I’ve Tested 25 Air Fryers. My All-Time Favorite Is 44% off Right Now
The Ninja XL is one buck short of an all-time low price ahead of Black Friday.
The Ninja XL is one buck short of an all-time low price ahead of Black Friday.
Dynabook unveils a laptop that weighs less than 1Kg with a feature I couldn’t find anywhere else: a replaceable battery
Dynabook unveils a laptop that weighs less than 1Kg and comes with an easily replaceable battery
Dynabook X8/Y and X6/Y powered by Intel Core processorsFeatures self-replaceable battery system, extending battery lifespanLightweight, durable design with MIL-SPEC standards; 26-hour battery life
Dynabook has introduced two new models to its premium laptop lineup, both powered by Intel’s 13th-generation Core P processors.
The X8/Y is equipped with the Intel Core i7-1360P, while the X6/Y features the Intel Core i5-1340P.
Weighing approximately 937 grams, the laptops are designed for portability while also meeting MIL-SPEC standards, featuring a magnesium alloy body. JEITA 3.0 testing estimates battery life at up to 26 hours, and there’s the option for users to swap in a new battery when performance declines.
Microsoft productivity software included
Both laptops offer a self-replaceable battery system, allowing users to change the battery as needed. Battery performance naturally drops over time, especially with extensive use and frequent charging, so Dynabook has designed an easy-to-replace battery setup that involves removing two screws on the battery cover and inserting the replacement.
Dynabook aims to minimize the need for battery replacements, as the X-series laptops are configured to “Auto mode” by default. This mode adjusts charging between “100% charge mode” and “80% charge mode” based on usage patterns to preserve battery life, especially when the device is frequently plugged in.
The X8/Y and X6/Y both come with 16GB LPDDR5 memory and a 512GB PCIe SSD. They feature a 13.3-inch LCD display with a resolution of 1920×1080, and the screen can open to a full 180 degrees.
The Dynabook X series includes productivity tools such as PC Transfer Navigator 2 for data migration, Dynabook Smartphone Connection, and Dynabook Color Adjustment Utility for display customization.
Additional features like AI noise cancellation and a one-touch microphone mute support online meetings, and Microsoft Office Home & Business 2024 is included with both models. A one-year Microsoft 365 Basic subscription is also provided, offering 100GB of OneDrive storage and ad-free Outlook mail.
Connectivity options include Wi-Fi 6E, Bluetooth 5.3, gigabit Ethernet, USB Type-A, Thunderbolt 4 USB-C, HDMI, a microSD slot, and fingerprint recognition.
Available in Dark Tech Blue and Dark Tech Silver, the X8/Y is expected to retail in the mid-270,000 yen range (around $1,800), while the X6/Y will set you back around 250,000 yen (approximately $1,650).
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These are the best business laptops you can buy right nowAnd these are the lightest laptops on the marketJapanese-built Vaio premium laptop weighs just 899g
Google is prepping Gemini to take action inside of apps
Gemini could spring into action soon. | Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge
Google released the first Android 16 developer preview earlier this week and keen-eyed observers are already uncovering interesting tidbits, including one that hints about a much more useful future for Google’s AI assistant. In Android Authority, Mishaal Rahman writes about a mysterious new API in Android 16 called “app functions,” which appears to give Gemini Assistant agentic-like abilities to take action in apps. It sounds awfully similar to the upgraded “app intents” Apple supports in iOS 18, and it’s exactly the kind of thing that could make AI assistants much more useful than they are in their current state.
A page on Google’s developer site describes an app function as “a specific piece of functionality that an app offers to the system. These functionalities can be integrated into various system features.” Really clears things up. But Rahman points to a specific example buried in the documentation that sheds some more light. It details how an app developer could use app functions to expose certain actions to the system — in this case, ordering food. With this function available to Gemini, you might be able to place an order with your neighborhood Thai restaurant without having to open the DoorDash app. Kinda neat.
Apple’s working on a similar approach to a smarter assistant. One of its promises for the smarter Siri we’ll supposedly get in iOS 18 is that it will be able to take action in apps for you. By updating its app intents framework, Apple has created a way for developers to expose “order food”-type functions to Siri. According to rumors, we probably won’t see that update until spring of 2025, though.
“Doing things for you” was kind of the whole promise of smart assistants from the beginning, but that hasn’t started materializing until very recently. Gemini can access information in certain apps with your permission, but currently it’s mostly limited to searching things like Gmail and Google Maps. And Siri’s biggest update in iOS 18 so far added a ChatGPT extension so you can ask more complicated questions, but it still falls short on “taking action.” Now, both platforms appear to be laying the groundwork for better assistants — and 2025 could be a very interesting year for AI on smartphones.
Gemini could spring into action soon. | Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge
Google released the first Android 16 developer preview earlier this week and keen-eyed observers are already uncovering interesting tidbits, including one that hints about a much more useful future for Google’s AI assistant. In Android Authority, Mishaal Rahman writes about a mysterious new API in Android 16 called “app functions,” which appears to give Gemini Assistant agentic-like abilities to take action in apps. It sounds awfully similar to the upgraded “app intents” Apple supports in iOS 18, and it’s exactly the kind of thing that could make AI assistants much more useful than they are in their current state.
A page on Google’s developer site describes an app function as “a specific piece of functionality that an app offers to the system. These functionalities can be integrated into various system features.” Really clears things up. But Rahman points to a specific example buried in the documentation that sheds some more light. It details how an app developer could use app functions to expose certain actions to the system — in this case, ordering food. With this function available to Gemini, you might be able to place an order with your neighborhood Thai restaurant without having to open the DoorDash app. Kinda neat.
Apple’s working on a similar approach to a smarter assistant. One of its promises for the smarter Siri we’ll supposedly get in iOS 18 is that it will be able to take action in apps for you. By updating its app intents framework, Apple has created a way for developers to expose “order food”-type functions to Siri. According to rumors, we probably won’t see that update until spring of 2025, though.
“Doing things for you” was kind of the whole promise of smart assistants from the beginning, but that hasn’t started materializing until very recently. Gemini can access information in certain apps with your permission, but currently it’s mostly limited to searching things like Gmail and Google Maps. And Siri’s biggest update in iOS 18 so far added a ChatGPT extension so you can ask more complicated questions, but it still falls short on “taking action.” Now, both platforms appear to be laying the groundwork for better assistants — and 2025 could be a very interesting year for AI on smartphones.
Our Universe is not fine-tuned for life, but it’s still kind of OK
Inspired by the Drake equation, researchers optimize a model universe for life.
Physicists including Robert H. Dickle and Fred Hoyle have argued that we are living in a universe that is perfectly fine-tuned for life. Following the anthropic principle, they claimed that the only reason fundamental physical constants have the values we measure is because we wouldn’t exist if those values were any different. There would simply have been no one to measure them.
But now a team of British and Swiss astrophysicists have put that idea to test. “The short answer is no, we are not in the most likely of the universes,” said Daniele Sorini, an astrophysicist at Durham University. “And we are not in the most life-friendly universe, either.” Sorini led a study aimed at establishing how different amounts of the dark energy present in a universe would affect its ability to produce stars. Stars, he assumed, are a necessary condition for intelligent life to appear.
But worry not. While our Universe may not be the best for life, the team says it’s still pretty OK-ish.
Judge rules SiriusXM’s annoying cancellation process is illegal
Image: The Verge
A New York judge has determined that SiriusXM’s “long and burdensome” cancellation process is illegal. In a ruling on Thursday, Judge Lyle Frank found SiriusXM violates a federal law that requires companies to make it easy to cancel a subscription.
The decision comes nearly one year after New York Attorney General Leticia James sued SiriusXM over claims the company makes subscriptions difficult to cancel. Following an investigation, the Office of the Attorney General found that the company attempts to delay cancellations by having customers call an agent, who then keeps them on the phone for serval minutes while “pitching the subscriber as many as five retention offers.”
As outlined in the ruling, Judge Frank found that SiriusXM broke the Restore Online Shoppers Confidence Act (ROSCA), which requires companies to implement “simple mechanisms” to cancel a subscription. “Their cancellation procedure is clearly not as easy to use as the initiation method,” Judge Frank writes, citing the “inevitable wait times” that come along with talking to a live agent and the subscription offers they promote.
The Federal Trade Commission has started cracking down on hard-to-cancel subscriptions as well, with a new “click to cancel” rule going into effect next year. Under the law, companies must make canceling a subscription as easy as it is to sign up. “This decision found SiriusXM illegally created a complicated cancellation process for its New York customers, forcing them to spend significant amounts of time speaking with agents who refused to take ‘no’ for an answer,” Attorney General James said in a statement.
As a result of the ruling, SiriusXM must change its cancellation process — but only for customers located in New York. SiriusXM says it plans to appeal the decision and will also follow the FTC’s incoming click-to-cancel rule, according to Reuters. The company didn’t immediately respond to The Verge’s request for comment.
Image: The Verge
A New York judge has determined that SiriusXM’s “long and burdensome” cancellation process is illegal. In a ruling on Thursday, Judge Lyle Frank found SiriusXM violates a federal law that requires companies to make it easy to cancel a subscription.
The decision comes nearly one year after New York Attorney General Leticia James sued SiriusXM over claims the company makes subscriptions difficult to cancel. Following an investigation, the Office of the Attorney General found that the company attempts to delay cancellations by having customers call an agent, who then keeps them on the phone for serval minutes while “pitching the subscriber as many as five retention offers.”
As outlined in the ruling, Judge Frank found that SiriusXM broke the Restore Online Shoppers Confidence Act (ROSCA), which requires companies to implement “simple mechanisms” to cancel a subscription. “Their cancellation procedure is clearly not as easy to use as the initiation method,” Judge Frank writes, citing the “inevitable wait times” that come along with talking to a live agent and the subscription offers they promote.
The Federal Trade Commission has started cracking down on hard-to-cancel subscriptions as well, with a new “click to cancel” rule going into effect next year. Under the law, companies must make canceling a subscription as easy as it is to sign up. “This decision found SiriusXM illegally created a complicated cancellation process for its New York customers, forcing them to spend significant amounts of time speaking with agents who refused to take ‘no’ for an answer,” Attorney General James said in a statement.
As a result of the ruling, SiriusXM must change its cancellation process — but only for customers located in New York. SiriusXM says it plans to appeal the decision and will also follow the FTC’s incoming click-to-cancel rule, according to Reuters. The company didn’t immediately respond to The Verge’s request for comment.
Rest Easy With Up to $1,000 Off Purple Mattresses, Bed Frames and More
You can also save on pillows, bedding and other sleep accessories during this massive sale.
You can also save on pillows, bedding and other sleep accessories during this massive sale.
Score This PlayStation VR 2 Bundle for Its Lowest Price Ever This Black Friday
You can play Horizon Call of the Mountain and get an excellent virtual reality headset for over 40% off now.
You can play Horizon Call of the Mountain and get an excellent virtual reality headset for over 40% off now.
Pepeto’s $600K Presale Highlights Vision for Supporting Memecoins Ahead of 2025
London, united kingdom, 22nd November 2024, Chainwire
The post Pepeto’s $600K Presale Highlights Vision for Supporting Memecoins Ahead of 2025 first appeared on Tech Startups.
London, united kingdom, 22nd November 2024, Chainwire
The post Pepeto’s $600K Presale Highlights Vision for Supporting Memecoins Ahead of 2025 first appeared on Tech Startups.