• Apple's iPhone 15 led sales globally in mid-2024 with Samsung close behind
    appleinsider.com
    Apple's iPhone 15 soared to the top of global smartphone sales in 2024, marking a new wave of demand for premium tech and flashy features.iPhone 15Counterpoint Research shows that Apple's iPhone 15 and Pro counterparts topped global sales in the third quarter of 2024. Samsung and Xiaomi held positions in the top ten, indicating a stable but competitive smartphone market.The iPhone 15's success comes when high-end smartphones gain broader consumer interest. Pro Series models made up half of Apple's iPhone sales for the first time in a third quarter, highlighting the growing demand for advanced features. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
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  • Testing out Mac ultra wide display mirror on Apple Vision Pro
    appleinsider.com
    You can finally mirror your Mac to Apple Vision Pro with new wide and ultra wide options. We updated to the latest beta so we could test it out.You can soon mirror your Mac as an ultra wide display to Vision ProThe new mirroring options arrive as part of visionOS 2.2, which just recently launched as an early developer beta. We updated our Apple Vision Pro and our MacBook Pro to macOS 15.2 to try it. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
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  • Oregon researchers build prototype mass timber home that fits together like gingerbread house
    archinect.com
    A research team in Oregon has unveiled a mass timber prototype home that seeks to showcase a sustainable, energy-efficient alternative to traditional home construction. Designed by the TallWood Design Institute, a collaboration between the University of Oregon and Oregon State University, the 760-square-foot project was unveiled at an open house event on November 7th.Image courtesy of the University of OregonImage courtesy of the University of OregonThe home, built from locally sourced mass plywood panels produced by Freres Engineered Wood, aims to address key issues such as affordable housing shortages, wildfire resilience, and economic sustainability. Unlike conventional timber construction, the home is constructed of mass plywood panels shaped to fit together like pieces of a gingerbread house, the team says.Image courtesy of the University of OregonImage courtesy of the University of OregonThrough the project, the team imagines a future where a home could arrive in a flatpack ...
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  • Victor Lundy, famed modernist and key Sarasota School figure, dies at age 101
    archinect.com
    Victor Lundy, the renowned modernist architect whose work leaned on fine art and espoused a more humane form of architecture for the masses, has died in Texas at the age of 101, the Sarasota Observer is reporting.A true man of his times, Lundy served in the U.S. Armys 26th Infantry Division during World War II (his sketches from the war are considered important) before returning home to complete his B.A. and eventually matriculate into the Harvard GSD, where he studied for his masters degree under Walter Gropius.Lundys religious commissionsincluding the First Unitarian Church in Westport, Connecticut, and the St. Paul Lutheran Church in Sarasotaare, perhaps, his best-known projects alongside the United States Tax Court Building in Washington, D.C. Lundy was considered one of the leading figures of the Sarasota School. His watercolor practice was another important aspect of his approach to designing.Docomomo US thanked him for his optimistic spirit" in a commemorative post ...
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  • The U.S., Australia, and New Zealand implement an updated reciprocity agreement for architects
    archinect.com
    The National Council of Architectural Registration Boards (NCARB), the Architects Accreditation Council of Australia (AACA), and the New Zealand Registered Architects Board (NZRAB) have implemented a new Mutual Recognition Agreement (MRA). It replaces the previous MRA between the countries, created in 2016, further expanding licensure access for international architects.The new agreement recognizes the professional credentials of architects licensed or registered in the United States, Australia, and New Zealand and acknowledges the value of the various pathways to licensure within each country. As a result, unnecessary barriers to reciprocal licensure, such as extended experience requirements and limited paths to licensure or registration, are being reduced.Related on Archinect: Work and study agreement signed between architectural registration bodies of the UK, Australia, and New ZealandAs stated by NCARB President Kenneth R. Van Tine, The updated agreement is pivotal to NCARBs...
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  • Liquid Works Is Live: https://blendermarket.com/products/sa
    www.youtube.com
    Liquid Works Is Live: https://blendermarket.com/products/sa...With a library of high-quality procedural materials. Perfect for any scene needing a realistic fluid effect. Find out more. #Blender3D ##ProceduralMaterials #sanctus #liquid #materials
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  • CGI VFX Short Film HD "Circle Short Film" by Alexander Heringer | CGMeetup
    www.facebook.com
    Circle Short Filmhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y7MWT-odiWs #3d #cgi #animation #animated #shortfilm #short #Artist #DigitalArt #3DArt #Art #2D #Artwork #Games #GameArt #Illustration #DigitalArtist #Drawing #Youtube #cgmeetupCGI VFX Short Film CIRCLE Short Film by Alexander Heringer. Featured on http://www.cgmeetup.net/home/circle-short-film/CIRCLE depicts a young woman in despai...
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  • CGI Short Film Trailer: "Red Gaia" by Udesh Chetty | CGMeetup
    www.facebook.com
    Red Gaiahttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=otOxGwvxaF0 #3d #cgi #animation #animated #shortfilm #short #Artist #DigitalArt #3DArt #Art #2D #Artwork #Games #GameArt #Illustration #DigitalArtist #Drawing #Youtube #cgmeetupCGI Short Film Trailer "Red Gaia" by Udesh Chetty "Red Gaia" traces the existential journey of an AI android on Mars, focusing on how it interacts with the r...
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  • Spotifys AI is no match for a real DJ
    www.theverge.com
    At the risk of stating the obvious, AI is absolutely everywhere lately. Theres AI in your car, AI in your messaging app, AI in your glasses. Ive gotten pretty desensitized to it all as a hazard of the job, but it was Spotifys AI DJ that actually got my attention.Ive listened to a top 40 radio station in the past two decades, so Im familiar with the concept of a robot picking music for me. In that context, an AI DJ doesnt seem like much of a stretch. But after using it on and off for a week, Im convinced its the perfect analogy for our AI-everything moment. Its eerily human, and it plays a lot of music I like. But take it from someone with access to a high-quality local indie radio station one that employs human DJs! there just aint nothing like the real thing.Spotifys AI DJ has been around since early 2023, but it piqued my interest recently when I was scrounging around the app looking for some work-friendly tunes. The AI voice greeted me by name, then after a little preamble, told me it had some dream pop and neo-psychedelic waves picked out. As the music started, I was annoyed at how extremely my shit it was. I shouldnt have been surprised, considering that Spotify has nearly a decades worth of data on my musical listening habits. It drew on my previous listening for the next track, too: a song by Classixx, whose Hanging Gardens album I listened to on repeat last year. But while I listened to Hanging Gardens on Spotify, I didnt discover it there. I heard it first on KEXP a local station where real humans pick the music.DJ X is represented by an animated green circle that moves as it talks.Do I want to listen to Santigold? Yeah, but its more meaningful coming from a human curator. See, here in Seattle, were extremely spoiled. In between the robot-programmed, conglomerate-owned stations, we have a real honest-to-god independent station on our radio dials: 90.3, to be precise. I started listening to KEXP through their online stream years before I moved to Seattle. Being a local has only made me more of a fan; I celebrated the opening of the new KEXP location in 2016 and saw one of my favorite bands play a free in-studio show there not long before they broke up. Ive logged countless hours working on my laptop in the community gathering space. Being able to walk into my favorite radio station and just like, hang out, remains cool as hell all these years later. I wish every city in the country had a KEXP.Its not that I like everything that I hear on KEXP. The Friday song is banned in my house because my husband and I are both so sick of it. And as much as Ive tried, I cant get into Wet Leg. Its a me problem. But thats kind of the point of a radio station, isnt it? You hear some stuff you like and some stuff youre not as into. Maybe you hear a song you forgot about but love or a band you dig that youve never heard before. Its a well-rounded meal, while an AI-curated set feels like a dessert buffet. Its all the stuff you love, and its great at first, but then it gives you a stomach ache after a while.It hits different than when it comes from an algorithmIn the era of Spotify algorithms and top 40 stations, a DJ might seem like an abstract concept. But KEXPs DJs are very much real people that I see out in the community, emceeing local music festivals and shopping at the co-op grocery store. Its an obvious but crucial difference. When a real human plays a song you really like because they really like it, too, it hits different than when it comes from an algorithm.Being on air and sharing music is a way of connection with thousands of people across the world, says Evie Stokes, DJ and host of KEXPs Drive Time. Its a great way for me to be honest and have accountability and community that I think we so desperately need.Her connection to the audience is built through and alongside the music; Stokes has shared her journey into sobriety with her listeners. Every time I talk about it on air I get an influx of messages from folks who are going through similar paths in their life. That connection simply cant exist when the only thing running the station is a robot.One of the downsides of being employed as a writer is that its basically impossible for me to listen to the radio while I work. I cant write to songs with lyrics, and I definitely cant write while a DJ is talking. So I turn to Spotify a lot during the workday, and Ive listened to plenty of lofi and smooth jazz beats playlists while blogging. Ive used another of Spotifys AI features, too: AI-created playlists. For the purpose, theyre fine. Best of all, theres no pretense that a human is picking the music for me. I tell the computer what mood Im in, and it assembles a playlist of tunes that fit the assignment.If nothing else, the AI DJ is a kind of totem of the particular AI moment were in. Generative AI is buzzy, and tech companies are busy shoving it into every corner of every product they make, whether it has any business being there or not. Theres plenty of stuff AI can do and probably will do for us in the near future. But standing in for a real human, especially in creative applications, isnt one of them. Take it from the Polish radio station that tried and failed spectacularly to replace its human presenters with AI characters.A podcast is just humans talking to each otherDoes anyone actually want an AI DJ calling them by name? Does anybody want an AI-generated DM from their favorite creator? Does anyone want to have a Zoom meeting with your AI avatar? Maybe, but I think the tech executives pushing for more of this stuff are vastly overestimating this demand and underestimating the value that a real human brings to an exchange. People want to listen to podcasts, for Christs sake. A podcast is just humans talking to each other. Conceptually, listening to a podcast is about as advanced as gathering round the radio for your favorite program like people did a hundred years ago. Some things are constants.On the day I started listening to the Spotify AI DJ, I got in the car that afternoon to pick my kid up from daycare. DJ Riz was hosting Drive Time on KEXP, and the first thing I heard him play was Sunshine, Lollipops and Rainbows by Lesley Gore, released in 1963. Its a bop thats as syrupy-sweet as the candy in its title. Riz followed that up with Love from Mos Defs 1999 album Black on Both Sides. Im sure I wouldnt have listened to either of those songs on my own that afternoon, let alone back to back. But it worked, and the juxtaposition made me smile. You just dont get that kind of thing from AI.
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  • Chill games for a chill weekend
    www.theverge.com
    Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 60, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If youre new here, welcome, its a lot of gaming stuff this week, and also you can read all the old editions at the Installer homepage.)This week, Ive been doomscrolling about the election, if Im honest. But lets not talk about that. Ive also been reading about shipwrecks and in-flight magazines and baseball bat influencers, making a bunch of lists in Listy, dusting off my Bluesky account as Threads becomes increasingly worse,Batman: Arkham Shadow, playing with tasks and notes in the Craft beta, seeing if I can replace Gmail with Thunderbird for Android, and trying really, really hard to convince myself I dont need a new Mac Mini.I also have for you a couple of new games to play this weekend, some fun stuff to watch, a nifty new way for Mac users to take notes, and more. And I have some ideas for everyone looking for a place to put all their articles, newsletters, and other online stuff.Oh, housekeeping note: Installers off next week. We have some planning meetings going on, and also, honestly, this is one of the driest times of the year when it comes to new stuff. Ill be back with a big issue in two weeks ahead of Thanksgiving, and then we have some fun plans through the rest of the year.All right, its a lot of games this week. Which feels right. Lets go.(As always, the best part of Installer is your ideas and tips. What are you comfort watching this week? What have you been playing / reading / downloading / baking that everyone else should know about, too? Tell me everything: installer@theverge.com. And if you know someone else who might enjoy Installer, tell them to subscribe here.)The DropMario & Luigi: Brothership. It feels like we get a fun new Mario game like every two weeks these days. And Im not complaining! Im into the teamwork-y vibe of this one and the amount of pure unadulterated exploring it asks you to do.Game Changers. The first two episodes of this new Discovery series tell the story of two of my favorite things in gaming: Nintendo and Madden. There are also episodes coming about Call of Duty, Scrabble, and other iconic games. The nostalgia is through the roof with this one. Raycast Notes. Raycast has become one of my most-used Mac apps: its a launcher, a clipboard manager, a window reorder-er, and a million other things. Its built-in notes app just got a big upgrade its as simple as opening a text file but much more powerful.Guild Builds. The striking New York Times tech workers created a pretty fun set of games you can play instead of Wordle this week. Match Strike is hilarious and fun, as is Scabbys Fair Contract Builder. Who knew you could build a good game thats also a sick burn against your boss?Heretic. Ive been excited for this movie ever since I read Andrew Websters review, which confirmed that Hugh Grant can be as terrifying as he is charming. Plus, a bad guy you can describe as a theological debate bro? Im in.The AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D. This CPU is power-hungry and expensive, but Tom Warren called it the best gaming CPU on the market, and that is no small feat. If youre building a gaming PC this holiday season, this is where to start.Stardew Valley 1.6.9. I have heard from a lot of folks who retreated into Stardew Valley this week as a reprieve from the real world. The newest update adds new items, the ability to retrieve things youve dropped in water, and lots of other useful and delightful changes.Countdown: Paul vs. Tyson. Look, Im not proud of the fact that Im fascinated by next weeks Tyson / Paul fight. Is it even a real fight? Is it all a bit? Who knows! But leave it to Netflix to milk it for all its worth; I bet you $10 this series will be more fun and dramatic than the fight itself.Here. By most accounts, this movie is bad. But director Robert Zemeckis did some fascinating and AI-forward work to de-age Tom Hanks and Robin Wright in order to make the movie work, and Ive enjoyed the way all three have talked about the process. This feels like a movie well remember in the story of AI filmmaking.Google Vids. The pitch for Vids what if making a video were as easy as making a Google Doc? is a really clever one. And now, months after Google first announced the app, you can give it a whirl. Send me all the weird stuff you make!Group projectLast week, a lot of you reached out saying you were bummed to see that Omnivore, a really great app for reading articles, newsletters, and other stuff, was shutting down. I was bummed, too! Ive recommended Omnivore to a lot of people and really liked the app. (PSA, by the way: if youre still using Omnivore, you only have a few more weeks to get your stuff out.)Now, a bunch of us are stuck trying to figure out where to go. So I asked you all to share what you need most in an app like this and lots of you did! Thanks, as always, to everyone who reached out with thoughts and recommendations. I think I have a pretty good sense of what were all looking for, so let me try and recommend a few things.If all you need is a place to save articles and read them later, you have lots of options. Readwise Reader is the most powerful (and the only one that also does RSS and newsletters), but its also $8 a month. Matter is a lovely app but is mostly Apple-only. Instapaper is a great option and works across basically all platforms its probably the one Id recommend to most people. Pocket is solid, too, but I just dont like the interface.If you want something a little more open and versatile, Id go with an RSS tool. I use Feedbin, which I love. Feedly and NewsBlur are also good for this kind of thing. All three give you an email address you can use to subscribe to newsletters and a way to manually save a page to your reader.If youre trying to build more of a database of stuff that you can search through later, Id start with a bookmarking tool. Raindrop is my go-to, but if youre an Apple user, theres also GoodLinks and Anybox and Plinky. You can also use an app like Obsidian, with its web clipper, to turn webpages into text files.If you want something that will truly last forever, the best move is to host something yourself. A few of you recommended apps like Wallabag, Linkwarden, and Linkding, and if youre willing to do the work, this is the most durable option by far. There are some folks working on ways to self-host Omnivore, too, so keep an eye on that.The best answer for most people, I think, is to use an RSS reader like Feedbin to compile all your incoming stuff and then a read-later app like Instapaper to go through your reading list. Readwise Reader is the closest thing Ive found to Omnivores all-in-one capability, and its definitely the one Id recommend to people looking for a one-to-one replacement, but youll pay pretty handsomely for it. Maybe Omnivore was too good to be true this whole time.Screen shareIve been listening to Brian McCullough talk for a really long time. I think I first encountered his work on the Internet History Podcast, which is like a treasure trove of early Silicon Valley stories. He also hosts the Techmeme Ride Home podcast, which is an awesome way to get daily tech news. And more recently, Ive been listening to his newest show, RAD! 80s90s History. (I might even be on that show in a few weeks stay tuned.) And in addition to all that, McCullough is a general partner at the Ride Home Fund, investing in tech companies. Busy guy, that Brian.I asked Brian to share his homescreen to see if we might learn how he manages it all. Here it is, plus some info on the apps he uses and why:The phone: An iPhone 16 Pro. For the first time in my life of using iPhones, I have a case on it, because my son dropped my previous one twice and shattered the front and back glass. I wouldnt have upgraded this year except for that. So, lesson learned. Kids.The wallpaper: The wallpaper is a picture I took some night on Prospect Park West years ago. The lockscreen is obviously an old iPod interface, my favorite version of the iPod. I bought it from some collection of wallpapers about a year ago. Cant remember where from, though.The apps: Phone, Fantastical, Apple Maps, Settings, Slack, Microsoft Word, Shopify, Citi Bike, Audible, Microsoft OneNote, Carrot Weather, Amazon, Jersey Mikes, Wallet, Tovala, Threads, X, York, Claude, Messages, Overcast, Safari, Superhuman.Im fairly basic with the apps, as you can see. Apps to get news from, like Threads and Twitter. Slack for work. Superhuman for email.Ive totally moved over to Claude in the last few months thanks to Alex Kantrowitz evangelizing it to me constantly. So much so that Ive canceled my OpenAI subscription. Tovala is a smart oven / meal plan company that Ive been using religiously since the pandemic. Basically my lunch every single day is a Tovala meal. Jersey Mikes finally came to Park Slope and so thats also a meal go-to. I use Citi Bike once or twice a day.The app that says York is interesting. Thats my subway stop for my office in Dumbo. This random dude made this thing that you can get at Nextstop.nyc. Basically, it gives you real-time train times for whatever subway stops you use all the time, and then you put an icon for that on your phone. IT. IS. AMAZING. It is insane that, 20 years into my living in NYC, it took this long for someone to do this right. Im about to leave the office, when is the next train? Should I leave now or wait five minutes? Amazing.I also asked Brian to share a few things hes into right now. Heres what he sent back:My kids and I are playing tons of Tiny Glade. Relaxing game that can also be super complex and sophisticated if you put in the time. Its like Minecraft in that way, but with a sort of romanticist feel.The book Im obsessed with right now is Rick Atkinsons The British Are Coming. Ive read Ricks other books about the US Army in World War II, but he has a new series about the American Army in the Revolutionary War. Its amazing and detailed like all of Ricks books, but full of stuff I didnt know. Like, the battle of Lexington and Concord: oh, Paul Revere, the British go and try to shut down a weapons depot and the minutemen take potshots at them? Oh no. WAY more bloody than that. Like hundreds of people died on both sides. Savage fighting. Very interesting stuff. Im almost to the Battle of Brooklyn and cant wait.I rewatched Millers Crossing a few nights ago, and god damn if that movie isnt the most underrated and underseen of the whole Coen filmography.Im looking forward to the next book in Brandon Sandersons Stormlight Archive series, which is coming next month: Wind and Truth. Even though the previous book in the series was pretty boring.CrowdsourcedHeres what the Installer community is into this week. I want to know what youre into right now as well! Email installer@theverge.com or message me on Signal @davidpierce.11 with your recommendations for anything and everything, and well feature some of our favorites here every week. For even more great recommendations, check out the replies to this post on Threads.Superfan. A beautiful app to keep tabs on ongoing sports events and matches. KaranIve been using this little-known news app called Adarga Panoptic. Has this interesting take on the news where its provided through the lens of a persons perspective rather than just headlines. Content is a bit limited, but with some added customization options, this could be a really cool way to see the news differently. AlenScribe Notes. Its like Whisper Memos but has more features. Sort of like Cleft but cheaper. Ive been using it for a few weeks now and I love it. Helps me get my scrambled thoughts and to-dos out of my head and into a place where I can make sense of them all. DavidCheck out the Mobapad M6 HD for the Nintendo Switch! Its a Joy-Con alternative that has ergonomic grips, Hall effect joysticks, and gyro and HD rumble. It essentially has every feature of the Joy-Cons, but theyre actually comfy to hold. The buttons are a little clicky, and the travel case is almost as bulky as my Steam Deck, but its definitely the most comfortable and feature-packed Joy-Con alternative Ive found. I picked one up on a recent trip to Hong Kong, and it completely changed my Switch playing experience. KevinIve been keeping an eye on an app called Openvibe. Its able to aggregate your Threads, Bluesky, and Mastodon (and Nostr, too, if youre into that kind of thing) feeds into a single feed you can scroll. The home feed algorithm is hit or miss, but the trending feed is great, especially because its not something Mastodon or Bluesky have natively. Also, it lets you cross-post to all four networks for free! DrakeWinter is looming, so I got myself a Zwift Ride smart bike for days when running outside just isnt a great idea. Great hardware. The app feels older than it is, but the gamification kinda works. More fun than staring at the wall! RobertWith *gestures around wildly* going on, Im pouring less of my time into social media and more into a personal blog using a great service called Pika. Its dead simple to set up and I love how barebones it is. KalebStarted collecting sports cards, primarily NFL. Its not something Ive thought about since I was 14, but it has been a fun distraction. These are two great YouTube channels to get into: Market Movers and Sports Card Investor. And getting in on breaks on Whatnot, where you buy into a live box opening, is some fun entertainment. TravisIve been reading Richard II, which feels of a piece with the moment, and due to which I discovered how much more complicated sideloading a Gutenberg ebook to a Kindle is than it should be. The right format wasnt the one labeled for Kindles! JeanneIve been playing a lot of Maestro lately on my Quest 2. Its such an amazing and immersive experience. If you ever wanted to feel like an orchestra conductor, this is as close as you can get (unless youre an actual orchestra conductor, in which case, congrats, such a cool job!). GonzaloSigning offSo I have this Apple Watch. Its fine, I like it, whatever, but Id rather wear another watch. So I went down a YouTube rabbit hole: can you turn an Apple Watch into a standalone, pocketable device that works even when its not on your wrist? Turns out, you can! There are a lot of good ideas out there, but Im basically just following the ideas in this video from Jose Briones. (Im also intrigued by the TinyPod, but that one doesnt seem to be very good.) Im turning my Watch into basically a teeny-tiny iPod and backup communications device that I carry around like a pocket watch. Its silly, but its fun. And it works!See you in two weeks!
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