• SMASHINGMAGAZINE.COM
    Solo Development: Learning To Let Go Of Perfection
    As expected from anyone who has ever tried building anything solo, my goal was not to build an app but the app the one app thats so good you wonder how you ever survived without it. I had everything in place: wireframes, a to-do list, project structure you name it. Then I started building. Just not the product. I started with the landing page for it, which took me four days, and I hadnt even touched the apps core features yet. The idea itself was so good I had to start marketing it right away!I found myself making every detail perfect: every color, shadow, gradient, font size, margin, and padding had to be spot on. I dont even want to say how long the logo took.Spoiler:No one cares about your logo.Why did I get so stuck on something that was never even part of the core app I wanted so badly to build? Why wasnt I nagging myself to move on when I clearly needed to?The reality of solo development is that there is no one to tell you when to stop or simply say, Yo, this is good enough! Move on. Most users dont care whether a login button is yellow or green. What they want (and need) is a button that works and solves their problem when clicking it.Test Early And OftenUnnecessary tweaks, indecisive UI decisions, and perfectionism are the core reasons I spend more time on things than necessary.Like most solo developers, I also started with the hope of pushing out builds with the efficiency of a large-scale team. But it is easier said than done.When building solo, you start coding, then you maybe notice a design flaw, and you switch to fixing it, then a bug appears, and you try fixing that, and voil the day is gone. There comes a time when it hits you that, You know what? Its time to build messy. Thats when good intentions of project and product management go out the window, and thats when I find myself working by the seat of my pants rather than plowing forward with defined goals and actionable tasks that are based on good UI/UX principles, like storyboards, user personas, and basic prioritization.This realization is something you have to experience to grasp fully. The trick Ive learned is to focus on getting something out there for people to see and then work on actual feedback. In other words,Its more important to get the idea out there and iterate on it than reaching for perfection right out of the gate.Because guess what? Even if you have the greatest app idea in the world, youre never going to make it perfect until you start receiving feedback on it. Youre no mind reader as much as we all want to be one and some insights (often the most relevant) can only be received through real user feedback and analytics. Sure, your early assumptions may be correct, but how do you know until you ship them and start evaluating them?Nowadays, I like to tell others (and myself) to work from hypotheses instead of absolutes. Make an assertion, describe how you intend to test it, and then ship it. With that, you can gather relevant insights that you can use to get closer to perfection whatever that is.Strength In Recognizing WeaknessLets be real: Building a full application on your own is not an easy feat. Id say its like trying to build a house by yourself; it seems doable, but the reality is that it takes a lot more hands than the ones you have to make it happen. And not only to make it happen but to make it happen well. Theres only so much one person can do, and admitting your strengths and weaknesses up-front will serve you well by avoiding the trap that you can do it all alone.I once attempted to build a project management app alone. I knew it might be difficult, but I was confident. Within a few days, this simple project grew legs and expanded with new features like team collaboration, analytics, time tracking, and custom reports being added, many of which I was super excited to make.Building a full app takes a lot of time. Think about it; youre doing the work of a team all alone without any help. Theres no one to provide you with design assets, content, or back-end development. No stakeholder to swoop and poop on your ideas (which might be a good thing). Every decision, every line of code, and every design element is 100% on you alone.It is technically possible to build a full-featured app solo, but when you think about it, theres a reason why the concept of MVP exists. Take Instagram, for example; it wasnt launched with reels, stories, creators insights, and so on. It started with one simple thing: photo sharing.All Im trying to say is start small, launch, and let users guide the evolution of the product. And if you can recruit more hands to help, that would be even better. Just remember to leverage your strengths and reinforce your weaknesses by leaning on other peoples strengths.Yes, Think Like an MVPThe concept of a minimum viable product (MVP) has always been fascinating to me. In its simplest form, it means building the basic version of your idea that technically works and getting it in front of users. Yes, this is such a straightforward and widely distributed tip, but its still one of the hardest principles for solo developers to follow, particularly for me.I mentioned earlier that my genius app idea grew legs. And lots of them. I had more ideas than I knew what to do with, and I hadnt even written a reasonable amount of code! Sure, this app could be enhanced to support face ID, dark mode, advanced security, real-time results, and a bunch of other features. But all these could take months of development for an app that youre not even certain users want.Ive learned to ask myself: What would this project look like if it was easy to build?. Its so surreal how the answer almost always aligns with what users want. If you can distill your grand idea into a single indispensable idea that does one or two things extremely well, I think youll find as I have that the final result is laser-focused on solving real user problems.Ship the simplest version first. Dark mode can wait. All you need is a well-defined idea, a hypothesis to test, and a functional prototype to validate that hypothesis; anything else is probably noise.Handle Imperfection GracefullyYou may have heard about the Ship it Fast approach to development and instantly recognize the parallels between it and what Ive discussed so far. In a sense, Ship it Fast is ultimately another way of describing an MVP: get the idea out fast and iterate on it just as quickly.Some might disagree with the ship-fast approach and consider it reckless and unprofessional, which is understandable because, as developers, we care deeply about the quality of our work. However,The ship-fast mentality is not to ignore quality but to push something out ASAP and learn from real user experiences. Ship it now perfect it later.Thats why I like to tell other developers that shipping an MVP is the safest, most professional way to approach development. It forces you to stay in scope and on task without succumbing to your whimsies. I even go so far as to make myself swear an Oath of Focus at the start of every project.I, Vayo, hereby solemnly swear (with one hand on this design blueprint) to make no changes, no additions, and no extra features until this app is fully built in all its MVP glory. I pledge to avoid the temptations of endless tweaking and the thoughts of just one more feature.Only when a completed prototype is achieved will I consider any new features, enhancements, or tweaks.Signed,Vayo, Keeper of the MVPRemember, theres no one there to hold you accountable when you develop on your own. Taking a brief moment to pause and accepting that my first version wont be flawless helps put me in the right headspace early in the project.Prioritize What MattersI have noticed that no matter what I build, theres always going to be bugs. Always. If Google still has bugs in the Google Notes app, trust me, then its fine for a solo developer to accept that bugs will always be a part of any project.Look at flaky tests. For instance, you could run a test over 1,000 times and get all greens, and then the next day, you run the same test, an error shows. Its just the nature of software development. And for the case of endlessly adding features, it never ends either. Theres always going to be a new feature that youre excited about. The challenge is to curb some of that enthusiasm and shelve it responsibly for a later time when it makes sense to work on it.Ive learned to categorize bugs and features into two types: intrusive and non-intrusive. Intrusive are those things that prevent projects from functioning properly until fixed, like crashes and serious errors. The non-intrusive items are silent ones. Sure, they should be fixed, but the product will work just fine and wont prevent users from getting value if they arent addressed right away.You may want to categorize your bugs and features in other ways, and Ive seen plenty of other examples, including:High value, low value;High effort, low effort;High-cost, low-cost;Need to have, nice to have.Ive even seen developers and teams use these categorizations to create some fancy priority score that considers each category. Whatever it is that helps you stay focused and on-task is going to be the right approach for you more than what specific category you use.Live With Your StackHeres a classic conundrum in development circles:Should I use React? Or NextJS? Or wait, how about Vue? I heard its more optimized. But hold on, I read that React Redux is dead and that Zustand is the new hot tool.And just like that, youve spent an entire day thinking about nothing but the tech stack youre using to build the darn thing.We all know that an average user could care less about the tech stack under the hood. Go ahead and ask your mom what tech stack WhatsApp is built on, and let me know what she says. Most times, its just us who obsesses about tech stacks, and that usually only happens when were asked to check under the hood.I have come to accept that there will always be new tech stacks released every single day with the promise of 50% performance and 10% less code. That new tool might scale better, but do I actually have a scaling problem with my current number of zero users? Probably not.My advice:Pick the tools you work with best and stick to those tools until they start working against you.Theres no use fighting something early if something you already know and use gets the job done. Basically, dont prematurely optimize or constantly chase the latest shiny object.Do Design Before The First Line of CodeI know lots of solo developers out there suck at design, and Im probably among the top 50. My design process has traditionally been to open VS Code, create a new project, and start building the idea in whatever way comes to mind. No design assets, comps, or wireframes to work with just pure, unstructured improvisation. Thats not a good idea, and its a habit Im actively trying to break. These days, I make sure to have a blueprint of what Im building before I start writing code. Once I have that, I make sure to follow through and not change anything to respect my Oath of Focus.I like how many teams call comps and wireframes project artifacts. They are pieces of evidence that provide a source of truth for how something looks and works. You might be the sort of person who works better with sets of requirements, and thats totally fine. But having some sort of documentation that you can point back to in your work is like having a turn-by-turn navigation on a long road trip its indispensable for getting where you need to go.And what if youre like me and dont pride yourself on being the best designer? Thats another opportunity to admit your weaknesses up-front and recruit help from someone with those strengths. That way, you can articulate the goal and focus on what youre good at.Give Yourself TimelinesPersonally, without deadlines, Im almost unstoppable at procrastinating. Ive started setting time limits when building any project, as it helps with procrastination and makes sure something is pushed out at a specified time. Although this wont work without accountability, I feel the two work hand in hand.I set a 23 week deadline to build a project. And no matter what, as soon as that time is up, I must post or share the work in its current state on my socials. Because of this, Im not in my comfort zone anymore because I wont want to share a half-baked project with the public; Im conditioned to work faster and get it all done. Its interesting to see the length of time you can go if you can trick your brain.I realize that this is an extreme constraint, and it may not work for you. Im just the kind of person who needs to know what my boundaries are. Setting deadlines and respecting them makes me a more disciplined developer. More than that, it makes me work efficiently because I stop overthinking things when I know I have a fixed amount of time, and that leads to faster builds.ConclusionThe best and worst thing about solo development is the solo part. Theres a lot of freedom in working alone, and that freedom can be inspiring. However, all that freedom can be intoxicating, and if left unchecked, it becomes a debilitating hindrance to productivity and progress. Thats a good reason why solo development isnt for everyone. Some folks will respond a lot better to a team environment.But if you are a solo developer, then I hope my personal experiences are helpful to you. Ive had to look hard at myself in the mirror many days to come to realize that I am not a perfect developer who can build the perfect app alone. It takes planning, discipline, and humility to make anything, especially the right app that does exactly the right thing. Ideas are cheap and easy, but stepping out of our freedom and adding our own constraints based on progress over perfection is the secret sauce that keeps us moving and spending our time on those essential things.Further Reading On SmashingMagWhats The Perfect Design Process?, Vitaly FriedmanDesign Under Constraints: Challenges, Opportunities, And Practical Strategies, Paul BoagImproving The Double Diamond Design Process, Andy BuddUnexpected Learnings From Coding Artwork Every Day For Five Years, Saskia Freeke
    0 Kommentare 0 Anteile 18 Ansichten
  • DESIGN-MILK.COM
    FreePower + Cosentino Bring Wireless Charging to Your Kitchen Counter
    Charging our phones has never been more convenient, with fast wired options via USB ports and wireless charging eliminating messy cables. Yet, despite these advancements, charging locations remain limited. FreePower and Cosentino aim to change that with a groundbreaking partnership.This Cosentino x FreePower collaboration seeks to create surfaces with built-in wireless charging pads. FreePowers innovative technology will be incorporated into Cosentinos Silestone and Dekton surfaces, set to debut in Cosentino City showrooms in 2025. These surfaces promise to combine aesthetics with functionality, featuring sleek, minimalistic white rings to indicate charging zones.FreePowers technology goes beyond expectations. Utilizing multiple charging coils embedded in the material, it provides a charging area capable of powering up to three devices simultaneously at 15 watts each the fastest Qi wireless charging speed currently available, rivaling even Apples MagSafe. The system supports a variety of devices, including phones and earbuds like AirPods.Designed for translucent surfaces, the technology can be integrated into kitchen, bathroom, and other home areas. However, these features are only available on new installations, as retrofitting existing countertops is not yet possible. Designers working with Cosentino surfaces will undergo specialized training to implement FreePower technology into their projects.The integration of wireless power into everyday surfaces has vast potential. While the technology isnt yet ready to power high-energy appliances like blenders, the partnership between FreePower and Cosentino marks a significant step forward. Envision a future where kitchen appliances operate seamlessly on wireless power surfaces a prospect that feels closer than ever.To support this innovation, FreePower and Cosentino are actively training fabricators nationwide. By the first quarter of 2025, over 300 fabricators are expected to be certified, with many more to follow by years end. This widespread adoption will pave the way for more accessible wireless charging solutions in homes.For additional details, visit the FreePower website at freepower.io.
    0 Kommentare 0 Anteile 20 Ansichten
  • DESIGN-MILK.COM
    Elevate Your Space With Favius Elegant New Releases
    German design brand favius is giving us new reasons to spend time in our coziest living spaces with an expansion of its portfolio a trio of remarkable pieces that blur the lines between architecture, art, and modern craftsmanship. As a continuation of its celebrated collaborations with Christian Haas, Hanne Willmann, and Studio Besau-Marguerre, favius introduces a fresh set of releases: a new coffee table thats equal parts sculpture and statement by Haas, and two striking new colorways for existing designs by Willmann and Studio Besau-Marguerre. Each piece reflects favius commitment to quality and artistic expression, elevating contemporary interior spaces with an elegant aesthetic.The star of the lineup, BOIA by Christian Haas, is a coffee table thats nothing short of a tactile experience. Made from three meticulously carved solid ash segments, BOIA feels as good as it looks. Its wood finish is open-pored lacquer, which highlights the woods natural grain and makes it as inviting to touch as it is to admire. With three contrasting metal legs in a coordinating powder-coated finish that seem to pierce the wood base, BOIA is topped with a translucent gray glass, creating a light, floating effect and revealing the table legs underneath. Available in three versatile colors, BOIA is designed to make a subtle yet impactful effect in the home.favius continues to elevate its existing pieces, offering new hues to the already beloved FUNGI floor lamp by Hanne Willmann and SEDIMENT table by Studio Besau-Marguerre. The FUNGI lamp, now available in sky blue and wine red, is a harmonious blend of hand-blown glass and handmade ceramics. The semi-transparent, steel-gray glass lampshade offers a unique view of the ceramic base, creating a layered visual effect thats both dramatic and understated.Meanwhile, the SEDIMENT table is refreshed with a black finish and a Nero Marquina tabletop in both the coffee table and side table versions. This reimagined version offers a new take on marble, with alternating raw and polished stripes that evoke the visual texture of layered stone.Each piece encapsulates favius philosophy of merging fine materials with top-tier craftsmanship and artistic detail. The entire collection is proudly crafted in Germany, reflecting a strong commitment to sustainability and a vision of beauty that values longevity and ecological consideration. With these releases, favius makes a strong case for staying in and reveling in the cozy and elegant ambiance of your own home.To learn more about the BOIA, FUNGI, and SEDIMENT products, visit favius.de.Photography by Fabian Frinzel.
    0 Kommentare 0 Anteile 19 Ansichten
  • LIFEHACKER.COM
    CES 2025: This Smart Planter Will Care for Your Houseplants While You're Away
    There are endless crafty ways to keep plants watered while youre away from home: You can wick water from jugs, upend wine bottles into your planters, or simply pay the neighbors kid to come by. The problem is that all of these methods are imperfect, and all too often, you come home to plants that are over-watered, under-watered or neglected completely. This week at CES, LeafyPod introduced smart planters that dont simply hold onto a months worth of waterthey promise to take better care of your plants than a plant sitter.Self-watering planters have been helping plants the last few years by keeping water in a reservoir at the bottom of the planter, allowing the plant to intake what it needs, but this is also limitedyou usually get just a few weeks of watering. LeafyPods can hold a month of water, and rather than allowing the plant to slowly intake water on its own, the planters use sensors that monitor humidity, light, and temperature and then apply water to your plantonly as much as it needs. If youre worried about cords, the LeafyPod is wireless and cordless. The battery promises to last for six months, and is recharged via USB-C. Credit: LeafyPod LeafyPod uses AI (of course it does), and will spend a few weeks learning your plants habits and needs, and then will take over. When home, you work in tandem with LeafyPod. The app will identify the type of plant, and then make specialized recommendations to you specifically for that plant, whether it needs more light or humidity, or is too cold.Every single plant in my stewardship has specific needs, and theyre used to how I water. I know the signs of trouble for each of them, and Ive never been able to find a plant sitter that replaced me. I always assume Im coming home to a few dead plants, and Im rarely wrong, no matter how well meaning people are. For me, LeafyPod has a lot of potential. It also has some obvious limitations.First, theres the price. Each LeafyPod is about $75, and youll need a LeafyPod Bridge (also around $75) for your flock of pods. Second, the planters only come in one size: small. The internal dimensions of LeafyPod are 5.1 inches by 4.1 inches, which means even medium-sized plants are out of luck. Lastly, LeafyPod is decidedly modern looking, so youll need to make these all white planters work with your aesthetic. Still, I can see the upside of trusting LeafyPod with particularly spendy houseplants, rather than risking it with a housesitter. Even if youre home, I like the idea of something monitoring my plants and catching things I dont, like lighting needs and temperature issues.LeafyPod is on pre-order sale, with plans to ship in April 2025. One planter plus the bridge is $148, two planters and the bridge is $228, and three planters plus a bridge is $308.
    0 Kommentare 0 Anteile 19 Ansichten
  • LIFEHACKER.COM
    My Sister-in-law Introduced Me to a Colombian Cheese Drink, and It Absolutely Rules
    I dont think I could deal with winter if I didnt have a few hot, comforting drinks to rely on; steaming mugs of hot chocolate, tea, or coffee feel like burying my head in the sand for 10 minutes. But Ive been growing a little tired of the usual suspects. Luckily, on a cold November morning, my sister-in-law introduced me to the most wonderfully rejuvenating drink: aguapanela con queso. This drink-snack combo has given me something to look forward to this winter.Aguapanela, simple and satisfyingAguapanela is a comforting sweet drink made from dissolving chopped panela, or piloncillo, into water. Panela is raw, unrefined cane sugar. Its usually sold in cones or large rounds, and shrink-wrapped in plastic. Panela is used all over Latin America but raw cane sugar is used frequently in other countries bearing different names, like jaggery or muscovado. Depending on the cooking method and the plant, the flavors and intensity of sweetness differ slightly. Credit: Allie Chanthorn Reinmann I started seeing panela available in the international aisle of large supermarkets and specialty markets around 10 or 15 years ago. It seems to be becoming more available as time goes on, and you can buy an eight-ounce cone for about $1.50. I promise itll be worth the splurge.Have your drink and cheese it tooYou dont have to speak fluent Spanish to understand that the con queso (with cheese) in this drink's name. It was the first time I ever spooned cheese out of my drink, and before I knew it, I couldnt stop.My sister-in-law explained that she was making us (me, my brother, and our dad) a breakfast drink she and her family would make in Colombia all the time. She handed us cups of brown liquid with a spoon in it and white blobs at the bottom. That was the queso. I spooned up a hunk of cheese and ate it, sipping some of the liquid at the same time. The cheese was soft (semi-melted in the steaming liquid), chewy, and a bit salty in a similar way to low-moisture mozzarella. The drink itself was sweet but full of flavorsmoky caramel, molasses, and did I detect anise?I asked her how she made this clearly complicated and nuanced drink. Well, you simply dissolve chopped panela sugar in water.How to make aguapanela con quesoShe explained that in Ibagu, Colombia they make aguapanela as an energizing drink that can be enjoyed hot or cold, and if youre feeling sick its common to drink it with fresh lime juice.1. Chop the panelaThese cane sugar bricks are hard, so you have to cut them. Even though its a type of brown sugar, its not like the kind you might be used to baking with. I use a large, sharp knife and run it down the edge to shave off strips. I think it dissolves a bit faster this way rather than to cut off big clumps. Ive read that some folks grate it with a microplane, but I feel like that would take a while.2. Dissolve it in hot waterPut the chopped sugar into a pot with water to dissolve over medium-low heat. Alternatively, you can put the sugar and water in a microwave-safe measuring cup and microwave it in 30-second-to-one-minute intervals. Stir to help dissolve the sugar.3. Add the cheeseOnce the drink is piping hot and the sugar has all dissolved, add small hunks of cheese to the cup to soften. Serve extra cheese on the side.This sweet and slightly salty combination is my current obsession. This type of cheese gets stretchy and chewy but it doesnt melt away to cloud up the drink. I like to eat a piece of cheese and sip the drink while I chew. Its a fun activity and, above all, a new way for me to enjoy cheese. Credit: Allie Chanthorn Reinmann You dont have to add cheese to your aguapanela, but I heartily suggest you give it a try. Check your supermarkets cheese fridge and look for Latin American cheeses. Tropical is probably the biggest brand supplier Ive seen in New York and it offers a wide variety. You can use quesito Colombiano, queso campesino, queso blanco, or panela cheese, and if you simply cant find those cheeses, you can use mozzarella. Personally, I would take low-moisture mozzarella over fresh mozzarella because of the saltiness, but its up to you.During this particularly gusty week in Brooklyn, Ill be doing ice-cold marathon training runs with one thing on my mindnot personal records, but hot aguapanela con queso when I get home.Aguapanela Con Queso RecipeIngredients: cup chopped panela (or piloncillo) cup boiling waterAs many chunks of queso as youd like (or try lime juice, or cinnamon)1. Combine the chopped panela and water in a microwave safe cup. Stir and heat in the microwave in 30 second installments until the sugar is dissolved and the drink is piping hot. Taste it to see if you want more panela or more water. 2. Add pieces of queso and let them soften for a few moments before enjoying.
    0 Kommentare 0 Anteile 20 Ansichten
  • WWW.ENGADGET.COM
    NVIDIA, AMD and Intel aimed for maximum power at CES 2025
    There was no question that NVIDIA's RTX 5000 GPUs would be one of the biggest stories at CES 2025, and I figured Intel and AMD to arrive with some new hardware of their own. But I didn't expect that each of these companies would, in their own way, be putting the pedal to the metal when it comes to power for their chip designs. After all, we've spent the last few years covering AI PC CPUs that was targeting efficiency more than raw performance.While NVIDIA RTX 5000 GPUs seem to deliver the performance leap we expected over its 2022-era cards, AMD is also redefining what's possible for mobile workstations with its Ryzen AI Max chips, which combine powerful graphics with gobs of integrated memory. Intel isn't sitting still either it's finally moving Arrow Lake into the high-performance and gaming arena with its Core Ultra 200HX chips, which can reach up to 24 cores and 5.5GHz speeds.I'm not just talking about power in the sheer performance sense, either. NVIDIA's $1,999 RTX 5090 requires a 1,000-watt power supply to function and uses up to 575 watts. The Ryzen AI Max chips, meanwhile, could eat up as much as 120-watts. Intel's Core Ultra 200HX chips go as high as 120-watts. Clearly, none of this hardware is meant for anyone concerned about their energy bills or potential laptop battery life.RTX 5090RTX 5080RTX 5070 TiRTX 5070RTX 4090ArchitectureBlackwellBlackwellBlackwellBlackwellLovelaceCUDA cores21,76010,7528,9606,14416,384AI TOPS3,3521,8011,4069881,321Tensor cores5th Gen5th Gen5th Gen5th Gen4th GenRT cores4th Gen4th Gen4th Gen4th Gen3rd GenVRAM32 GB GDDR716 GB GDDR716 GB GDDR712 GB GDDR724 GB GDDR6XMemory bandwidth1,792 GB/sec960 GB/sec896 GB/sec672 GB/sec1,008 GB/secTGP575W360W300W250W450WSo what do you get for all of this energy consumption? AMD says the RTX 5090 will deliver roughly twice the performance of its previous flagship, the $1,499 RTX 4090. In a 4K Cyberpunk 2077 demo with full ray tracing, the 4090 hovered around 108 fps while the 5090 was reaching 240 fps. That frame count is a bit controversial, though, since the RTX 5090's DLSS 4 AI upscaling generates three frames for every natively rendered frame. The end result may look smoother to most people, but some gamers might question the integrity of so-called false frames.It's those same AI-generated frames that allow NVIDIA to proclaim that the $549 RTX 5070 could be as powerful as the 4090. That may be true when it comes to pure frames-per-second count, but it certainly won't be for rasterized performance without DLSS 4.AMD's Ryzen AI Max chips aren't aiming for the same sort of graphical heights as NVIDIA's new GPUs, but they're still notable for the sheer amount of hardware they contain. The top-of-the-line Ryzen AI Max+ 395 sports 16 CPU Zen 5 cores, 50 TOPS of AI performance and 40 RDNA 3.5 GPU compute units. According to AMD, it should be on-part with Apple's 14-core M4 Pro chip (and even faster in the Vray benchark), and it's 2.6 times faster in 3D rendering than Intel's Core Ultra 9 288V.AMDIn an interview with AMD CVP and product CTO Joe Macri, he told Engadget that the success of Apple Silicon as a major reason why the Ryzen AI Max exists. "What Apple showed was consumers don't care what's inside the box," he said. Macri later noted, "I always knew, because we were building APUs, and I'd been pushing for this big APU forever, that I could build, a system that was smaller, faster, and I could give much higher performance at the same power."AMD also briefly previewed its RDNA 4 graphics at CES, though at this point it's clearly aiming for the mid-range and not NVIDIA's RTX 5090. Notably, AMD will debut a new AI powered upscaling technology in RDNA 4 GPUs, FidelityFX Super Resolution 4 (FSR 4). That should finally give AMD a way to directly compete against NVIDA's DLSS, which for years has looked better than earlier versions of FSR. The first RDNA 4 cards, the Radeon RX 9070 and 9070 XT, will arrive sometime in the first quarter.Intel's presence at CES 2024 was more muted than the competition, but loyalists will likely appreciate the new Core Ultra 200HX chips. While they scale back NPU performance from its recent AI PC hardware (12 TOPS down from 48 TOPS), the Core Ultra 9 285HX looks like a 24-core beast. It'll be interesting to see how it competes AMD's Ryzen AI 300 hardware, though it likely won't stand a chance against the Ryzen AI Max when paired up with a discrete GPU.IntelThis article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/nvidia-amd-and-intel-aimed-for-maximum-power-at-ces-2025-150038070.html?src=rss
    0 Kommentare 0 Anteile 20 Ansichten
  • WWW.ENGADGET.COM
    Faraday Future pitches a fresh start with a minivan EV prototype at CES 2025
    At CES 2017, Faraday Future introduced its futuristic luxury EV, the FF 91. Seven years later, following repeated delays, bankruptcy, lawsuits and other controversies, the company has sold 15 or 16 FF 91s. Now the company is detailing its latest strategy shift, with a plan to sell cheap EVs under its new low-cost FX brand. FX CEO Max Ma came to CES, along with two prototype vehicles, to pitch the plan that he described as a fresh start for the embattled company.As you might expect with Faraday, the exact details are somewhat hazy, but it involves sourcing parts from Chinese car-makers and bringing them to the US to produce mass volume mainstream vehicles with some of the premium touches Faraday is known for. We want to take that $300,000-car expertise from a technology and features and performance [standpoint] into a $30,000, $40,000 car to try to upgrade the overall user experience, Ma said during a briefing with Engadget. The first FX vehicle, the flagship product of the brands lineup, will be a minivan (or, as Ma referred to it, an AI MPV") called the "Super One."Faraday showed off two prototype minivans to demonstrate the concept. We were not permitted to take photos but the vehicles in the photo at the top of this post are the ones I saw.One was meant to show the kind of premium in-cabin experience Faraday is envisioning for the low-cost car. It had two rows of white leather captain seats. The second-row seats had reclining footrests, heated seats and built-in massagers. There was also a small fridge underneath the center console for keeping drinks cold. The vehicle was missing its door handles and several other pieces. Obviously, well have door handles, a Faraday rep assured us.The second minivan was even less finished. The entire interior, including the dashboard and instrument cluster, was covered in black fabric held together with binder clips. But a Faraday rep took me and other reporters for a ride in it, driving in small, slow circles around a Las Vegas parking lot. Later, Faraday offered to let me take the minivan for a spin and I apparently the first lady to pilot the vehicle also drove it in slow circles around the parking lot. Im not sure what I was supposed to get out of it, though, it felt like driving a minivan.There are two other vehicles planned for the initial FX lineup, the FX 5 and FX 6, which were previously announced by the company. Faraday is aiming for a $20,000 - $30,000 price for the FX 5 and $30,000 - $50,000 for the FX 6. There aren't many other details yet about either, though Faraday shared a teaser image of an FX 6 prototype, which it described as an "extra-large luxury AIEV."Faraday FutureFaraday claims it will start producing one of its planned vehicles later this year, with the first "pre-production" model rolling off the production line by the end of 2025, according to a timeline shared by Ma. Thats a lofty promise considering the companys past history of mismanagement and delays. Faraday Future CEO Matthias Aydt also acknowledged that the company has yet to finalize its partnerships with the companies that will supply its parts. He also didnt address how tariffs may affect those plans.Ma said he understood the skepticism. Basically, this is a kind of fresh start. We really want to demonstrate that through our dedication of hard work, we can achieve what we promised.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/transportation/evs/faraday-future-pitches-a-fresh-start-with-a-minivan-ev-prototype-at-ces-2025-010050422.html?src=rss
    0 Kommentare 0 Anteile 19 Ansichten
  • WWW.ENGADGET.COM
    A new initiative will fund and support open-source Chromium projects
    Google has teamed up with the Linux Foundation to establish a new initiative called the "Supporters of Chromium-Based Browsers." At the moment, most of the money that keeps Chromium, the open-source web browser project that produced the codebase powering Chrome, comes from Google. The company says it has no intention of reducing its contribution going forward, but it also continues to "welcome others stepping up to invest more."Under the Linux Foundation's management, the new initiative aims to fund the open development of Chromium projects and ensure proper support for contributions that could lead to technological advancements. It's also meant to provide a "neutral space" where developers, members of the academia and big industry players can work together. Aside from Google, Microsoft, Meta and Opera have also pledged their support for the initiative.Google said it established the new program after hearing from "many companies and developers about how critical the Chromium project is to their work" and how they would like to give it more than direct engineering support over the years. Chrome is just one of the browsers built on Chromium Microsoft's Edge and Opera are also based on the project's codebase, so their involvement in the initiative doesn't really come as a surprise.It's worth noting that the Department of Justice called for the breakup of Google last year, including a sale of the Chrome web browser. Google said in its announcement that it intends to continue supporting the Chromium project, but only time will tell if selling off Chrome will affect its contributions.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/a-new-initiative-will-fund-and-support-open-source-chromium-projects-143028118.html?src=rss
    0 Kommentare 0 Anteile 19 Ansichten
  • WWW.TECHRADAR.COM
    The biggest addiction treatment provider in the US says it was hit by data breach
    BayMark Health Services notified law enforcement and affected people of the breach, offering free identity theft monitoring.
    0 Kommentare 0 Anteile 19 Ansichten
  • WWW.TECHRADAR.COM
    Im a big PC gamer these were the 3 best gaming handhelds announced at CES 2025
    We've waited a while to see the veil lifted on the future of handheld gaming, and CES 2025 has done just that.
    0 Kommentare 0 Anteile 19 Ansichten