey to lean into being the entertainment company and being okay with that, and maybe people will do their homework somewhere else and when they’re done with their homework, then they’ll come play with you. MZ: Yeah. I think that there is part of that that I think is probably right. I think AI is by definition a general technology, so I think you want to be careful about trying to design too narrow of an experience, because it’s kind of like web search, the vertical search engines never quite took off because people just wanted a general thing, so I think you want to be careful about that. But back to your question about what are we optimizing for, we want Meta AI to be your personal AI. It’s very personalized, in addition to things like remembering what you’ve talked to it about, which is I think going to be an industry standard feature, Meta AI just knows stuff about you from using our apps. One thing that I think, a lot of people are fascinated to basically understand how the feed algorithms in Instagram and Facebook, what they know about them, and talk to the algorithm. I think that this is a really fascinating thing to explore is the ability to ask the algorithm what it knows about you, and give it feedback, and talk to it and do that in a natural way. I think text is useful because it’s inherently discreet, you’re not talking out loud, but a lot of people really prefer to use voice. It’s much more natural, especially for multi-turn interactions, much faster for a lot of people than typing. So we’ve designed the experience to be fundamentally personalized and fundamentally more leaning into voice, but also, as you say, embracing the fun parts of it. That creating content and seeing what other interesting things people are doing with Meta AI is just so like an entertaining thing. So, I’ll be able to ask this AI, “Why am I seeing all these videos of XYZ”? MZ: Yeah. I mean, you can ask it what it knows about you and it’ll explain it to you. Here’s a broader question. I was asking you about Facebook starts out with connection, connecting with friends and family, and then you’ve had to move to this world of the best user-generated content under some competitive pressure, also you’re an entertainment app. Is there a bit where you’re full circle in a way where it’s about connection, but you’re now connecting to AI? That’s where Facebook — it was always the individualized feed and now it’s taken to its logical conclusion? MZ: Well, I do think that as a company, we are probably pretty attuned to the problem of people. Generally, people have a demand for wanting to express themselves, for wanting to feel understood, for wanting to feel a sense of connection, for not wanting to feel alone, and I think that those are things that we’ve delivered products over a 20-year period that have been very effective on. Going forward, I think one of the interesting questions is, “How does AI fit into that?”. There’s an interesting sociological finding that the average American has fewer than three friends and the average American would like to have more than three friends. So, now, ideally, you would just make it so they can connect to the right people and that’s obviously something that we try to help people do. When they’re not physically together, you can stay connected through our apps, you can keep in touch with people, you can meet new people. But I do think that going forward there are going to be dynamics where you interact with different people around different things. I personally have the belief that everyone should probably have a therapist, it’s like someone they can just talk to throughout the day, or not necessarily throughout the day, but about whatever issues they’re worried about and for people who don’t have a person who’s a therapist, I think everyone will have an AI. And all right, that’s not going to replace the friends you have, but it will probably be additive in some way for a lot of people’s lives. I think in some way that is a thing that we probably understand a little bit better than most of the other companies that are just pure mechanistic productivity technology, how to think about that type of thing. I think we also understand a little bit better some of the pitfalls and how do you make it so it can be additive to your social interactions, instead of negative. I think one of the things that I’m really focused on is how can you make it so AI can help you be a better friend to your friends, and there’s a lot of stuff about the people who I care about that I don’t remember, I could be more thoughtful. There are all these issues where it’s like, “I don’t make plans until the last minute”, and then it’s like, “I don’t know who’s around and I don’t want to bug people”, or whatever. An AI that has good context about what’s going on with the people you care about, is going to be able to help you out with this. In a good personalized AI, it’s not just about knowing some basic things about what you’re interested in, a good assistant or good personalization, it’s about having a theory of mind for how you think about stuff. I mean, this is what we do with all of our friends. It’s like we don’t just kind of go, “Okay, here’s my friend Bob and he likes whatever”, you have a deep understanding of what’s going on in this person’s life and what’s going on with your friends, and what are the challenges, and what is the interplay between these different things. Will Bob’s AI be able to talk to your AI and smooth over any issues? MZ: Well, I think that the exact API on that probably needs to be figured out, because there’s a lot of privacy sensitivity. And I mean, this is true in human relationships, and there’s a lot of questions when you’re connecting with another person or you’re trying to help people work through an issue of what context is shared and people have to be discreet about different things and we’ll need to develop the AI to do that, too. But I think before you even get to that, I think just developing an AI that has a coherent theory of mind, and understanding of your world, and what is going on in your world in a pretty deep way, not a just very surface way of, “He likes MMA”, but, “What’s really going on with him?” — I think that that’s going to be really fundamental. And you think you can do this just fundamentally better than anyone else can? MZ: Probably, yeah. Obviously, I think to some degree, I’m not even sure that the other companies are trying to do this, because I think that they’re much more focused on- My ongoing joke has been the people building AI are the least suited to figure out the use cases for AI in many respects. MZ: Look, I think the most obvious ones are around productivity. I think to some degree you see Google, and you see OpenAI, and those companies are going after that, it seems like Anthropic is really focused on building the software agent. I think that those are going to be massive businesses or whoever wins in those areas at least. I am not making a characterization about each one of those individual companies, which has its own strengths and weaknesses. But just like the Internet brought us increases in productivity, but also increases in connectivity and increases in entertainment, AI will do all of that too. This doesn’t just bring us one thing, it transforms everything. So, yeah, I think that there’s a lot of focus here, there are going to be the big companies who have a lot of technology and capital to bring to bear, there are going to be a lot of new startups. This is something that I’ve lived and breathed for a long time is, “How do you build technology at the intersection of deep technology and helping people connect?”. I think it’s very compelling and the way you said it taps into what you’ve been as a company, but it does feel like there’s always been a tension between what you’ve been as a company, even going back to our discussion about going to mobile and having to just be an entertainment app, not being able to be a platform, what you’ve been and what you want to be, Mark wants to have a platform. Well, you’re at a developer conference. MZ: You don’t always get to do what you want! I think if you only follow the market, then I think that that has a way of not being particularly interesting over time, I think you need to take some novel bets. I think it’s quite novel, “We’re back to connecting, we’re just going to connect you with an AI”. MZ: Yeah. I think that’s one of the things that I think could be fascinating. But no, obviously, the peril of leadership and trying to take new bets is that they don’t always work. It’s kind of like baseball, you don’t need your things to work even half the time in order to build something amazing, you just need to be some combination of better than everyone else and hitting the ball further when you do hit it. That analogy’s is somewhat strained, but you kind of get what I’m saying. I get it. You’re in the Hall of Fame if you fail two-thirds of the time. MZ: Yeah. Obviously, over the last 20 years, there have been a lot of things that I wish would’ve gone a different direction than they went and bets that didn’t work out. But I think in the face of that, having the conviction to continue doing interesting things, I think is part of what the fun of this whole thing is. There is a question, why do you keep doing this? And you kind of look back, I remember back in 2017, you’re like, “We’re going to actually take down video a bit in our apps because we want people to feel good about this and to connect with people”, and then today we’re like, “Oh, there’s video everywhere and it’s getting bigger and bigger”. MZ: Yeah. There were a lot of mistakes that I feel like I made during that period, in terms of deferring to some so-called experts about what was valuable for people. And look, obviously, there’s research that’s helpful, but one of my takeaways from that period is that by and large people are smart, they know what is valuable in their lives. When you have some expert who’s saying that something is bad and people are telling you that it is good, 9 times out of 10, the people who are experiencing the thing are probably actually right. And to this point, I don’t know how valid it is, but what do people use AI for? Therapist or life coaches, top of list. MZ: One of the uses for Meta AI is basically, “I want to talk through an issue”, “I need to have a hard conversation with someone”, “I’m having an issue with my girlfriend”, “I need to have a hard conversation with my boss at work”, “Help me role-play this”, or, “Help me figure out how I want to approach this”. Which, by the way, is another use case that I think probably works better with voice, because you’re actually playing through the conversation rather than just text. But yeah, I think that this is going to be a huge part of it. How do you get people to try yours, if they’re already on ChatGPT or whatever it might be? Just in their head, AI equals ChatGPT. MZ: Well, there’s on the order of a billion monthly actives who are already using Meta AI for things, but I think fundamentally- Are you worried that if you put an app out there — I was talking about this on Google the other day, Google actually has the most used AI product in the world, which is AI Search Overviews, but everyone’s like, “Oh, Gemini has only 30 million users”. Is this going to be a similar situation? “Oh, no one uses the Meta AI, look at the apps way down in the rankings”, and you’re like, “No, we have a billion over here”? MZ: I don’t know, we’ll see. I think not all of these things need to work, but some of them need to work in a major way, and I think no one has the foresight to know exactly which things are going to work. I think you kind of have to have some theses about what direction you think the world is going to go in, put some bets out, see which ones work, and then have the agility to double down on the things that are good. To your point, usually you cannot pass someone who is leading in a space by doing the same thing as them, you have to do something better, and sometimes the thing that can be better can be making it seamless to use that experience from within a product that they’re already using. If people want to text or call Meta AI, then doing that in the app that they text and call with is pretty helpful. I think in the US, people probably underestimate how much Meta AI is used because they underestimate WhatsApp and the rest of the world. Most of the people who are using Meta AI are using it in WhatsApp. In the US, there’s 100 million people who use WhatsApp, it’s not tiny, but it is not yet the primary messaging platform in the US, iMessage still is. I think if you look at the curves, it probably will continue to be for at least two to three more years until WhatsApp overtakes it, but even when WhatsApp overtakes it, it’ll have just overtaken the last primary messaging app. Whereas if you look in most countries in the world, WhatsApp is all the communication, right? If you’re doing that through WhatsApp and you also want to have a platform where you can message an AI, okay, that kind of makes sense. A lot of people use Meta AI in a lot of these places. Now there is an issue for us in that which is, well, the US happens to be the most important country, so is it okay for us if we’re kind of under-indexed in the United States? Probably not over time. That’s a thing that we need to do better at, but I do think it’s a thing that’s probably underestimated today. Tariffs and Reality Labs Changing gears just a little bit, I’ve long argued that, and it relates to the international point in a very different way, I’ve long argued that Meta is anti-fragile. For example, back when large advertisers boycotted you, that simply meant lower prices for the companies seeking to compete with them. When Apple implemented ATT it hurt you a lot, but it hurt all of your competitors, I think, far more, and you can see that looking backwards. Is there some concern just on the business point that tariffs are the sort of exogenous shock that not even Meta can escape, where it’s just impacting, particularly with your long tail, all these advertisers, it’s going to be rough? MZ: I think what we’ve seen in past downturns, and we’ve been running the company for long enough now that we’ve been through a few of these cycles, is that when the financial environment gets tight, all companies look to rationalize their budgets by shifting resources to the things that really work. I think within marketing, the things that really work are the things that you can measure, and I think we’re basically at the top of the list. So, like you said, in those hard situations in the past — so 2008, 2009, some of the stuff that happened around COVID, some of the ATT stuff — the different kind of downturns along the way, they hit our business and revenue, but we gained market share. I think one of the things that is good about being a controlled company and founder-led company is you can see past short-term pain to make the investments that you need to to deliver more value over time. When I see some downturns resulting in market share gains, then I’m going to do things like build out even more GPU infrastructure to serve those businesses and people better, which in the short term investors are kind of like, “Hey, your revenue is a little lower than we thought and now you’re actually increasing your expenses, what’s going on?” Increasing CapEx. MZ: We’ve seen these cycles over time where our stock goes down and it goes down dramatically. 90 bucks, three years ago. MZ: Yeah, it goes down by 3x or whatever. But I guess one of the strategic advantages that we have of being a controlled company is fundamentally, I’m not a CEO who needs to worry about making the quarter in order to keep my job. We have a board at the company and a corporate structure which is very focused on maximizing long-term value. Which, I don’t know, if you look at the theory of how all these endowments or things are run, being able to invest over a longer term time horizon actually just is its own source of alpha that yields higher returns over time and that’s, I think, one of the advantages that we have as a company. If you continue to deliver on that long term, is it still okay if that long term doesn’t include a platform, if you’re just an app? MZ: It depends on what you’re saying. I think early on, I really looked up to Microsoft and I think that that shaped my thinking that, “Okay, building a developer platform is really cool”. It is cool. MZ: Yeah, but it’s not really the kind of company fundamentally that we have been historically. At this point, I actually see the tension between being primarily a consumer company and primarily a developer company, so I’m less focused on that at this point. Now, obviously we do have developer surfaces in terms of all the stuff in Reality Labs, our developer platforms. We need to empower developers to build the content to make the devices good. The Llama stuff, we obviously want to empower people to use that and get as much of the world on open source as possible because that has this virtuous flywheel of effects that make it so that the more developers that are using Llama, the more Nvidia optimizes for Llama, the more that makes all our stuff better and drives costs down, because people are just designing stuff to work well with our systems and making their efficiency improvements to that. So, that’s all good. But I guess the thing that I really care about at this point is just building the best stuff and the way to do that, I think, is by doing more vertical integration. When I think about why do I want to build glasses in the future, it’s not primarily to have a developer platform, it’s because I think that this is going to be the hardware platform that delivers the best ability to create this feeling of presence and the ultimate sense of technology delivering a social connection and I think glasses are going to be the best form factor for delivering AI because with glasses, you can let your AI assistant see what you see and hear what you hear and talk in your ear throughout the day, you can whisper to it or whatever. It’s just hard to imagine a better form factor for something that you want to be a personal AI that kind of has all the context about your life. Is the dream still the glasses and VR is a way to get there? Where does VR fit in this? MZ: The glasses are going to be by far the bigger thing. There’s already a billion or two billion people in the world who wear some kind of glasses, like what you’re wearing. It’s sort of unimaginable to me that 10 years from now, every pair of glasses that already exists isn’t just going to be AI glasses at some point at a minimum, and AI glasses with holograms at a maximum. Plus, I think a lot of people who wear contacts today will choose to wear glasses because the stuff is super valuable. I assume your glasses that you are wearing do not have prescription lenses in them? MZ: These don’t. Actually, I wear contacts normally, I have very bad vision. But no, I just started wearing these because it’s super useful throughout the day to have AI glasses on. Well, because I just thought of something with the VR angle. I talked about this, you started out connecting people and then maybe it ends up with AI, you connect with AI. But maybe it turns out from a VR perspective, it’s AI in this generative content that makes it that much more immersive and somewhere you want to be more frequently, and that solves the cold start problem. What do you actually use these for beyond just games? And then, once everyone gets them on, then we’re back full circle and I can get the experience of being with my friends and us virtually attending a game together. MZ: I think that that’s all right. I actually think that both AR glasses and VR are going to be huge markets, it’s just that I think that glasses are going to be the phones of the future and VR is going to be the TV of the future. If you think about it, we obviously don’t walk around the world carrying TVs, but the average person spends hours a day with a TV, and we’re going to want that to get more immersive and more engaging over time too. As the form factor and quality of the VR headsets improve, I think that that’s going to replace tablets and it’s going to replace a lot of TVs and things like that. The fidelity of the hologram that you can get where you’re putting photons in the world with AR will never be the same depth as what you can get if you just have a screen and you are printing pixels on it. It’s like AR can only ever add photons to the world, it can’t take them away. Whereas VR, you’re blocking out the world, you’re starting with a blank canvas, you can do whatever you want. So, I would guess they’re going to be both. How long until Orion? I did get to try it last year. MZ: The goal is a few years, and we’ll see how we do. Why’d you show it off? You basically went and showed Apple and everybody else, “Look, this is what we can do, but we can’t ship it yet”. MZ: I think we wanted to get feedback, we like developing stuff in the open. There’s always this trade off between, on the one hand, getting feedback also means that your competitors can see stuff, but it also advances your thinking. Does it give a big kick in the butt to your own team saying, “Now you got to get this out the door”? MZ: I think people take pride in their work, so having a moment where they can show things definitely rallies them. But no, I think open and closed development have very different advantages and disadvantages. Where if you were really truly on track to do something amazing by yourself, then keeping it a secret until the moment you release it has merits. But I think most things are not like that, most things require iteration and feedback and ideas, and I think in most cases, doing it openly coupled with a long-term commitment to doing that thing, will lead to a faster pace of progress in you doing better work than others. I think in something like VR and AR where the other companies in the space, it’s like every time we do something good, they kind of spin up their AR program again. There are all these rumors about, okay, Google cancels their stuff, starts it up, cancels it, starts it up, whatever. It’s like Apple decided there wasn’t going to be glasses, oh the Ray-Bans are doing well, spins up their glasses program again. I think fundamentally we’re just going to be working on this for 10 or 15 years, consistently, openly getting feedback on it, I think we care more than they do, and we have, I think, the best people in the world working on it because we’ve shown that. I think similarly for the AI problems that we’re working on, it’ll be a similar thing, which is there are problems that everyone agrees on are the good ones to work on and then there are ones that today are sort of more marginal. Like some of the stuff around companionship or creating new types of content in feed that I think people haven’t — there’s no existence proof yet that says that’s going to be good. Does it just kill you that Studio Ghibli happened on OpenAI and not on yours? MZ: People use Imagine on Meta AI a lot too, but no, I thought that was good. It was a cool thing. They all got posted on social media, right? MZ: It was good. Look, I think this is a big enough space that no one company is going to do all the cool things and I think in this world, if you can’t be happy when other people do cool things, then you are going to be a pretty sad person. Last question: our first interview was when you changed the name of the company to Meta. Still happy with the name? MZ: Yeah, I think it’s a great name. I think it’s evocative of the future where the digital and physical worlds are more blended together, which is coming true even faster than I would’ve guessed because of the AI stuff. The thing that has surprised me since then is if you would have asked me back then, “Were we going to get the fully holographic world first or AI?”, I would’ve guessed the fully holographic world. So it’s cool that we’re getting AI sooner, but fundamentally they are both parts of the same vision and I think glasses are going to be fundamental for both of them. Way more people are using AI glasses now then they would have if there hadn’t been this massive growth in the AI tech. Very good, it was nice to connect with you again, thank you very much. MZ: Good seeing you. This Daily Update Interview is also available as a podcast. To receive it in your podcast player, visit Stratechery. The Daily Update is intended for a single recipient, but occasional forwarding is totally fine! If you would like to order multiple subscriptions for your team with a group discount (minimum 5), please contact me directly. Thanks for being a supporter, and have a great day! Get notified about new Articles Please verify your email address to proceed. ←Amazon, Trump, and Tariff Costs; Amazon Haul and Temu; Political Lessons
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  • WWW.PCWORLD.COM
    Hate Windows 11? These 9 free apps make it feel like Windows 10 again
    Just a few months before the end of free support, Windows 10 is still the most widely used operating system version from Microsoft: Almost half of all Windows PCs are still running it. While you can count businesses among the crowd that might be loathe to change, the fact is that many consumers are just very satisfied with Windows 10 and they aren’t in any hurry to adopt a new way of doing things with Windows 11. There is still no “killer application” that would make the case for switching from Windows 10 to 11. On the contrary, Microsoft recently cancelled one of the most important new feature of Windows 11, namely support for Android apps on PCs. Still, once Windows 10 hits end of service, it will become increasingly risky for users to stick with the OS, beloved as it might be. Further reading: Windows 10 will hit end of life in 2025. Here’s what to expect The good news is that there are myriad ways to mimic the Windows 10 experience on Windows 11. Here are 9 free apps that prove that point. Try out Windows 11 You can only really judge what Windows 11 has in store for you and how you will cope with it once you have it and use it. If you are currently still working with Windows 10 and your computer fulfils the system requirements for Windows 11, you can simply switch to the new version via the Windows update. Microsoft will even create a temporary backup copy that you can use to return to your Windows 10 with all settings, data, and programs for 10 days. After these one and a half weeks, the “Windows.old” backup folder on the system partition is automatically deleted. However, experience shows that the “Revert” function does not always work reliably. To try out Windows 11 without any worries, we recommend backing up the entire system partition. Windows 11 like Windows 10 In practice, however, the main thing is to adapt the existing system with Windows 11 to the familiar Windows 10 in terms of operation, functions, and appearance. In addition to the “Windows 10 style”, the Start11 software provides other ready-made profiles that make your own system look like an earlier version of Windows. Foundry Start11 customizes your system to the style of either Windows 7 or 10 with just a few mouse clicks. This applies in particular to the classic Start menu and the functions of the earlier versions, which Microsoft has now cancelled. After installation, select the style option for Windows 7 or 10 in the program, then click on “Start icon” in the section bar on the left and switch off the central positioning in the taskbar. Then search the internet for the desktop background of the previous system in the native resolution of your monitor using the keyword “Windows 10 wallpaper,” save the image file to your hard drive, and insert it as the background. This is done quickly, and Start11 also offers many other settings to customize your PC. Startallback is free and also easy to use; here you can choose between three styles for Windows 7, 10, and 11. Regardless of this decision, the layout of the taskbar and Windows Explorer can be defined and many other things can be changed. Another free tool for customizing is Open Shell Menu. The Explorer Patcher, which you can access via “Properties (Explorer Patcher)” in the Start menu, is also useful. Explorer Patcher customizes Windows Explorer, the taskbar, and more in a variety of ways. This also includes the ability to never have apps combine in your taskbar and bringing back classic Windows 10 context menu.Jared Newman / Foundry The software restores a number of options from previous versions of the Microsoft file manager, including the classic context menu, which offers all entries immediately and not just by clicking on “Show more options.” Alternatively, Windows 11 Classic Context Menu also does this. Finally, Winaero Tweaker combines well over 100 tools and settings in one interface, including many for customizing the desktop, taskbar, Windows Explorer, and context menu. A detailed description would go beyond the space available here. Windows themes and the Windhawk mods Windows “themes” are compilations of desktop wallpapers and modified layouts of windows, mouse pointers, icons, and more: Such themes provide a completely new Windows style. Windows 11 itself only provides a few themes under “Settings > Personalization > Themes;” Microsoft offers additional packages via the link to the Store (search “themes”) and on the internet. After downloading, you can install these theme packs by double-clicking on them and manage them under “Themes.” If you want to use third-party themes, first remove the installation lock with Ultra UX Theme Patcher. As the tool has a deep impact on the system, we recommend making a system backup beforehand. It is also important to only download themes from trustworthy sources. Themes in the form of archive files must first be unpacked and then copied to the directory “C:\Windows\Resources\Themes” together with subfolders. They can then be selected in the Settings app. On the Windhawk marketplace, developers provide so-called mods with which users can customize their Windows computers according to their wishes.IDG In addition to themes, Windhawk has established itself as a marketplace for so-called mods, which can also be used to customize Windows in a variety of ways. After installing the software, you can search for mods on the user interface and select them via “Details.” The explanations and notes are important, so read them carefully. Add the individual mods to the system by clicking on “Install -> Accept the risk (Install Mod).” Then select the desired option or function in the “Settings” tab and save the settings. RevertSV: Windows 10 perfectly imitated RevertSV promises a modern Windows 11 with the look and feel of Windows 10. The developer has already made all the customizations and offers the system as a ready-to-use ISO image. However, RevertSV is not suitable for productive use due to the U.S. settings. However, it can be tried out in a virtual machine with Vmware Player or virtualization software. The current version of RevertSV is based on Windows 11 version 21H2, a version based on Windows 11 24H2 is planned. In a YouTube video, the developer shows what the system looks like under the hood using some of the functions. Do you remember the earlier Windows photo display? It’s much better for quickly viewing and browsing through a collection of images than the later apps. IDG
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  • WWW.TOMSHARDWARE.COM
    Finally, the most powerful gaming graphics card is available in the UK at almost MSRP and comes with a free copy of DOOM: The Dark Ages
    The Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 GameRock from Palit is available from Overclockers for the cheapest price in the UK and comes with a free copy of DOOM: The Dark Ages.
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  • WWW.NEOWIN.NET
    Android 15 passes 10% market share, likely due to the OneUI 7 rollout
    When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works. Android 15 passes 10% market share, likely due to the OneUI 7 rollout Paul Hill Neowin · May 1, 2025 07:42 EDT The market share tracking website, Statcounter, is now reporting that Android 15 has a market share of 10.06%, putting it over the 10% milestone for the first time since it launched in September 2024. This is the latest stable version of Android, but given the slow pace at which Android updates reach users, it has only now passed 10% of usage. Android 14 peaked in January 2025 at 37.08% and has since been declining. For the most recent month, it sits at 33.44%. Android 13 also declined from 17.38% to 16.94%. For any iPhone users out there not that familiar with Android updates and looking aghast at these figures, it’s important to understand that Android users still get security patches from OEMs if their devices are still supported, as well as updates to core components from Google. Credit: Statcounter What’s interesting looking back at the data is the fact that Android 15 seems to be taking longer to be adopted compared to Android 14. Version 14 was released in October 2023 and by February 2024 it had already reached 12.58% market share. That’s a much quicker uptake than Android 15 which had only hit 3.3% after the same period of time. One of the main cited reasons for the slower uptake is the delayed release of OneUI 7 by Samsung. Given that Samsung is one of the main players in the Android landscape, this will have had a big effect on Android 15 adoption. Neowin reported that OneUI 7 started rolling out at the start of April beginning with the Galaxy S24 and Z Fold series. Here is the rollout timetable, current when the article was published: April: Galaxy Z Fold 5, Galaxy Z Flip 5, Tab S10+/S10 Ultra, Galaxy S23/S23+/S23 Ultra, S24 FE. May: Galaxy Z Fold 4, Z Flip 4, Galaxy Tab S9/S9+/S9 Ultra, S23 FE, Z Fold 3, Z Flip 3, A34, A35, S22/S22+/S22 Ultra, Tab S8/S8+/S8 Ultra, S21/S21+/S21 Ultra, Galaxy A16, Galaxy Quantum 5, Galaxy Quantum 4. June: Galaxy Tab S9 FE/S9 FE+, Galaxy A73, A53, A33, A25, A24, A15, Quantum 3, Jump 3, Jump 2, Buddy 3, Galaxy Tab A9/A9+, Tab Active 5, Tab Active 4 Pro, Wide 7. Hopefully, OneUI 7’s rollout over the next couple of months will significantly drive Android 15 adoption. We should have a clearer picture around July, August, or September when all the above eligible devices will likely have upgraded. Source: Statcounter Tags Report a problem with article Follow @NeowinFeed
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  • SCIENCE.SLASHDOT.ORG
    Starting July 1, Academic Publishers Can't Paywall NIH-Funded Research
    An anonymous reader writes: NIH Director Dr. Jay Bhattacharya has announced that the NIH Public Access Policy, originally slated to go into effect on December 31, 2025, will now be effective as of July 1. From Bhattacharya's announcement: NIH is the crown jewel of the American biomedical research system. However, a recent Pew Research Center study shows that only about 25% of Americans have a "great deal of confidence" that scientists are working for the public good. Earlier implementation of the Public Access Policy will help increase public confidence in the research we fund while also ensuring that the investments made by taxpayers produce replicable, reproducible, and generalizable results that benefit all Americans. Providing speedy public access to NIH-funded results is just one of the ways we are working to earn back the trust of the American people. Trust in science is an essential element in Making America Healthy Again. As such, NIH and its research partners will continue to promote maximum transparency in all that we do. Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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  • WWW.CREATIVEBLOQ.COM
    How to design instantly recognisable characters using strong silhouettes
    Get in shape with top tips from concept artist Mariia Bulgakova.
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  • WWW.DESIGNWEEK.CO.UK
    Sergeant Walnuts’ new Manchester Building Society identity is rooted in its home city
    Sergeant Walnuts has rebranded Manchester Building Society with a colourful local map and a chunky M. Founded more than 100 years ago, Manchester Building Society (MBS) merged in 2023 with Newcastle Building Society, although the two separate brands remain. By then, MBS was a moth-balled business with no branch network. The company’s head of brand Andrew Nicholson and his team have been working on how it should relaunch since mid-2024. Sergeant Walnuts won the job following a competitive pitch against other local agencies, with Nicholson keen that the new brand identity was rooted in its home city. “We were very keen that the creative direction and brand identity represents Manchester, and that Mancunians would recognise themselves in it,” he explains, rather than, “something that’s imposed on them.” The aim was for the brand to look different to other banks and building societies Also, it needed to look unlike other banks and building societies. “The world doesn’t need another faceless, placeless navy-blue bank,” Nicholson says. There was no pressure to connect the new identity with its sister company’s look and Nicholson was keen to give MBS its own visual presence. “The brands are very different, and the strategy for retail is very regional,” he says. And the new identity didn’t need to pay any homage to MBS’s previous look – a blue and yellow affair with a tick and a couple of ellipsoids – which Nicholson’s research revealed to have zero unprompted awareness among local people. Use of colour was an important consideration of the brand “To be kind, it probably looked its age,” says Sergeant Walnuts managing director, Richard Attwater. “There was no equity in the existing brand that we wanted to leverage in any way, so it was a blank canvas.” MBS plans to open a flagship city centre flagship branch in a former Diesel store later this summer. Core branch design is by M Worldwide in London, with detailed architectural work by MWE Architects in Stocksfield, Northumberland. Spatial design, interiors and branding were developed by Nicholson’s in-house team working with Sergeant Walnuts. Over time the brand hopes to have a footprint in up to ten Greater Manchester boroughs as possible. This physical presence informed the design solution. The central design idea for the new brand identity stemmed from the map of Greater Manchester. The designers created a simplified, colourful representation of the area. Use of colour was important, Attwater says. “We wanted it to look like the antithesis of big banks, who are distancing themselves from customers,” he says, pointing out that many of them are fleeing the high street. According to Which? banks and building societies have closed 6,303 branches since January 2015, at a rate of around 53 a month. This represents 64% of the branches that were open at the start of 2015. The M was designed to be modern and different, and give a distinctive icon shape. That map was overlaid onto Sergeant Walnuts’ ‘M’ to create the core logo. Designed in-house, the key was to differentiate it from other Ms, such as those of Metrolink and Metro Bank. “And we were trying to give ourselves a lot of real estate, to house as much of the map as possible,” Attwater says. “We explored many, many Ms, this one felt modern and different, and gave a distinctive icon shape.” Nicolson describes it as having “stature and some heft to it, balanced with the slight playfulness of the colour palette. We’re a business that looks after people’s money, so there needs to be substance.” There was no pressure to connect the new identity with the brand of their sister company The suite of colours – which includes dark red, dark green and beige – was chosen for being bright, complementary and distinct from one another, so all the local boroughs felt represented. The colour palette gives MBS flexibility to “create combinations suggesting different moods and feelings.” So for example it can speak to young people saving for their first home, and older people planning their retirement. “This design system allows us to be nuanced in how we present ourselves,” Nicholson says. Sergeant Walnuts explored many Ms for the logo The wordmark is written in inter. Sergeant Walnuts added a bespoke kick on the downstroke of the ‘l’ in “building” to differentiate it from the ‘u’ and the ‘I’ and improve legibility. “We wanted a widely accessible font that we could deploy across the business – simple, unfussy, slightly utilitarian,” Nicholson says. The building society’s website is being redesigned in-house. Attwater is now commissioning a suite of photography, showing people and places in every borough. The aim is to give “an authentic representation of what it’s like to come from those places”, he says, rather than merely repeating clichés such as the Hacienda nightclub and the city’s nickname, Cottonopolis.
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  • WWW.CREATIVEBOOM.COM
    Northern Design Festival announces 2025 line-up
    Northern Design Festival (NDF) has revealed the full line-up for its 2025 edition, returning to Lancaster from 15–17 May with a programme that puts transparency in process, practice, and personal experience, firmly in the spotlight. Now in its second year, the three-day festival is fast becoming a standout moment in the northern design calendar. With a focus on dialogue over dogma, this year’s event promises a candid exploration of the creative industry's less polished corners and the conversations that too often go unspoken in studios, agencies, and portfolios. Co-founder and director Antonia Arbova explains the motivation behind this year’s theme: “This year’s festival is centred around uncovering the raw, honest stories that often go untold – stories that may not have come to light without the dedication and encouragement of our team. "Each speaker invited to take part has been thoughtfully selected for their alignment with our core values: fostering an inclusive and equitable creative community, not just in the North, but across the wider industry." In keeping with that ethos, the line-up strikes a balance between practical support and soul-searching reflection. Alongside keynote talks and panels, the programme includes hands-on workshops, portfolio reviews, live podcast recordings and informal chats, all designed to spark connection, challenge assumptions, and demystify industry norms. Highlights include Work in Process with Hondo Studio, a behind-the-scenes keynote lifting the lid on the collaborative, sometimes chaotic reality of running a creative studio. Louise Sloper’s Typographic Truthiness tackles how type can clarify or confuse depending on how it’s wielded – a timely reminder for anyone working with words and visuals. Meanwhile, The Transparent Brand panel brings together voices from Studio Up North, M1 Studios, BAGGI and more to discuss how brands can build trust through pricing clarity and values-led collaboration. Ya’Qub Mir, lead designer at Studio Up North and one of this year’s speakers, says: “Transparency really resonates with me – it’s a celebration of identity, resilience, and the power of design to shape culture and community. To me, transparency is not only a necessity, but also a responsibility that all designers should want to commit to, and I’m looking forward to the panel discussion around this topic. “The festival is such an important event, giving northern creatives an opportunity to connect, be inspired and showcase the strength of talent in our region. It’s an honour to be part of it.” The line-up also features a live recording of the My Life in Design podcast with Claire Blyth (Red Setter) and Claire Parker (The Chase), who’ll be sharing personal reflections on careers built through branding. Meanwhile, storytelling takes centre stage in Honest Storytelling: Being Authentic, a panel hosted by BBC Creative, Wash, The Chase and The Engine Room, diving into what it really means to “show your working” as a creative. There’s a lighter side too. Friday night’s Over a Pint session sees Dave Sedgwick and Creative Boom's very own Abbey Bamford sink a few and swap stories on the grind of independent practice – expect war stories, wisdom, and probably at least one pint-related mishap. For those early in their careers, the festival offers practical sessions on routes into the industry, plus portfolio reviews led by Craft and agencies including Robot Food, Studio North and Ultralight. Hands-on workshops include a tile ceramics session – a tactile counterpoint to the theory-heavy talks. Aaliyah Rice from BBC Creative, who joins the panel on honest storytelling, points to the festival’s value for emerging creatives: “Northern Design Festival is such a great space for beginner designers to really understand their industry, especially with a theme like transparency where they can be involved in honest conversations surrounding design to better understand the career path they might be facing. “Design can often have a certain glamour and sheen to it as a career and I’m really looking forward to having these conversations. I can’t wait to hear and answer all their insightful questions on the day.” The festival also includes social moments like the Opening Night at The Storey Gallery and a closing celebration at Mint Cafe Bar. For something more intimate, Demystifying the Agency: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly offers small-group storytelling sessions where no question is off-limits. Niamh Cartwright, NDF’s co-founder and director, says the spirit of openness runs through every aspect of the event: “The NDF team is so excited to bring together such an incredible lineup of speakers for the second Northern Design Festival. It has been such an honour getting to know all of these amazing creatives and agencies that are involved this year. Their 'transparent' approach to innovation and creativity truly represents what we are trying to champion. “We hope that our talks and workshops inspire you and that you are able to leave Lancaster with the confidence to be open and honest as a creative, knowing that you have a supportive community around you!"
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  • X.COM
    Virtual Game Cards are now available on #NintendoSwitch via a system update! Find out more about Virtual Game Cards: https://ntdo.com/6019fLl2W
    Virtual Game Cards are now available on #NintendoSwitch via a system update!Find out more about Virtual Game Cards: https://ntdo.com/6019fLl2W
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  • WWW.GAMESPOT.COM
    Best Lego Deals Ahead Of Star Wars Day - Save On Dozens Of Sets
    Lego has created nearly 1,000 Star Wars-themed building sets over the past 25-plus years. Unsurprisingly, this astonishing figure makes the Star Wars franchise Lego's most prolific and wide-ranging theme. But like all Lego sets, the Star Wars builds are eventually retired and disappear from retail shops. The lifespan of any given Lego set varies, but sometimes you can only buy a particular Star Wars kit for a year before it's gone. As such, it's important to not wait too long for that one Star Wars set you've been eyeing, especially if it's on sale. Ahead of Star Wars Day 2025, we've rounded up our favorite Star Wars Lego deals at Amazon, including the Millennium Falcon and R2-D2.Lego will be adding nine new sets to the Star Wars lineup on May 1 as part of its May the Fourth celebrations. Make sure to check out our roundup of all of the new Star Wars Lego sets, as it also has details about the Lego Store's Star Wars Day promotion, which runs until May 5 and features exclusive free sets and other bonuses. The big new release this year is Jango Fett's Firespray-Class Spaceship, the latest entry in Lego's Ultimate Collector Series. It comes with an exclusive freebie and multiple free sets during the sale. Best Star Wars Lego Deals at Amazon Here's a quick rundown of all of the best Star Wars Lego set deals currently available at Amazon. We will update this roundup with notable new deals throughout the week leading into Star Wars Day. Our favorite deals are in the first list, and you can read more about each of these sets in the gallery below. The second list includes a wide variety of playsets and display models, so make sure to scan that one too, especially if you're shopping for a youngster.Millennium Falcon (921 pieces) -- $68 ($85)R2-D2 (1,050 pieces) -- $82 ($100)Acclamator-Class Assault Ship (450 pieces) -- $42.49 ($50)Darth Vader Helmet (834 pieces) -- $66 ($80)The Dark Falcon Starship (1,579 pieces) -- $155 ($180)Chewbacca (2,319 pieces) -- $174 ($200)A New Hope - Tantive IV (654 pieces) -- $64 ($80)A New Hope - Boarding the Tantive IV (502 pieces) -- $44 ($55)The Phantom Menace - Podrace Diorama (718 pieces) -- $63 ($80)AT-TE Walker (1,082 pieces) -- $112 ($140)The Clone Wars - Coruscant Guard Gunship (1,083 pieces) -- $112 ($140)Captain Rex Y-Wing Microfighter (99 pieces) -- $7.78 ($13)The Mandalorian Helmet (584 pieces) -- $56 ($70)Captain Rex Helmet (854 pieces) -- $56 ($70)ARC-170 Starfighter (497 pieces) -- $61.57 ($70)Ahsoka’s Jedi Interceptor Spaceship (290 pieces) -- $38.24 ($45)Droideka Model (583 pieces) -- $52 ($65)Home One Starcruiser (559 pieces) -- $58 ($70)Obi-Wan Kenobi’s Jedi Starfighter (282 pieces) -- $24 ($30)Bob’s Starfighter (305 pieces) -- $32 ($40)501st Clone Troopers Battle Pack (119 pieces) -- $16 ($20)Paz Vizsla and Moff Gideon Battle Set (289 pieces) -- $32 ($40)Clone Trooper & Droid Battle Pack (215 pieces) -- $24 ($30)TIE Bomber (625 pieces) -- $52 ($65)The Razer Crest UCS (6,187 pieces) -- $526 ($600)Ahsoka Tano’s T-6 Shuttle (599 pieces) -- $57.79 ($80)Mandalorian’s N-1 Starfighter (412 pieces) -- $49 ($60)Ahsoka Tano’s Duel on Peridea (382 pieces) -- $44 ($55)BARC Speeder Escape (221 pieces) -- $25 ($30)The image used above this list is of the new Brick-Built Star Wars Logo, which is one of this year's new Lego sets for Star Wars Day. See all Star Wars Lego Deals Lego Star Wars: Millennium Falcon (921 pieces) $68 (was $85) Not to be confused with the gigantic 7,541-piece Millennium Falcon, this smaller model is much more affordable and much easier to complete. The finished Millennium Falcon is 9.5 inches long and includes intricate details like a cockpit, satellite dish, and cannons. A nameplate and display stand are included. Consider giving it a look if you want a version of the iconic vehicle in your home that doesn’t cost close to $1,000. See at Amazon Lego Star Wars: R2-D2 (1,050 pieces) $82 (was $100) Though it’s listed as a toy set, this R2-D2 replica works just as well as a display piece. It’s also quite large at over 1,000 bricks--so if you’re buying for a young builder, they’ll likely need some help. The completed figure is designed with a 360-degree rotating head, detachable third leg, and attachable tools. Bonus items include a Darth Malak minifigure, info plaque, and a decorated stand. See at Amazon Lego Star Wars: The Clone Wars Coruscant Guard Gunship (1,083 pieces) $112 (was $140) Create your own Clone Wars story with this Coruscant Guard Gunship. Along with a chance to piece together a large gunship, you’ll get five minifigures--Chancellor Palpatine, Commander Fox, two Coruscant Guards, and Padme Amidala. You can carry these figures inside the gunship, as it features a pilot cockpit and a large cargo bay. It should look great as a display piece, but built-in stud shooters make it a fun playset for young Star Wars fans. See at Amazon Lego Star Wars: A New Hope - Tantive IV (654 pieces) $64 (was $80) Designed as a piece of décor, the Tantive IV comes with a stand and nameplate to help you display it in your home. It’s a faithful replica of the vehicle from A New Hope, featuring 11 engines, turbolasers, and other intricate details. Measuring over 6 inches high, 12.5 inches long, and 4 inches wide, it’s sure to grab the attention of anyone who enters the room. No minifigures are included. See at Amazon Lego Star Wars: The Phantom Menace - Podrace Diorama (718 pieces) $63 (was $80) Bring the blistering Mos Espa Podrace into your home with this unique diorama. Featuring Anakin and Sebulba’s Podracers as they speed across Tatooine, it’s a flashy piece of home décor. It’s fairly sizeable at 12 inches wide and 4.5 inches tall, and a 25th Anniversary Brick plus name plaque help set the scene for the action. See at Amazon Lego Star Wars: Chewbacca (2,319 pieces) $174 (was $200) This is one of the larger Star Wars Lego sets for adults, as it clocks in at over 2,000 pieces. Once completed, you’ll have an 18-inch tall version of Chewbacca. The figure isn’t posable, but it does come with a bowcaster, a built-in stand, and info plaque with character details. There’s even a Chewbacca minifigure that can be placed next to the info plaque. This set is designed for experienced builders. See at Amazon Lego Star Wars: AT-TE Walker (1,082 pieces) $112 (was $140) Bundled with five minifigures, the AT-TE Walker makes for an epic playset. Not only do you get to build a large AT-TE Walker with space for up to seven minifigures, but there are three Battle Droids and a buildable Dwarf Spider Droid--giving you plenty of ways to recreate your favorite scenes or build your own skirmishes. See at Amazon Lego Star Wars: The Dark Falcon Starship (1,579 pieces) $155 (was $180) Inspired by the dark version of the Millennium Falcon from the Disney+ special, Rebuild the Galaxy, this 1,579-piece Lego set is quite sizable. The Dark Falcon itself features a removable cockpit that fits two minifigures, and you’ll even get spring-loaded shooters and rotating cannons. The vehicle’s top panels also flip open to reveal an intricate interior. Six minifigure are included with the set. See at Amazon Lego Star Wars: A New Hope - Boarding the Tantive IV (502 pieces) $44 (was $55) Piece together the memorable scene from A New Hope, featuring Darth Vader and his Stormtroopers as they fend off the Rebel invaders. Seven minifigures are included in the set (such as Darth Vader and Captain Antilles), and there’s a fun flick lever that blasts open the entrance door. It works as both a playset and a diorama, so consider showing it off in your game room once it’s completed. See at Amazon Lego Star Wars: Darth Vader Helmet (834 pieces) $66 (was $80) If you want a flashy centerpiece for your home theater, take a look at the 834 brick Darth Vader Helmet. Standing around 8 inches tall, you’ll build a replica of the helmet that comes bundled with a stand and nameplate (in case any of your visitors are unfamiliar with Lord Vader’s iconic headwear). Two other Lego Star Wars Helmets are available for discounted prices at Amazon right now:The Mandalorian Helmet (584 pieces) -- $56 ($70)Captain Rex Helmet (854 pieces) -- $56 ($70)Darth Vader Helmet (834 pieces) -- $66 ($80) See at Amazon Lego Star Wars: Acclamator-Class Assault Ship (450 pieces) $42.49 (was $50) This model should be relatively easy to snap together at just 450 pieces, making it a good choice for builders of all skill levels. The completed vehicle sits on top of an included stand, and a nameplate offers more information about the ship. The Acclamator-Class Assault Ship is a small replica of the one from Attack of the Clones, and at just 5 inches wide and 9 inches tall, it’s an ideal size for an end table, bookcase, or entertainment center. See at Amazon More Gaming, Tech, and Entertainment Deals & Preorders Lego Star Wars Day Sale Is Live - Get Two Free Sets With Jango Fett's UCS Starship All The Nintendo Switch 2 Games You Can Preorder Now Studio Ghibli Movies With Collectible Steelbooks Are Available For Cheap + Show More More Gaming, Tech, and Entertainment Deals & Preorders Links (5) 8BitDo Halts US Shipments Due To Tariffs, But You Can Get Great Controller Deals (For Now) You Won't Find Switch 2 Consoles On Amazon, But You Can Get Games & Gear Nintendo Switch 2 Preorders Sold Out - Games & Accessories Available Nintendo Switch 2 Pro Controller Preorders Are Available Now Final Fantasy X Magic: The Gathering Card Preorders Restocked At Walmart
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