• What does Mark Zuckerberg want from Donald Trump?
    www.theverge.com
    At this point, its pretty clear what Donald Trump wants from Mark Zuckerberg. But what does Zuckerberg, who has now gone to Mar-a-Lago twice since the November election, want from the President-elect?Thats the question Ive been asking sources in and around Meta over the last several days. They all described Metas relationship with the outgoing Biden administration as incredibly hostile. Its safe to assume that Zuckerberg wants a reset for the MAGA regime, especially since Trump threatened not that long ago to imprison him for life.In Trumps America, removing tampons from the mens restrooms on Metas campuses, a real thing that just happened is as much a business decision as a political one. Destroying woke ideology is a key pillar of Trumps stated mandate. Others who know they need to play the game, like Amazon, are also starting to fall in line. Even still, Zuckerberg is transforming Meta for this new political reality at a speed thats unusual for a company of its size and influence. Founder mode.In his conversation with Joe Rogan and his video on Instagram, Zuckerberg shares a laundry list of issues that Trump could help him with: fighting other countries that are ratcheting up their policing of his platforms, stopping Apple from dictating how he builds mobile apps and smart glasses (the latter is increasingly important to Metas future), and, perhaps most importantly, keeping domestic AI regulation from slowing his efforts to crush OpenAI. Elon Musk has bought Trumps ear. But the more time Zuckerberg spends in Mar-a-Lago, the more Sam Altman and Tim Cook should be worried.Then theres the US governments case to break up Meta thats set to go to trial in a few months. After the blur that was the last four years, its easy to forget that this lawsuit was filed at the end of Trumps first term by a Republican FTC chair, not Lina KhanMost of the headline reactions from the past week have focused on Zuckerbergs decision to end Metas third-party fact check program. It was a convenient scapegoat for company executives that, frankly, never lived up to the goal of bringing more neutrality to Facebook and Instagram. The Community Notes alternative Meta is cribbing from X was not on the product roadmap before this week, so it will probably be awhile before everyone sees it in the wild.The announcement that US moderators would be moved from California to Texas is perhaps the most cynical of them all; talk to anyone who knows and theyll tell you the vast majority of moderators are already based in Austin.Do you work at Meta? Id love to chat. You can reach me me securely on Signal and Ill keep you anonymous.The hateful speech that is now allowed on Metas is eye-popping on its face and will be deserving of more scrutiny in the coming weeks. The decision to start recommending political content again is a 180-degree turn for Zuckerberg. But insiders believe that the most impactful change for users of Metas apps will be the softening of its systems that remove content for potential policy violations.Out of all the announcements Meta made last week, this is the one I believe is the least connected to Trump. Meta execs have been signaling for a while that they know they are mistakenly removing too much content that doesnt actually break the rules; Im told its one of, if not the, biggest complaint in user surveys. If done correctly, dialing back on moderation mistakes may be the only thing Zuckerberg announced that makes everyone happy.ElsewhereCES is for dealmaking now: Each year, the official CES show the sprawling show floor and flashy keynotes feels more like an advertising exercise and no longer a place to launch real products. Most of the energy has moved to private meeting rooms and happy hours at the Wynn, Aria, and Cosmopolitan, where tech execs are schmoozing CMOs and getting deals done with partners all week. At this shadow CES, everyone seems to agree that the show is more alive than ever. Booths on the show floor have become marketing tools to show clients before you take them to a steak dinner. The challenge for the organizers of CES will be figuring out how to bridge the growing influence of this part of the show with their current business model of charging people to walk around booths filled with smart toasters and concept cars.TikTok may just get banned: Imagine an alternate world in which the Chinese government is about to ban Instagram from operating in the country and Mark Zuckerberg is in hiding. Thats the situation with ByteDance and its founder Zhang Yiming, who stepped down from the CEO role after the last US ban attempt but still controls the company. He let TikTok be banned in India and seemingly has no interest in the app surviving this time, so why wouldnt he let the same thing happen again?Google and OpenAI flick at whats next: Googles DeepMind unit is starting an ambitious project to build generative models that simulate the physical world, which it believes is on the critical path to artificial general intelligence. Meanwhile, OpenAI is returning to its early roots by starting a general-purpose robotics team that will build hardware and push towards AGI-level intelligence in dynamic, real-world settings. We may have hit a scaling wall on text data but the big labs clearly see an opportunity in 3D. (See also what Nvidia announced last week.)Other headlines you may have missed: Tencent (a large investor in Epic Games, Snap, and US tech companies)put on the Pentagons blacklist for being allegedly under the influence of the Chinese military. Tim Cooks totalrose 18 percent last year to $74.6 million. Elon Musk is hosting an inauguration party for Trump in DC with Uber and The Free Press. Sam Altmans sister filed a sexual abuse lawsuit against him.Job boardSome recent, noteworthy job changes in the tech world:A bunch of changes at Meta: UFC CEO Dana White, Exor CEO John Elkann, and Charlie Songhurst joined the board. Joel Kaplan is running policy and comms now. After a stint at Google, Im told Michael Levinson is coming back as VP of product for the Integrity org. (Good luck!) Head of civil rights, Roy Austin, is leaving. And former DEI chief Maxine Williams is now head of accessibility and engagement.Elon Musks X named a couple of new leaders: Romina Khananisho is the new head of government affairs and John Nitti is head of ad innovation.Calista Redmon joined Nvidia as VP of global AI initiatives, where shell drive adoption of the NVIDIA platform for national and regional AI initiatives.Sophia Dominguez, Snaps director of AR platform, is leaving.More linksMy colleagues rounded up the best things they saw at CES this year.Kylie Robison on how Elon Musks xAI is quietly taking over X.Ethan Mollick sounds the alarm about what the AI labs are claiming is coming.Eric Goldmans 2024 Internet Law Year-in-Review.Ming-Chi Kuo is bearish on Apple this year.Derek Thompson on the anti-social century.If you havent already, dont forget to subscribe to The Verge, which includes unlimited access to Command Line, all of our reporting, and an improved ad experience on the web.As always, I want to hear from you, especially if you work at Meta. Respond here, and Ill get back to you, or ping me securely on Signal.Thanks for subscribing.
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  • This AI Paper Introduces Toto: Autoregressive Video Models for Unified Image and Video Pre-Training Across Diverse Tasks
    www.marktechpost.com
    Autoregressive pre-training has proved to be revolutionary in machine learning, especially concerning sequential data processing. Predictive modeling of the following sequence elements has been highly effective in natural language processing and, increasingly, has been explored within computer vision domains. Video modeling is one area that has hardly been explored, giving opportunities for extending into action recognition, object tracking, and robotics applications. These developments are due to growing datasets and innovation in transformer architectures that treat visual inputs as structured tokens suitable for autoregressive training.Modeling videos has unique challenges due to their temporal dynamics and redundancy. Unlike text with a clear sequence, video frames usually contain redundant information, making it difficult to tokenize and learn proper representations. Proper video modeling should be able to overcome this redundancy while capturing spatiotemporal relationships in frames. Most frameworks have focused on image-based representations, leaving the optimization of video architectures open. The task requires new methods to balance efficiency and performance, particularly when video forecasting and robotic manipulation are at play.Visual representation learning via convolutional networks and masked autoencoders has been effective for image tasks. Such approaches typically fail regarding video applications as they cannot entirely express temporal dependencies. Tokenization methods such as dVAE and VQGAN normally convert visual information into tokens. These have shown effectiveness, but scaling such an approach becomes challenging in scenarios with mixed datasets involving images and videos. Patch-based tokenization does not generalize to cater to various tasks efficiently in a video.A research team from Meta FAIR and UC Berkeley has introduced the Toto family of autoregressive video models. Their novelty is to help address the limitations of traditional methods, treating videos as sequences of discrete visual tokens and applying causal transformer architectures to predict subsequent tokens. The researchers developed models that could easily combine image and video training by training on a unified dataset that includes more than one trillion tokens from images and videos. The unified approach enabled the team to take advantage of the strengths of autoregressive pretraining in both domains.The Toto models use dVAE tokenization with an 8k-token vocabulary to process images and video frames. Each frame is resized and tokenized separately, resulting in sequences of 256 tokens. These tokens are then processed by a causal transformer that uses the features of RMSNorm and RoPE embeddings to establish improved model performance. The training was done on ImageNet and HowTo100M datasets, tokenizing at a resolution of 128128 pixels. The researchers also optimized the models for downstream tasks by replacing average pooling with attention pooling to ensure a better quality of representation.The models show good performance across the benchmarks. For ImageNet classification, the largest Toto model achieved a top-1 accuracy of 75.3%, outperforming other generative models like MAE and iGPT. In the Kinetics-400 action recognition task, the models achieve a top-1 accuracy of 74.4%, proving their capability to understand complex temporal dynamics. On the DAVIS dataset for semi-supervised video tracking, the models obtain J&F scores of up to 62.4, thus improving over previous state-of-the-art benchmarks established by DINO and MAE. Moreover, on robotics tasks like object manipulation, Toto models learn much faster and are more sample efficient. For example, the Toto-base model attains a cube-picking real-world task on the Franka robot with an accuracy of 63%. Overall, these are impressive results regarding the versatility and scalability of these proposed models with diverse applications.The work provided significant development in video modeling by addressing redundancy and challenges in tokenization. The researchers successfully showed through unified training on both images and videos, that this form of autoregressive pretraining is generally effective across a range of tasks. Innovative architecture and tokenization strategies provide a baseline for further dense prediction and recognition research. This is one meaningful step toward unlocking the full potential of video modeling in real-world applications.Check out the Paper and Project Page. All credit for this research goes to the researchers of this project. Also,dont forget to follow us onTwitter and join ourTelegram Channel andLinkedIn Group. Dont Forget to join our65k+ ML SubReddit. Nikhil+ postsNikhil is an intern consultant at Marktechpost. He is pursuing an integrated dual degree in Materials at the Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur. Nikhil is an AI/ML enthusiast who is always researching applications in fields like biomaterials and biomedical science. With a strong background in Material Science, he is exploring new advancements and creating opportunities to contribute. [Recommended Read] Nebius AI Studio expands with vision models, new language models, embeddings and LoRA (Promoted)
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  • Scientists Say They've Figured Out What Turned the Sun Blue
    futurism.com
    The Sun was feeling gloomy.Clouded ThoughtsIn 1831, a volcanic eruption flooded the skies with so much sulfur gas that it cooled the planet by nearly two degrees Fahrenheit, causing all manner of famine, devastation, and social upheaval.So gloomy were its effects that, in the northern hemisphere, it even sullied the beaming visage of the Sun, turning it a somber blue instead. In other mood swings, reports from the period say that the Sun also appeared purple and green.But in the nearly two hundred years since, exactly which volcano blew its top to so shake up the natural order has remained a mystery until now.Ashes to AshesAs detailed in a new study published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, scientists say they've determined the culprit to be the Zavaritskii volcano on the extremely remote and uninhabited island of Simushir, one of the Kuril Islands, in the Western Pacific.The breakthrough, according to the authors, came through examining ash found in ice core examples, providing a "perfect fingerprint match" to the Zavaritskii volcano."Only in recent years have we developed the ability to extract microscopic ash shards from polar ice cores and conduct detailed chemical analyses on them," study lead author Will Hutchinson, a geoscientist at the University of St Andrews, said in a statement. "These shards are incredibly minute, roughly one-tenth the diameter of a human hair."The volcano's Kuril Islands are currently controlled by Russia, though Japan disputes its claim to the archipelago. It contains a number of volcanoes with dozens of them being active but the sheer remoteness of the islands means many of them remain understudied."Finding the match took a long time and required extensive collaboration with colleagues from Japan and Russia, who sent us samples collected from these remote volcanoes decades ago," Hutchin said in the statement.But the hard work was worth it. "The moment in the lab when we analyzed the two ashes together, one from the volcano and one from the ice core, was a genuine eureka moment," he added.Climactic ChangeIn addition to making an impressive achievement in geological forensics, the work is a friendly reminder that many of the world's volcanoes remain unmonitored, including those on the Kuril islands despite being an extremely productive volcanic region, according to the researchers.That doesn't bode well if we're to prepare ourselves for the worst consequences of a similar global disaster to the one the Zavaritskii wreaked."If this eruption were to happen today, I don't think we'd be much better off than we were in 1831," Hutchison told LiveScience. "It just shows how difficult it will be to predict when and where the next big climate-changing eruption will come from."Share This Article
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  • Waymo Self-Driving Taxi Flummoxed by Construction Worker's Hand Signals
    futurism.com
    Waymo's cars are still struggling with the basics.Wave Function CollapseFor years, Google's Waymo driverless taxis have been wreaking havoc on San Francisco streets and an increasing number of other cities as the service expands triggering traffic jams, getting stuck in roundabouts, and even colliding with a delivery robot.And when it comes to construction sites, a common fixture in any metropolis, Waymos are having a hard time.Look no further than avideo circulating on social that shows a Waymo cab struggling to decipher the hand signals of a construction worker, judderingto a halt and refusing to turn left.The incident highlights persistent shortcomings with driverless ride-hailing tech, often related to chaotic edge cases: despite years of research and tens of millions of miles driven, simple hand signals can still seemingly pose an insurmountable obstacle.Mixed SignalsIt's unclear what exactly caused the Waymo to become so paralyzed. Confusing matters is the Stop sign the construction worker is pointing at the vehicle, suggesting the car's software was befuddled by the mixed signals."That is a big red stop sign," one Reddit user argued in a subreddit dedicated to the company.Nonetheless, a human driver likely would've had no issues navigating the situation, responding to the construction worker's waving arm with ease.Ironically, Waymo's driverless vehicles recently passed an independent review by German tech inspection company TV SD, which found that the company's First Responder Program "meets industry standards," including the ability to respond to hand signals for traffic cops.In early 2019, Waymo first demonstrated its cars' ability to follow signals from a police officer.But given the latest run-in, the company's software is far from foolproof even over half a decade later. Case in point, last year one of its cars was pulled over by a police officer after driving down a busy road in the opposite lane.And chances are we'll see plenty of similar run-ins in the near future as well. Waymo made its autonomous ride-hailing service Waymo One available in Los Angeles in April and in San Francisco in June, years after rolling out the service in Phoenix.The company is also planning to expand into other US cities including Austin and Miami, as well as its first international foray in Tokyo, Japan.Whether its competitors, including Elon Musk's Tesla, which is planning to roll out a similar service, will fare any better remains to be seen.Share This Article
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  • Nonstick Cookware Industry Furious at Suggestion They Should Stop Causing Cancer
    futurism.com
    Image by Getty / FuturismThe makers of America's nonstick cookware are none too pleased about a new law that will bar them from using carcinogenic "forever chemicals."As Minnesota Public Radio reports, the Cookware Sustainability Alliance advocacy group is suing Katrina Kessler, the head of the state's pollution control agency, over a newly-enacted law that will ban the use of cancer-causing per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), which are used to make non-stick pans.Dubbed "Amara's Law" after 20-year-old cancer victim Amara Strande, who in 2023 succumbed to a rare type of liver cancer linked to PFAS after growing up near a Minnesota-based 3M plant that dumped them into the local water supply, the new regulation bans the chemicals and any items made with them from being sold within the state.Though the cause seems worthy enough, the Cookware Sustainability Alliance which was launched last spring by cooking utensil manufacturers to purportedly enhance "public understanding of the safety of cookware based on scientific research and verifiable data" is calling the law unconstitutional and unenforceable."Everything else that is produced for the consumer cookware industry and 100percentof the Subject Cookware is manufactured, distributed, and sold from outside Minnesota," the lawsuit declares, per Minneapolis' KARE 11. "This out-of-state commerce is, consequently, the sole subject impacted by the cookware ban in the Statute."Though Amara's Law covers everything from rugs to menstrual products alongside the cookware in question, the advocacy group insists that it unfairly discriminates against culinary tools that use these forever chemicals, and violates state commerce clauses to boot. The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, which championed the law and spurred on its passage, heartily disagrees."It is estimated Minnesota taxpayers will have to spend $28 billion in the next 20 years to remove PFAS from wastewater and landfill leachate in the state," reads a statement from the MPCA toMinnesota Public Radio. "We simply cannot clean our way out of this problem."Mehmet Konar-Steenberg, a professor at Saint Paul's Mitchell Hamline School of Law, suggested toMPR that the nonstick advocates are questioning the law's worth."Theyre saying that this law doesnt deliver enough public health benefits when compared to the kind of difficulties it creates for out-of-state businesses to conduct business in Minnesota," Konar-Steenberg said. "Theyre saying, on balance, this law just isnt worth it."A glance at the docket for this injunction, which seeks to have the law declared unconstitutional by state courts, shows that the Cookware Sustainability Alliance means business and that they're not going to stop making and selling products using cancer-causing nonstick technology without a fight.Share This Article
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  • 'The Traitors' Release Schedule: When Episode 4 Premieres on Peacock
    www.cnet.com
    Table of Contents Treachery, murder, a roster of reality icons -- After winning an Emmy for best competition program in 2024, Peacock's The Traitorscontinued its ruthless run last Thursday.Season 3 debuted with three episodes, dividing the group into faithfuls and traitors and eliminating four people from the competition. Alan Cumming, who won an Emmy last year for hosting the show, set the dramatic scene in the Scottish Highlands. Contestants still in the running include Bob the Drag Queen from RuPaul's Drag Race, Chrishell Stause from Selling Sunset, Gabby Windey from The Bachelorette, Rob Mariano (aka Boston Rob) from Survivor and more. Season 3 will see a cash prize of up to $250,000 split between truth-telling winners or snatched by their sneaky peers. For more lies, backstabbing and banishing, here's when you can watch the rest of the latest Traitors season on Peacock.How to watch The Traitors season 3The first three episodes of season 3 hit Peacock on Jan. 9 at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT. One new episode will appear each Thursday through March 6. On that date, a reunion special is scheduled to premiere along with the finale. Here's a look at this season's upcoming episodes.Episode 4: Jan. 16Episode 5: Jan. 23Episode 6: Jan. 30Episode 7: Feb. 6Episode 8: Feb. 13Episode 9: Feb. 20Episode 10: Feb. 27Episode 11: March 6Season 3 reunion special: March 6Peacock has two plans: $8 per month ad-supported Peacock Premium and $14 per month Premium Plus, which reduces commercials, lets you download titles and throws in your live local NBC station. You can also choose to pay for a year of either type of Peacock up front and save some money: Premium is $80 annually and Premium Plus is $140. James Martin/CNET Peacock discounts are available for college students, teachers, military personnel and medical professionals and first responders. You can also get the streaming service with Xfinity Internet or Instacart Plus. Read our Peacock review. See at Peacock How to watch The Traitors from anywhere with a VPNPerhaps you're traveling abroad and want to stream Peacock while away from home. With a VPN, you're able to virtually change your location on your phone, tablet or laptop to access the series from anywhere in the world. There are also other good reasons to use a VPN for streaming.A VPN is the best way to encrypt your traffic to stop your internet service provider from throttling your speeds. Using a VPN is also a great idea if you're traveling and want to add an extra layer of privacy for your devices and log-ins when connecting to Wi-Fi networks. Streaming TV can be a bit smoother with a reliable, quality VPN that'spassed our testsand meets our security standards.You can use a VPN to stream content legally as long as VPNs are allowed in your country and you have a valid subscription to the streaming service you're using. The US and Canada are among the countries where VPNs are legal, but we advise against streaming or downloading content on illegal torrent sites. We recommend ExpressVPN, but you may opt for another provider fromour best list, such as Surfshark or NordVPN. James Martin/CNET 2024 Latest Tests DNS leaks detected, 25% speed loss in 2024 testsNetwork 3,000 plus servers in 105 countriesJurisdiction British Virgin Islands If you're looking for a secure and dependable VPN, our Editors' Choice is ExpressVPN. It's fast, works on multiple devices and provides stable streams. It's $13 a month, or you can opt for a deal that gives you 15 months for $6.67 per month if you pay the total amount up front.ExpressVPN offers a 30-day money-back guarantee.Read our review of ExpressVPN. 61% off with 2yr plan (+4 free months) See at ExpressVPN Follow the VPN provider's instructions for installation, and choose a country where The Traitors will be streaming on Peacock. Before you open the streaming app, make sure you're connected to your VPN using your selected region. If you want to stream The Traitors on more than one device, it's possible you'll need to configure each one to ensure you're signed in. Go to settings and check your network connections to verify you're logged in and connected to your VPN account. Now you're ready to open Peacock to stream.If you run into issues with streaming, first make sure your VPN is up and running on its encrypted IP address. Double-check that you've followed installation instructions correctly and picked the right geographical area for viewing. If you still encounter connection problems, you may need to reboot your device. Close all apps and windows, restart your device and connect to your VPN first. Note that some streaming services will restrict VPN access.
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  • Best Apple iPhone SE Cases for 2025
    www.cnet.com
    Protect your iPhone SE with one of the best compatible phone cases, handpicked by our CNET experts.
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  • Every Eye-Catching Piece of Next-Gen Tech Unveiled at CES 2025
    www.cnet.com
    The next-gen tech from this year's CES trade show blew our minds. Like always, we kick the year off at CNET with some of the coolest and innovative releases in the tech world, culminating in ourofficial Best of CES awards and we come away with so many impressive show-stoppersthat we can't ever wait to show you what we found.This year's CES tech extravaganza served scads ofAItools, tech for yoursmart home, slick newTVs, groundbreaking EVs, powerfullaptops, ingenioushealth techand a bounty of robots.Scroll down for some of the most interesting products at CES 2025. For more CES coverage, check out all of the delicious (and gross) food created by CES kitchen tech or read about the top seven biggest disappointments at CES. Lisa Eadicicco/CNET Nike x Hyperice Tech-filled "shoes" that soothe your aching feet with topical warmth and compression. Nike partnered with fitness recovery tech company Hyperice to make a tech-filled boot that can help sore feet recover. First deployed at last year's Paris Olympics, the Nike x Hyperice boot (no more official name) slips around your foot and applies heat and compression with buttons to adjust either. It's technically a "system of dual-air Normatec bladders bonded to warming elements," but there was only one word when our CNET Senior Reporter Lisa Eadicicco wore them on the Vegas show floor: relief. Nike's Prototype Shoes Squeezed and Heated Our Weary Feet at CES 2025. Here's What They Feel Like. CNET Kirin Electric Salt Spoon Soup too bland but lowering salt intake? Use this spoon to add flavor... through electric shocks. The pitfall of salt is that it tastes so good, but many of us are on low-sodium diets for our health. Rather than use an untasty alternative, why not turn to science? Japanese appliance company Kirin has a new experimental soup spoon. It's large and requires an awkward grip to engage the sensors, so you kinda look like a toddler using it. But pull it off and weak electrical current will simulate the taste of salt (varying per person), making it an imperfect but promising piece of dinnerware tech. We Tested an Electric Salt Spoon That Might Help You Stick to Your Low-Sodium Diet. James Martin/CNET LG G5 OLED TV Hey, good looking After seeing the picture quality, TV expert David Katzmaier singled this out as one of his favorite TVs of the show; he traditionally finds LG's OLED quality best-in-class (as do I for its monitors), and this year's is brighter with better contrast in ambient light. New LG OLED TVs Boost Brightness, Load Up on AI and Flirt With Going Wireless. Watch this: Best TVs of CES 2025: Among So Many New Screens, I Pick 4 05:35 Katie Collins/CNET Flint Paper Battery Sustainable, affordable, scalable power Singaporean startup Flint's technology hopes to solve the problems inherent in today's widely-used lithium-ion batteries with cellulose, a natural material that promotes ionic transfer between the positive and negative terminals of a battery. Which is another way of saying "electricity!". Cellulose, the stuff of leaves and other greenery, is flexible, compressible and possibly more important, biodegradable; the paper battery can be shrunk small enough embed in a smartwatch strap. It's one our picks for Best of CES 2025, too. These Paper Batteries -- Yes, Paper -- Are Coming For Your Tech. LG LG UltraGear 45GX990A Bend it, game it The flagship of LG's new GX9 line of UltraGear gaming monitors announced at the show is the most feature-laden of the group and more interesting than a lot of other offerings -- it's relative high resolution (5,120 x 2,160), has support for multiple picture sizes and refresh rate configurations (dual mode) and a curved-to-flat bendable screen (like theCorsair Xeneon). The Monitors of CES 2025 I Can't Wait to Try. Honda Honda 0 series EVs From prototype to production We first saw Honda's 0 ("zero") series last yearas a concept, and this year Honda has shared a closer-to-final version of the sleek line, which goes into production in 2026. It's now running Asimo OS, an operating system named after its Asimo robot of yesteryear.These EVs look like what you'd expect a future car to look like; still with some wedginess to their shapes, and referred to as "gorgeous" by automotive reporter Antuan Goodwin. Honda's Gorgeous 0 Series EVs Begin Production Next Year. Geoffrey Morrison/CNET Xgimi Ascend A roll-up projector screen on the cheap-ish It's not the LG OLED rollable screen of your dreams, but the Ascend may be more within your grasp. It's a retractable, ambient light-rejecting screen with built-in speakers and an ultra short-throw projector that looks like a piece of furniture when the screen withdraws. TV tech guru Geoffrey Morrison has been an ultrashort throw skeptic, but thinks this pair may solve some of the issues he's had with them. There's no pricing yet for the screen (the projector is $2,700), but it's bound to be less than models like the LG. Finally, A Roll-Up Projector Screen of Your Budget TV Dreams. Humetrix Humetrix AI app An upgrade that will voice-to-voice translate your symptoms and meds in the local tongue. Humetrix's AI-powered translation technology already assisted aid workers at last summer's Paris Olympic Games, but soon it'll expand to help individuals seeking medical aid in places where they don't speak the native tongue. Humetrix's advantage lies in its database of 4 million medications and info on 67,000 medical conditions; using GPS location, Humetrix will translate and speak symptoms, medications and other health info into the local language (of 25 available for now) -- just speak into your phone and the Humetrix app will explain in the right lingual and medical terminology. CES 2025: This AI Tool Lets Doctors and Traveling Patients Converse, Despite Language Barriers. AC Future AC Future AI-THu, AI-THt and AI-THd Tiny homes with big tech When you're ready to go small -- or don't have the budget to go big -- a tiny home can be an appealing alternative, especially when it's luxurious and packed with the latest smart tech. Our favorite of AC Future's designer mini residences is the AI-Thu, a modular build (as small as 400 square feet) packed with smart technology that helps control lighting, heating, cooling and appliances, plus solar panels, a water recycling system, atmospheric water generation and a lot more. Would You Pay $100,000 for a Mini Smart House? We Saw the Details at CES 2025. Antuan Goodwin/CNET Top of mind for every potential EV buyer is how inconvenient charging is -- but the Aptera Solar EV is wrapped in solar panels to recharge while you drive. Forget the cockroach-looking solar-powered cars of yesteryear, as this EV is a svelte three-wheeler with a swooped design that looks like it's about to take off into the sky (that achieves 70% less drag than EV's on the road today). Aptera expects to start producing the $40,000 vehicle later this year, so start planning if a constantly-recharging two-seater EV would fit your lifestyle. I Took a Ride in an EV That Doesn't Need to Plug In. See at Aptera Read more: We Love These Ground-Breaking EV Solutions at CES 2025 James Martin/CNET Dreame X50 Ultra A robot vacuum with tiny legs to get up ledges or cross door gaps. Roombas and other robot vacuums have been a big hit, but their little wheels can be defeated by the tiniest ledge or threshold between rooms. Enter Dreame's X50 Ultra, which has two short wheeled legs it can deploy to surmount very modest obstacles. No, it won't climb stairs, but we saw it conquer small ledges a couple inches high. This advancement comes at the steep price of $1,699 when it starts shipping in mid-February (preorder it for $390 off). Dreame's Robot Vacuum Won't Be Climbing Stairs, but We Saw It Summit a Small Ledge at CES 2025. Read more: Home Tech Gadgets at CES 2025 Impressed More Than Last Year Katie Collins/CNET Delta Concierge Delta's AI-powered app aims to reduce travel woes. Delta has a new feature for its phone app, and yes, it's AI-powered. Coming this year, Delta Concierge will help out with the most annoying parts of travel, like reminding you about passport renewal and visa requirements, suggesting what to pack for your destination's weather and general tips on getting around while you roam. Like other new AI-powered features, you'll be able to ask questions through text or speech in natural language and have the app respond. Anything that makes travel less painful -- and for free -- is a big help these days. Delta Concierge Will Anticipate Your Every Travel Need Like an AI Trip Butler. Josh Goldman/CNET Lenovo Legion Go S New with added Steam! In addition to a prototype version of the update to its current Legion Go, the company's additions to its Go line of handheld gaming consoles include a couple of brand-new Go S models -- one of which is the first to run SteamOS natively, in addition to the Windows version. Yes, that's right: A Steam Deck alternative! Both models have identical hardware, and the Go S has a more traditional design compared with its somewhat overcomplicated sibling. It's pretty cool, but makes us wonder: where's our Xbox handheld, Microsoft? Lenovo Legion Go S Offers a Welcome, Less Complicated Design Than the Original. Zoltux Zoltux Instant Solar Kit "Balcony solar" 800-watt panels that can be installed in as little as five minutes. Zoltux's $1,199 Instant Solar Kit has a lot of promises and a few roadblocks, but it's still an intriguing Kickstarter product. It's an 800-watt solar panel you can hang anywhere, using an inverter to feed back into your home energy setup. You'll theoretically need an interconnection agreement and permission to operate from your local energy company, and there are concerns about just plugging one into any old 120-volt home outlet, but it's promising to get a plug-and-play solar panel to start harvesting your own energy without expensive installation -- assuming Zoltux works out the kinks. CES 2025: Could Zoltux's Instant Solar Kit Be the Answer to Hassle-Free Solar Power?. Watch this: See Lenovo's Gesture-Controlled, Rollable ThinkBook Laptop in Action 01:45 Lenovo Lenovo ThinkBook Plus Gen 6 Rollable A clever take on dual-screen laptops It's still only a concept, but Lenovo's new laptop extends the screen upward rather than folding it (or folding two screens together) like almost every dual-screen laptop we've seen. We've got no pricing or available for it yet -- it's a real product, not just a concept or prototype -- but being able to turn a laptop screen from 14 to 16.7 inches in a press of a button sounds like something I want. Wild Displays: Lenovo Shows Off Dual-Screen Yoga Book and Rollable ThinkBook. Read more: Check Out These Mind-Blowing Concept Products From CES 2025 James Martin/CNET Housing renters who want to mount their TV but are wary of drilling into their walls, your ship is about to come in. The Displace TV uses suction cups to stick to the wall and runs off batteries, meaning you can stick it pretty much anywhere in your home or office. It comes in varying sizes, starting with a $1,499 27-inch model and going up to a $4,999 55-inch TV, which will ship in spring 2025. I Suction-Cupped Displace TV's Wireless OLED to a Wall. I'll Never Be the Same. See at Displace Watch this: Displace TV's 55-Inch Television Hangs From a Wall Using Suction Cups 03:15 Read more: Nvidia Hands-Down Won AI at CES 2025, And Also The Show Itself. Here's Why That Matters Matt Elliott/CNET Nvidia GeForce RTX 50 series graphics cards Bigger on the inside? The new Nvidia cards just jumped more than a generation's worth in their power to render games and perform complex AI image generation, among a lot of other things. And they still fit into the box on your desk and cost about the same as before. The Wait Is Over: Nvidia's Next-Gen RTX 50-Series GPUs Are Here. Watch this: Everything Announced at Nvidia's CES Event in 12 Minutes 11:47 Celso Bulgatti/CNET Samsung stretchable screen concept Horror movies just gained a dimension You know that horror trope where something scary stretches the screen towards you and something awful enters the world? Samsung's turned the stretching screen of our nightmares into reality -- though it could be flowers as much as the undead pushing through. The screen bulges in the middle to produce a 3D effect; it's a little hard to see, according to editor Lisa Eadicicco, but it's there. Samsung's Wild Stretchable Display Concept Turns 2D Into 3D. Lisa Eadicicco/CNET Swippitt A fast way to fill up your phone's charge. And empty your wallet Swippitt's added a twist to the phone battery case: a box that swaps external batteries when you stick your phone in the slot. But it's not for everyone: At $450 for the hub and $120 for the Link case, the Sippitt is more expensive than aPlayStation 5and almost as pricey as an iPhone 16. I Watched a Printer-Size Gadget Add More Battery Life to a Phone in Seconds.
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  • Five Nights at Freddy's 2 set leaks give us our first peek at a terrifying pizzeria
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    Five Nights at Freddy's 2 set leaks give us our first peek at a terrifying pizzeriaReady, Freddy, go.Image credit: Universal Pictures News by Vikki Blake Contributor Published on Jan. 12, 2025 Photos purportedly taken on the set of Five Nights at Freddy's 2 have leaked online, including shots of an ominously dilapidated Freddy Fazbear pizzeria.Universal Pictures and Blumhouse Productions announced the sequel back in April last year, but we've learned very little since then, making these pictures - which include a rusty sign of the toy animatronics Freddy, Bonnie, and my girl Chica - particularly exciting for some.It's still unclear if the upcoming movie will be faithful to the second game's prequel timeline which takes place in the late 1980s.Let's Play Five Nights At Freddy's - Late To The Party.Watch on YouTubeA fan has also allegedly spotted "some FNAF merch being sold for a possible scene" in the sequel, too. To see this content please enable targeting cookies.Whilst not remotely official - so take all this with a healthy dollop of salt - these photos were reportedly taken in River Town, outside of New Orleans. Whilst the OP originally thought it little more than "a little [local] fair" and nothing special, they later saw signs indicating that the area would be closed to the public by 3pm, and then signs for "Extras" and "a bunch of trailers". So make of that what you will. To see this content please enable targeting cookies.Five Nights at Freddy's star Josh Hutcherson recently teased that the second Freddy-themed movie would be "much bigger" and "scarier" than its predecessor. He talked about "higher stakes" and hinted that there will be "more" and "different" animatronics, with the Freddy universe "opening up in a big way".On its release, Five Nights at Freddy's scored the second-largest debut of all time for a video game adaptation in the US, coming only behind that of Nintendo and Illumination's animated Super Mario Bros. Movie.
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  • Tencent threatens "legal proceedings" if US doesn't overturn decision to label it as a Chinese military company
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    Tencent threatens "legal proceedings" if US doesn't overturn decision to label it as a Chinese military companyBut first, the company will initiate "a Reconsideration Process" to "correct this mistake".Image credit: Tencent / Eurogamer News by Vikki Blake Contributor Published on Jan. 12, 2025 Chinese megacorp Tencent has doubled down on its assertions that it is not a Chinese military company, saying that if the US Department of Defense does not "resolve any misunderstanding", it will "undertake legal proceedings".In a public statement - which the company said it makes on a "voluntary basis" - it stressed the firm was "neither a Chinese military company nor a military-fusion contributor to the Chinese defence industrial base" and that while the allegation "does not affect [Tencent's] business", the the US Department of Defense made a "mistake" when it publicly classified the firm as a Chinese military company.Initially, the company insisted that the inclusion on the list was simply a misunderstanding, but this subsequent statement takes a much firmer line, saying: "The Company intends to initiate a Reconsideration Process to correct this mistake."During the process, it will engage in discussions with the U.S. Department of Defense to resolve any misunderstanding, and if necessary, will undertake legal proceedings to remove the company from the CMC List. The company will make further announcement(s) as and when appropriate."As Tom reminded us when this first bubbled up last week, Tencent's reach across the global video games industry is enormous. It owns League of Legends developer Riot Games, Dune: Awakening maker Funcom and UK outfit Sumo Digital, in addition to several of its own companies, such as Pokmon Unite maker Timi Studios. It is also in discussions with Ubisoft over a potential stock buyout.
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