• Apple TV+ maintained modest market share in the US during Q4 2024
    9to5mac.com
    The market share of Apple TV+ in the US has been fairly consistent over the last few quarters, at least thats what the latest research from JustWatch shows. Now 9to5Mac has seen exclusive data on the market share of streaming platforms during Q4 2024 and the situation for Apple remains stable.During the third quarter of 2024, Apple TV+ accounted for 8% of the market share in the US. But in the last quarter of the year, the platform lost ground to other platforms and its market share fell to 7%. Its not a significant drop and the figures are fairly consistent considering previous reports, but they do show that Apple is still struggling to compete with larger players.JustWatch notes that Apple TV+ is still seen as a secondary choice for most viewers, as the streaming market has become very competitive and most people still prefer major platforms like Netflix and Max.In 2024, Apple TV+ maintained a modest but consistent market share compared to its competitors, lagging behind larger platforms like Prime Video, Netflix, Hulu, and Max. Despite steady performance, Apple TV+ struggled to close the gap with Paramount+ and fell well short of Disney+s early-year momentum, the report says.As usual, first and second place in the ranking are disputed by Amazon Prime Video and Netflix, respectively. Max comes in third with 13%, with Disney+ following close behind with 12% of the market share in the US.You can take a look at the full market share ranking provided by JustWatch below:Amazon Prime Video: 22%Netflix: 21%Max: 13%Disney+: 12%Hulu: 11%Paramount +: 9%Apple TV+: 7%Peacock: 1%Others: 4%Launched in 2019, Apple TV+ has around 300 titles available far less than its competitors have. Thats because Apples platform focuses exclusively on original content. Over the years, some of Apples original films and shows have been nominated and won important awards, but the competition is tough.During the first weekend of 2025, Apple promoted Apple TV+ by giving free access to the platform to everyone for a limited period. However, well have to wait until the next quarter to see if the campaign has paid off for Apple.Add 9to5Mac to your Google News feed. FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.Youre reading 9to5Mac experts who break news about Apple and its surrounding ecosystem, day after day. Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow 9to5Mac on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay in the loop. Dont know where to start? Check out our exclusive stories, reviews, how-tos, and subscribe to our YouTube channel
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  • Apple's AI Is Constantly Butchering Huge News Stories Sent to Millions of Users
    futurism.com
    Apple has come under intense scrutiny for rolling out an underbaked AI-powered feature that summarizes breaking news while often butchering it beyond recognition.For over a month, roughly as long as the feature has been available to iPhone users, publishers have found that it consistently generates false information and pushes it to millions of users.Despite broadcasting a barrage of fabrications for weeks, Apple has yet to meaningfully address the problem."This is my periodic rant that Apple Intelligence is so bad that today it got every fact wrong in its AI a summary of Washington Post news alerts," the newspaper's tech columnist Geoffrey Fowler wrote in a post on Bluesky this week.Fowler appended a screenshot of an alert, which claimed that Pete Hegseth, who's been facing a confrontational confirmation hearing for the role of defense secretary this week, had been fired by his former employer, Fox News which is false and not what the WaPo's syndication of an Associated Press story"It's wildly irresponsible that Apple doesn't turn off summaries for news apps until it gets a bit better at this AI thing," Fowler added.The constant blunders of Apple's AI summaries put the tech's nagging shortcomings on full display, demonstrating that even tech giants like Apple are failing miserably to successfully integrate AI without constantly embarrassing themselves.AI models are still coming up with all sorts of "hallucinated" lies, a problem experts believe could be intrinsic to the tech. After all, large language models like the one powering Apple's summarizing feature simply predict the next word based on probability and are incapable of actually understanding the content they're paraphrasing, at least for the time being.And the stakes are high, given the context. Apple's notifications are intended to alert iPhone users to breaking news not sow distrust and confusion.The story also highlights a stark power imbalance, with news organizations powerless to determine how Apple represents their work to its vast number of users."News organizations have vigorously complained to Apple about this, but we have no power over what iOS does to the accurate and expertly crafted alerts we send out," Fowler wrote in a followup.In December, the BBC first filed a complaint with Apple after the feature mistakenly claimed that Luigi Mangione, the man who killed UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, had shot himself an egregious and easily disproven fabrication.Last week, Apple finally caved and responded to the complaint, vowing to add a clarifying disclaimer that the summaries were AI-generated while also attempting to distance itself from bearing any responsibility."Apple Intelligence features are in beta and we are continuously making improvements with the help of user feedback," a company spokesperson told the BBC in a statement. "A software update in the coming weeks will further clarify when the text being displayed is summarization provided by Apple Intelligence.""We encourage users to report a concern if they view an unexpected notification summary," the company continued.The disclaimer unintentionally points to the dubious value proposition of today's AI: what's the point of a summarizing feature if the company is forced to include a disclaimer on each one that it might be entirely wrong? Should Apple's customers really be the ones responsible for pointing out each time its AI summaries are spreading lies?"It just transfers the responsibility to users, who in an already confusing information landscape will be expected to check if information is true or not," Reporters Without Borders technology and journalism desk head Vincent Berthier told the BBC.Journalists are particularly worried about further eroding trust in the news industry, a pertinent topic given the tidal wave of AI slop that has been crashing over the internet."At a time where access to accurate reporting has never been more important, the public must not be placed in a position of second-guessing the accuracy of news they receive," the National Union of Journalists general secretary Laura Davison told the BBC.Share This Article
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  • eSalon: Temporary Bilingual Customer Service Representative (Spanish)
    weworkremotely.com
    eSalon is an LA-based beauty brand, creating custom home hair color from scratch for each one of our clients. We're a 10x winner of Allure's Best Hair Color, and we've custom crafted over 310,000 unique color variations so far.We are hiring a Temporary Bilingual Customer Service Representative (English & Spanish) to join us in providing outstanding customer support to our rapidly growing client base. We're looking for compassionate and persuasive individuals who have an exceptional way of connecting with people. That skillful way you are able to connect with customers and turn things around is what we are looking for to reduce client churn, as well as gather client insights about our products, services, and customer satisfaction. This is a temporary position, estimated to last though the end of May 2025, with the potential of full time employment based on performance and business needs. You would be hired on by eSalon's staffing partner, Apple One. While the role is fully remote, it is preferred you are based in the LA area for occasional training and company events. You must have availability to work a consistent schedule, Monday through Friday, 8AM-5PM PST. The hourly rate is $18 with the option of occasional overtime.Provide customer service via phone, email, and chat.Use consultative sales skills to assess client goals, educate them on the benefits of eSalon, propose a customized eSalon solution, and save clients from discontinuing service.Maintain a satisfactory level of productivity and customer satisfaction. Meet and exceed individual goals.Retain clients in accordance with company requirements and customer needs.Document client interactions accurately.Communicate ongoing retention activity and progress.Reply to clients and reviews through Social Media.Project professionalism and work cooperatively with other departments and seek further advice and guidance when necessary. RequirementsExcellent written and oral communication with native level fluency in English and Spanish.1+ years customer service or call center experience (preferably with an emphasis on retention sales).Experience selling in a solution or service environment with top notch phone presentation skills.Active experience utilizing CRM systems to document daily calls, meetings, and activity is required.Must be organized, self-motivated, driven, and have an appetite to succeed.Consistent track record of retaining a high percentage of clients.Excellent writing skills.Stable work history.Must have a stable internet speed of at least 50MB.Highly motivated & energetic.Experience with Zendesk a plus.Flexible and able to thrive in fast paced, high growth environment.Must be available Monday - Friday, 8AM-5PM PST.Must be based in the United States.Must be authorized to work in the US for any employer.Benefits$18 / Hour Fully Remote position with equipment provided Complementary eSalon products Related Jobs See more Customer Support jobs
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  • Is Lemon8 a Good Replacement for TikTok? Here's What You Need to Know
    www.cnet.com
    TikTok's days in the US may soon be over. The app is set to be banned on Sunday, unless a US buyer or the Supreme Court intervenes.In the meantime, there's another app owned by TikTok's parent company ByteDance that's making waves. Lemon8 is currently the most downloaded lifestyle app in Apple's App Store and has over 10 million downloads in the Google Play store."Lemon8 is a lifestyle community focused app powered by TikTok, where you can discover and share authentic content on a variety of topics such as beauty, fashion, travel, food, and more," the app's description reads in both stores.Here's what you need to know about Lemon8.Note: I reached out to ByteDance for this story, and the company did not respond for comment.What is Lemon8? Lemon8 posts can contain text to help label objects in the post. Screenshot by Zach McAuliffe/CNETLemon8 is a video- and photo-sharing platform that eschews the vertical-scrolling format of TikTok in favor of a Pinterest board-style format. But what Lemon8 and TikTok do have in common is both have Following and For You tabs to show you posts from creators you follow and posts the app thinks you will like.Lemon8's content is split into six topic tabs, plus a seventh tab called All. The other tabs are Fashion, Beauty, Food, Wellness, Travel and Home. These tabs can be found across the top of your screen, and tapping into these tabs shows you recommended and suggested posts.Posts can be swipeable photo collections like in Instagram, or TikTok-style videos. Some creators add text to their photos to label clothing or a product. Some will also include the price of the item in the text.How is Lemon8 different from TikTok and other apps?Lemon8 is different from other apps in terms of what is posted and how it's presented.Lemon8 has a lot of influencer ads and product recommendations. It's difficult to tell what is and isn't sponsored content, and this appears to be the norm across the app. TikTok also has sponsored content, but usually these are marked as such in the bottom-left corner. Memes don't seem to be catching on in Lemon8. Screenshot by Zach McAuliffe/CNETThere aren't a lot of memes or jokes on Lemon8 compared to other apps, either. You can find memes on Lemon8, but various hashtags associated with "memes," like "funnymemes" and "catmemes," have fewer than 1 million views (as opposed to hundreds of millions on Instagram). This could be because Lemon8 is still catching on in the US, but my suspicion is Lemon8 isn't meant for memes. It's meant to be more of a guidebook to help you achieve a certain lifestyle or aesthetic.There's also a lot of writing in Lemon8. For example, post captions might include instructions for a recipe or a deeper breakdown of an outfit. TikTok captions can have useful information, but those captions are more about connecting posts to hashtags to get more views and don't necessarily add new information to the TikTok post. Lemon8 uses captions in a similar way to Instagram posts, but Lemon8 captions have one key difference from Instagram: templates. Lemon8 templates can help you quickly make, or give you an idea of what to include in, captions. Screenshot by Zach McAuliffe/CNETLemon8 lets you use templates for your posts to help you quickly format and to give you an idea of what to caption your post. There are caption templates for fashion, shopping finds, beauty, food and travel.Lemon8 reminds me of a mashup between the magazines Martha Stewart Living, Muscle & Fitness and Travel + Leisure. You can find some useful tips in Lemon8 to help you achieve a desired aesthetic or find some vacation inspiration, but it's not clear what is and isn't an ad.What are people saying about Lemon8?People's reaction to Lemon8 is seemingly positive so far. One TikTok creator posted a video calling Lemon8 "Pinterest, but interactive." Another said Lemon8 is a combination of Pinterest, Instagram and TikTok.However, this positivity could be artificially inflated. ZDNet reports that many TikTok posts about Lemon8 have described the app with similar language, making some believe ByteDance paid these creators.And some Lemon8 creators' claims make this theory sound more viable. One Lemon8 creator told Insider that ByteDance paid them to post on the app. Two other Lemon8 creators showed Insider emails that outlined the app's payment structure.Should you download Lemon8?Lemon8 is free so even if you're a little curious you can download and try the app. Just know the app's posts resemble instructional guides more than memes to share, and many posts feel like advertisements.See at App StoreSee at Google PlayWho owns Lemon8?ByteDance, the Chinese tech company that owns TikTok, also owns Lemon8. According to ZDNet, ByteDance is positioning Lemon8 to be an Instagram rival as more users stop using, or abandon, Meta's app.According to the Wall Street Journal, a leaked internal memo from Meta showed that Instagram engagement was declining. ByteDance executives could be hoping to capitalize on this by giving Instagram users an alternative app in the form of Lemon8. And while Lemon8 was released globally in 2020, the app's recent growth might show ByteDance's gamble is paying off.What's Lemon8's privacy policy? Lemon8's travel tab can give you inspiration for your next getaway. Screenshot by Zach McAuliffe/CNETMost of Lemon8's privacy policy seems standard for social media apps. It states Lemon8 collects personal and location information to provide you with a better app experience. Some collected information includes your IP address and browsing history. But part of the app's privacy policy might raise eyebrows."The personal information we collect from you may be stored on a server located outside of the country where you live," the policy reads. The company has servers around the world, according to the policy, so your information could be stored in any of them.This is different from how Lemon8's sister app TikTok stores some user's data. The company stores US-based user data in Oracle servers. TikTok CEO Shou Chew said ByteDance employees in China can access this data, but with "robust cybersecurity controls and authorization approval" overseen by a US-based security team.For more on social media, check out how you can use social media for good and how social media apps like Bereal and Mastodon might be the next big thing.
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  • Wildfires Started by Human Activities Are Often More Destructive
    www.scientificamerican.com
    January 15, 20254 min readWildfires Started by Daily Human Activities Are Often More DestructiveFast-moving fires, such as the recent ones in the Los Angeles area, and those started by humans, whether accidentally or not, are often some of the most destructiveBy Virginia Iglesias & The Conversation US Fire engines drive through flames ripping across Highway 36 as the Park fire continues to burn near Paynes Creek in unincorporated Tehama County, California on July 26, 2024. Josh Edelson/AFP via Getty ImagesThe following essay is reprinted with permission from The Conversation, an online publication covering the latest research.Investigators are trying to determine what caused several wind-driven wildfires that have destroyed thousands of homes across the Los Angeles area in January 2025. Given the fires locations, and lack of lightning at the time, its likely that utility infrastructure, other equipment or human activities were involved.Californias wildfires have become increasingly destructive in recent years. Research my colleagues and I have conducted shows U.S. wildfires are up to four times larger and three times more frequent than they were in the 1980s and 90s. Fast-moving fires have been particularly destructive, accounting for 78% of structures destroyed and 61% of suppression costs between 2001 and 2020.On supporting science journalismIf you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.Lightning strikes are a common cause of U.S. wildfires, but the majority of wildfires that threaten communities are started by human activities.A broken power line started the deadly 2023 Maui fire that destroyed the town of Lahaina, Hawaii. Metal from cars or mowers dragging on the ground can spark fires. Californias largest fire in 2024 started when a man pushed a burning car into a ravine near Chico. The fire destroyed more than 700 homes and buildings.Chart: The Conversation (CC-BY-ND); Source: National Interagency Coordination CenterWhat makes these wildfires so destructive and difficult to contain?The answer lies in a mix of wind speed, changing climate, the legacy of past land-management practices, and current human activities that are reshaping fire behavior and increasing the risk they pose.Fires perfect stormWildfires rely on three key elements to spread: conducive weather, dry fuel and an ignition source. Each of these factors has undergone pronounced changes in recent decades. While climate change sets the stage for larger and more intense fires, humans are actively fanning the flames.Climate and weatherExtreme temperatures play a dangerous role in wildfires. Heat dries out vegetation, making it more flammable. Under these conditions, wildfires ignite more easily, spread faster and burn with greater intensity. In the western U.S., aridity attributed to climate change has doubled the amount of forestland that has burned since 1984.Compounding the problem is the rapid rise in nighttime temperatures, now increasing faster than daytime temperatures. Nights, which used to offer a reprieve with cooler conditions and higher humidity, do so less often, allowing fires to continue raging without pause.Finally, winds contribute to the rapid expansion, increased intensity and erratic behavior of wildfires. Wind gusts push heat and embers ahead of the fire front and can cause it to rapidly expand. They can also create spot fires in new locations. Additionally, winds enhance combustion by supplying more oxygen, which can make the fire more unpredictable and challenging to control. Usually driven by high winds, fast-moving fires have become more frequent in recent decades.FuelFire is a natural process that has shaped ecosystems for over 420 million years. Indigenous people historically used controlled burns to manage landscapes and reduce fuel buildup. However, a century of fire suppression has allowed vast areas to accumulate dense fuels, priming them for larger and more intense wildfires.Invasive species, such as certain grasses, have exacerbated the issue by creating continuous fuel beds that accelerate fire spread, often doubling or tripling fire activity.Additionally, human development in fire-prone regions, especially in the wildland-urban interface, where neighborhoods intermingle with forest and grassland vegetation, has introduced new, highly flammable fuels. Buildings, vehicles and infrastructure often ignite easily and burn hotter and faster than natural vegetation. These changes have significantly altered fuel patterns, creating conditions conducive to more severe and harder-to-control wildfires.IgnitionLightning can ignite wildfires, but humans are responsible for an increasing share. From unattended campfires to arson or sparks from power lines, over 84% of the wildfires affecting communities are human-ignited.Human activities have not only tripled the length of the fire season, but they also have resulted in fires that pose a higher risk to people.Lightning-started fires often coincide with storms that carry rain or higher humidity, which slows fires spread. Human-started fires, however, typically ignite under more extreme conditions hotter temperatures, lower humidity and stronger winds. This leads to greater flame heights, faster spread in the critical early days before crews can respond, and more severe ecosystem effects, such as killing more trees and degrading the soil.Human-ignited fires often occur in or near populated areas, where flammable structures and vegetation create even more hazardous conditions. Homes and the materials around them, such as wooden fences and porches, can burn quicklyand send burning embers airborne, further spreading the flames.As urban development expands into wildlands, the probability of human-started fires and the property potentially exposed to fire increase, creating a feedback loop of escalating wildfire risk.Chart: The Conversation (CC-BY-ND) Source: Virginia Iglesias, data from ICS-209_PLUS and FIREDWhiplash weatherA phenomenon known as whiplash weather, marked by unusually wet winters and springs followed by extreme summer heat, was especially pronounced in Southern California in recent years.A wet spring in 2024 fostered vegetation growth, which then dried out under scorching summer temperatures, turning into highly combustible fuel. This cycle fueled some of the biggest fires of the 2024 season, several of which were started by humans.That dryness continued in Southern California through the fall and into early winter, with very little rainfall. Soil moisture in the Los Angeles region was about 2% of historical levels for that time of year when the fires began on Jan. 7, 2025.As the factors that can drive wildfires converge, the potential for increasingly severe wildfires looms ever larger. Severe fires also release large amounts of carbon from trees, vegetation and soils into the atmosphere, increasing greenhouse gas emissions and exacerbating climate change, contributing to more extreme fire seasons.This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.
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  • Rockstar shuts down ambitious mod that put GTA 4's Liberty City in GTA 5
    www.eurogamer.net
    Rockstar shuts down ambitious mod that put GTA 4's Liberty City in GTA 5Inner city pressure.Image credit: World Travel News by Matt Wales News Reporter Published on Jan. 16, 2025 Just weeks after publicly releasing the Liberty City Preservation Project - an ambitious mod adding a playable version of Grand Theft Auto 4's map to GTA5 - its developers have confirmed the project is being taken down following conversations with Rockstar Games.The Liberty City Preservation Project - which modding team World Travel has been working on since 2018 - generated significant interest when it launched earlier this month, giving GTA 5 players a chance to explore GTA 4 protagonist Niko Bellic's old stomping ground. It featured the entire Liberty City map - complete with traffic, pedestrians, weather, and more - alongside improvements such as overhauled lighting, better textures, and new scenarios.Unfortunately, the mod's enthusiastic reception also set it on a collision course with Rockstar, and the Liberty City Preservation Project is now officially no more. As spotted by Insider Gaming, lead modder nkjellman announced its end on Discord, writing, "Due to the unexpected attention that our project received and after speaking with Rockstar Games, we have decided to take down the Liberty City Preservation project."Liberty City Preservation Project trailer.Watch on YouTube"We appreciate all the support the project has received," nkjellman continued, "and we look forward to continuing to pursue our passion for modding the Grand Theft Auto series."Nkjellman didn't specify what had drawn Rockstar's ire, but the studio has frowned on similar mods before. Back in 2017, it called time on the 'Liberty City in GTA5' mod, saying that while it "generally [would] not take legal action against third-party projects involving Rockstar's PC games that are single-player, non-commercial, and respect the intellectual property rights of third parties", it would not allow "use or importation of other IP", including its own. So it seems likely that's where the Liberty City Preservation Project has fallen foul of Rockstar's rules.Perhaps notable, too, is the fact an official GTA 4 remaster was reported to have been in the works back in 2022. At the time, the project was said to have been shelved due to the poor reception of 2021's GTA: The Trilogy remasters - but the report also referenced a supposedly canned Red Dead Redemption remaster that did eventually show up in 2023. It's possible Rockstar's rumoured GTA 4 remaster is also alive and well, which might have contributed to the Liberty City Preservation Project's swift slap-down. But regardless, 2025 is a massive year for the long-running series, with GTA 6 currently expected to release this "autumn".
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  • Video: Digital Foundry's Technical Analysis Of Donkey Kong Country Returns HD
    www.nintendolife.com
    Subscribe to Nintendo Life on YouTube792kThe folks at this Digital Foundry have this week taken a look at the latest Switch release Donkey Kong Country Returns HD.In brief, the resolution and frame rate are "surprisingly solid". This Unity-powered game runs at 1080p docked and 720p in handheld mode on the Switch - with reasonable image quality and sharper textures. Unfortunately, it's not all intact - with "some oddities" and hiccups like reduced effects and sloppy animation."The closer you look though, the more you start to spot some oddities. Visual effects that were missing in the original trailer have been implemented and improved, but there are still small hiccups - the dust clouds kicked up while pounding the DK symbol are reduced, and the animation of the barrel breaking as DK shoots out of it is a bit sloppy."You might not notice stuff like this while just playing through, but you probably would notice the missing sunset in stage three, the less glowy floating KONG letters, and simplified shadows on the intro to the first boss fight. These sorts of nips and tucks are throughout, and while these are minor changes, it still feels weird to see a game released on a vastly more powerful system with fewer effects and details."The loading times of this HD version have also been cited as being "nearly twice as long as they were on the Wii version running from a disc", which feels like a "big step back".As for the frame rate, this version of the title runs at 60fps at 1080p, which is an improvement on the 3DS entry that was dropped back to 30fps. Overall, Digital Foundry sums this latest version as both "good and disappointing" - while the remastering efforts have been "largely successful", the areas where it falls short "feel less acceptable" given the age of the original game.You can get the full rundown in the video above, and check out our own thoughts in our review here on Nintendo Life: That's what you get for not hailing to the chimpWorth going bananas over?Monkey businessWill you be returning to this Donkey Kong outing this week? Let us know in the comments.[source youtu.be, via eurogamer.net]Related GamesSee AlsoShare:00 Liam is a news writer and reviewer for Nintendo Life and Pure Xbox. He's been writing about games for more than 15 years and is a lifelong fan of Mario and Master Chief. Hold on there, you need to login to post a comment...Related ArticlesReview: Donkey Kong Country Returns HD (Switch) - Aping A Retro ClassicThat's what you get for not hailing to the chimpRound Up: The Reviews Are In For Donkey Kong Country Returns HDWorth going bananas over?
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  • Chinese AI company MiniMax releases new models it claims are competitive with the industrys best
    techcrunch.com
    Chinese firms continue to release AI models that rival the capabilities of systems developed by OpenAI and other U.S.-based AI companies.This week, MiniMax, an Alibaba- and Tencent-backed startup that has raised around $850 million in venture capital and is valued at more than $2.5 billion, debuted three new models: MiniMax-Text-01, MiniMax-VL-01, and T2A-01-HD. MiniMax-Text-01 is a text-only model, while MiniMax-VL-01 can understand both images and text. T2A-01-HD, meanwhile, generates audio specifically speech.MiniMax claims that MiniMax-Text-01, which is 456 billion parameters in size, performs better than models such as Googles recently unveiled Gemini 2.0 Flash on benchmarks like MATH and SimpleQA, which measure the ability of a model to answer math problems and fact-based questions. Parameters roughly correspond to a models problem-solving skills, and models with more parameters generally perform better than those with fewer parameters.As for MiniMax-VL-01, MiniMax says that it rivals Anthropics Claude 3.5 Sonnet on evaluations that require multimodal understanding, like ChartQA, which tasks models with answering graph- and diagram-related queries (e.g., What is the peak value of the orange line in this graph?). Granted, MiniMax-VL-01 doesnt quite best Gemini 2.0 Flash on many of these tests. OpenAIs GPT-4o and Metas Llama 3.1 beat it on several as well.Of note, MiniMax-Text-01 has an extremely large context window. A models context, or context window, refers to input (e.g., text) that a model considers before generating output (additional text). With a context window of 4 million tokens, MiniMax-Text-01 can analyze around 3 million words in one go or just over five copies of War and Peace.For context (no pun intended), MiniMax-Text-01s context window is roughly 31 times the size of GPT-4os and Llama 3.1s.The last of MiniMaxs models released this week, T2A-01-HD, is an audio generator optimized for speech. T2A-01-HD can generate a synthetic voice with adjustable cadence, tone, and tenor in around 17 different languages, including English and Chinese, and clone a voice from just 10 seconds of an audio recording.MiniMax didnt publish benchmark results comparing T2A-01-HD to other audio-generating models. But to this reporters ear, T2A-01-HDs outputs sound on par with audio models from Meta and startups like PlayAI.With the exception of T2A-01-HD, which is exclusively available through MiniMaxs API and Hailuo AI platform, MiniMaxs new models can be downloaded from GitHub and the AI dev platform Hugging Face. Just because the models are openly available doesnt mean they arent locked down in certain aspects, however. MiniMax-Text-01 and MiniMax-VL-01 arent truly open source in the sense that MiniMax hasnt released the components (e.g., training data) needed to re-create them from scratch. Moreover, theyre under MiniMaxs restrictive license, which prohibits developers from using the models to improve rival AI models and requires that platforms with more than 100 million monthly active users request a special license from MiniMax.MiniMax was founded in 2021 by former employees of SenseTime, one of Chinas largest AI firms. The companys projects include apps like Talkie, an AI-powered role-playing platform along the lines of Character AI, and text-to-video models that MiniMax has released in Hailuo.Some of MiniMaxs products have become the subject of minor controversy.Talkie, which was pulled from Apples App Store in December for unspecified technical reasons, features AI avatars of public figures, including Donald Trump, Taylor Swift, Elon Musk, and LeBron James, none of whom appear to have consented to being featured in the app.In December, Broadcast magazine reported that MiniMaxs video generators can reproduce the logos of British television channels, suggesting that MiniMaxs models were trained on content from those channels. And MiniMax is reportedly being sued by iQiyi, a Chinese video streaming service that alleges MiniMax illicitly trained on iQiyis copyrighted recordings.MiniMaxs new models arrive days after the outgoing Biden administration proposed harsher export rules and restrictions on AI technologies for Chinese ventures. Companies in China were already prevented from buying advanced AI chips, but if the new rules go into effect as written, companies will be faced with stricter caps on both the semiconductor tech and models needed to bootstrap sophisticated AI systems.On Wednesday, the Biden administration announced additional measures focused on keeping sophisticated chips out of China. Chip foundries and packaging companies that want to export certain chips will be subjected to broader license requirements unless they exercise greater scrutiny and due diligence to prevent their products from reaching Chinese clients.Topics
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  • Former Cornwall Public Library // 1908
    buildingsofnewengland.com
    Constructed of random-coursed stone, this charming building in Cornwall, Connecticut, exhibits a prominent classical entry, Tuscan pilasters, and modillion eaves. This handsome structure was completed in late 1908 following a substantial donation to the town for its first purpose-built library by summer resident John E. Calhoun. Mr. Calhoun had cultivated an interest in architecture and is said to have designed the building, and later designed his own home in the village years later. The high-style architectural building documents the transformation of Cornwall from a sleepy agricultural town into a fashionable residential retreat in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The building operated as the towns public library until 2002 when the contemporary library building was completed. This stone structure was converted to the town hall.
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