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X all-hands leaves staff with few answers on delayed promotions

Linda Yaccarino. | Photo by Jerod Harris/Getty Images for Vox Media

During an internal all-hands meeting led by X CEO Linda Yaccarino on Wednesday, concerned employees tuned in to hear if she would address the pressing issue on their minds: performance reviews.
Sources inside the company confirm that a promotions process was recently delayed without explanation and that X’s sales team doesn’t expect to meet its revenue targets for the quarter. Given how the company formerly called Twitter has continued to struggle under Elon Musk’s ownership, employees have been bracing for more layoffs.
One of Musk’s key lieutenants, The Boring Company CEO Steve Davis, has been reviewing finances at X’s headquarters in San Francisco over the past several weeks, according to multiple employees who requested anonymity to speak without the company’s permission. As one of them described Davis: “He’s the grim reaper who only shows up for bad things.”
A source at X told The Verge that there have been a handful of people laid off in recent days. Many noticed the sudden departure of Yaccarino’s right-hand man, Joe Benarroch. So, when a rare all-hands meeting with her landed on employee calendars last week, X’s roughly 1,500 remaining staffers anxiously waited to find out more.
The meeting began with a montage of viral tweets, including one by infamous GameStop trader Keith Gill, followed by Yaccarino joining from an X conference room named “eXtraordinary.” She tried to drum up excitement about live events on the platform, such as the Super Bowl and March Madness, and urged employees to discuss Musk’s x.AI chatbot Grok with advertisers. She also emphasized that X’s focus on video has “definitely driving advertising” without elaborating.
As the meeting continued, X’s head of HR, Walter Gilbert, told staff that X is planning to implement a broader and more robust promotion process that will include “doing lighter-weight check-ins throughout the year.” One source who watched the meeting quipped that a bulk of the submitted employee questions were “definitely about HR, promotions, raises/equity” and not addressed.
Musk was noticeably absent despite him being in San Francisco along with Yaccarino. Instead, several other directors joined: Monique Pintarelli, head of advertising for the Americas, Nick Pickles, who leads policy, Kylie McRoberts, the company’s latest head of trust and safety, and Haofei Wang, director of engineering.
While Yaccarino was light on specific data about the performance of the advertising business, Pintarelli told staff that X now has over “50% of our revenue attributed to performance objectives,” which she described “as a pretty big shift from where the business was over the last few years.”
While this all-hands may not have given X employees many answers, Yaccarino did emphasize that the company will be conducting them once a quarter, adding that the team will “also be hearing quite soon from both Elon and I.”
Alex Heath contributed reporting.

Linda Yaccarino. | Photo by Jerod Harris/Getty Images for Vox Media

During an internal all-hands meeting led by X CEO Linda Yaccarino on Wednesday, concerned employees tuned in to hear if she would address the pressing issue on their minds: performance reviews.

Sources inside the company confirm that a promotions process was recently delayed without explanation and that X’s sales team doesn’t expect to meet its revenue targets for the quarter. Given how the company formerly called Twitter has continued to struggle under Elon Musk’s ownership, employees have been bracing for more layoffs.

One of Musk’s key lieutenants, The Boring Company CEO Steve Davis, has been reviewing finances at X’s headquarters in San Francisco over the past several weeks, according to multiple employees who requested anonymity to speak without the company’s permission. As one of them described Davis: “He’s the grim reaper who only shows up for bad things.”

A source at X told The Verge that there have been a handful of people laid off in recent days. Many noticed the sudden departure of Yaccarino’s right-hand man, Joe Benarroch. So, when a rare all-hands meeting with her landed on employee calendars last week, X’s roughly 1,500 remaining staffers anxiously waited to find out more.

The meeting began with a montage of viral tweets, including one by infamous GameStop trader Keith Gill, followed by Yaccarino joining from an X conference room named “eXtraordinary.” She tried to drum up excitement about live events on the platform, such as the Super Bowl and March Madness, and urged employees to discuss Musk’s x.AI chatbot Grok with advertisers. She also emphasized that X’s focus on video has “definitely driving advertising” without elaborating.

As the meeting continued, X’s head of HR, Walter Gilbert, told staff that X is planning to implement a broader and more robust promotion process that will include “doing lighter-weight check-ins throughout the year.” One source who watched the meeting quipped that a bulk of the submitted employee questions were “definitely about HR, promotions, raises/equity” and not addressed.

Musk was noticeably absent despite him being in San Francisco along with Yaccarino. Instead, several other directors joined: Monique Pintarelli, head of advertising for the Americas, Nick Pickles, who leads policy, Kylie McRoberts, the company’s latest head of trust and safety, and Haofei Wang, director of engineering.

While Yaccarino was light on specific data about the performance of the advertising business, Pintarelli told staff that X now has over “50% of our revenue attributed to performance objectives,” which she described “as a pretty big shift from where the business was over the last few years.”

While this all-hands may not have given X employees many answers, Yaccarino did emphasize that the company will be conducting them once a quarter, adding that the team will “also be hearing quite soon from both Elon and I.”

Alex Heath contributed reporting.

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Google is putting more Android in ChromeOS

Illustration: The Verge

ChromeOS will “soon be developed on large portions of the Android stack” so that it can roll out AI features at a faster pace, Google announced on Wednesday. The company says it will be embracing things like the Android Linux kernel and Android frameworks “as part of the foundation of ChromeOS.”
The changes won’t just mean more AI features, according to Google. The company also noted that they will help “simplify engineering efforts” and “help different devices like phones and accessories work better together with Chromebooks,” as detailed in a blog post.
Google surely wants to have Chromebook users trying as many AI-powered features as possible, so these changes will probably accelerate that. But the company cautions that while the changes to the tech stack are “starting now,” they “won’t be ready for consumers for quite some time.”
In the meantime, if you have a Chromebook Plus laptop, you can already use Gemini from your home screen.

Illustration: The Verge

ChromeOS will “soon be developed on large portions of the Android stack” so that it can roll out AI features at a faster pace, Google announced on Wednesday. The company says it will be embracing things like the Android Linux kernel and Android frameworks “as part of the foundation of ChromeOS.”

The changes won’t just mean more AI features, according to Google. The company also noted that they will help “simplify engineering efforts” and “help different devices like phones and accessories work better together with Chromebooks,” as detailed in a blog post.

Google surely wants to have Chromebook users trying as many AI-powered features as possible, so these changes will probably accelerate that. But the company cautions that while the changes to the tech stack are “starting now,” they “won’t be ready for consumers for quite some time.”

In the meantime, if you have a Chromebook Plus laptop, you can already use Gemini from your home screen.

Read More 

Netflix will settle 15 years of Chestnut vs. Kobayashi with a live hot dog-eating contest

Takeru Kobayashi (L) and Joey Chestnut (R) competed during the 92nd Annual Nathan’s Famous International Hot Dog Eating Contest in 2007. | Photo by Bobby Bank / WireImage

Netflix has scheduled Chestnut vs. Kobayashi: Unfinished Beef on September 2nd as another one of its live events, along with Christmas Day NFL games, WWE Monday Night Raw, and the delayed Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson fight.
A press release from Netflix takes the whole thing very seriously, quoting Kobayashi saying, “Retiring for me will only happen after I take him down one last time… Competing against Joey live on Netflix means fans all over the world can watch me knock him out.” Chestnut, meanwhile, says, “It’s time to give the people what they want!”
The competition will have extra intrigue because Joey Chestnut and Takeru Kobayashi will both have to skip the annual July 4th Nathan’s Famous Hot Dog Eating Contest that made their rivalry famous. A six-time winner, Kobayashi was banned from the contest in 2010 over a contract dispute. Then, on June 11th, Major League Eating announced a ban on Chestnut, a 16-time winner and the world record holder for most hot dogs, related to his deal with Impossible Foods.
And now Netflix, which is now looking a lot more like the “Blue Sky” days of the USA Network than HBO, has another curiosity to tout — location and specific timing to be announced later.

Takeru Kobayashi (L) and Joey Chestnut (R) competed during the 92nd Annual Nathan’s Famous International Hot Dog Eating Contest in 2007. | Photo by Bobby Bank / WireImage

Netflix has scheduled Chestnut vs. Kobayashi: Unfinished Beef on September 2nd as another one of its live events, along with Christmas Day NFL games, WWE Monday Night Raw, and the delayed Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson fight.

A press release from Netflix takes the whole thing very seriously, quoting Kobayashi saying, “Retiring for me will only happen after I take him down one last time… Competing against Joey live on Netflix means fans all over the world can watch me knock him out.” Chestnut, meanwhile, says, “It’s time to give the people what they want!”

The competition will have extra intrigue because Joey Chestnut and Takeru Kobayashi will both have to skip the annual July 4th Nathan’s Famous Hot Dog Eating Contest that made their rivalry famous. A six-time winner, Kobayashi was banned from the contest in 2010 over a contract dispute. Then, on June 11th, Major League Eating announced a ban on Chestnut, a 16-time winner and the world record holder for most hot dogs, related to his deal with Impossible Foods.

And now Netflix, which is now looking a lot more like the “Blue Sky” days of the USA Network than HBO, has another curiosity to tout — location and specific timing to be announced later.

Read More 

There’s a new 35mm film camera coming this year, and it looks pretty good

Now that’s a compact camera. | Image: MiNT

The analog film resurgence continues marching forward, as MiNT’s Rollei 35AF camera seems poised to release this year. The Hong Kong-based camera manufacturer first carved its niche making boutique instant film cameras that remixed classics like the Polaroid SX-70. Now, it’s launched a website with a waitlist for potential customers interested in this diminutive 35mm camera.
The Rollei 35AF is a reincarnation of the original Rollei 35 from 1966, but while one foot remains in the analog past, the new design incorporates lidar-based autofocus for its 35mm f/2.8 lens and options for automatic exposures. It’s still built with a boxy metal body like the original and seems to keep a very compact size. According to MiNT, via PetaPixel and Kosmo Foto, the Rollei 35AF is expected to sell for $650 to $800 when it launches later this year.

With Leica rereleasing its M6 rangefinder in 2022 and rumors that a new Pentax film camera may be imminent, new film cameras that are more than just the equivalent of reusable disposables seem to be on trend. I personally shudder at the current prices of film and lab development costs these days, but I still love that analog photography’s bubble hasn’t yet popped.
I recall using the original Rollei 35 in college a bunch of years ago, and it was a fun little camera — albeit one that asked a lot of its users. The original didn’t just have a manual focus lens (which was 40mm on the original), but it relied on zone focusing by way of the focus scale and some muscle memory. It will be really intriguing to see what an autofocus remix of the little Rollei is like.

Now that’s a compact camera. | Image: MiNT

The analog film resurgence continues marching forward, as MiNT’s Rollei 35AF camera seems poised to release this year. The Hong Kong-based camera manufacturer first carved its niche making boutique instant film cameras that remixed classics like the Polaroid SX-70. Now, it’s launched a website with a waitlist for potential customers interested in this diminutive 35mm camera.

The Rollei 35AF is a reincarnation of the original Rollei 35 from 1966, but while one foot remains in the analog past, the new design incorporates lidar-based autofocus for its 35mm f/2.8 lens and options for automatic exposures. It’s still built with a boxy metal body like the original and seems to keep a very compact size. According to MiNT, via PetaPixel and Kosmo Foto, the Rollei 35AF is expected to sell for $650 to $800 when it launches later this year.

With Leica rereleasing its M6 rangefinder in 2022 and rumors that a new Pentax film camera may be imminent, new film cameras that are more than just the equivalent of reusable disposables seem to be on trend. I personally shudder at the current prices of film and lab development costs these days, but I still love that analog photography’s bubble hasn’t yet popped.

I recall using the original Rollei 35 in college a bunch of years ago, and it was a fun little camera — albeit one that asked a lot of its users. The original didn’t just have a manual focus lens (which was 40mm on the original), but it relied on zone focusing by way of the focus scale and some muscle memory. It will be really intriguing to see what an autofocus remix of the little Rollei is like.

Read More 

OpenAI to use Oracle’s chips for more AI compute

Image: The Verge

OpenAI and Microsoft are teaming up with Oracle to get more compute capacity to run ChatGPT. As part of a partnership announced this week, the three companies are working together so that OpenAI can use the Microsoft Azure Al platform on Oracle’s infrastructure.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman hasn’t shied away from the fact that his company needs substantially more infrastructure to power its services. He has even been in discussions to raise billions of dollars for an AI chip venture. In the press release for the Oracle deal this week, he said Oracle’s chips will “enable OpenAI to continue to scale.”
To date, OpenAI has relied fully on Microsoft for its compute needs. In turn, Microsoft has invested $13 billion for a 49 percent stake in OpenAI’s for-profit subsidiary and the exclusive right to commercially license its technology. But as this Oracle deal makes clear, OpenAI needs more compute than Microsoft alone can give if it wants to keep up with demand and prevent future ChatGPT outages.
Microsoft and OpenAI are clearly sensitive about how this Oracle deal is perceived. On Wednesday, OpenAI issued a follow-up statement saying that “our strategic cloud relationship with Microsoft is unchanged” and that the new partnership “enables OpenAI to use the Azure AI platform on OCI infrastructure for inference and other needs.” (Inference refers to the act of running AI models in production through applications like ChatGPT.)
OpenAI also made clear that the pre-training of its frontier models “continues to happen on supercomputers built in partnership with Microsoft.”
There’s another level of awkwardness to OpenAI and Oracle working together: Oracle also provides infrastructure to xAI, Elon Musk’s OpenAI rival.

Image: The Verge

OpenAI and Microsoft are teaming up with Oracle to get more compute capacity to run ChatGPT. As part of a partnership announced this week, the three companies are working together so that OpenAI can use the Microsoft Azure Al platform on Oracle’s infrastructure.

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman hasn’t shied away from the fact that his company needs substantially more infrastructure to power its services. He has even been in discussions to raise billions of dollars for an AI chip venture. In the press release for the Oracle deal this week, he said Oracle’s chips will “enable OpenAI to continue to scale.”

To date, OpenAI has relied fully on Microsoft for its compute needs. In turn, Microsoft has invested $13 billion for a 49 percent stake in OpenAI’s for-profit subsidiary and the exclusive right to commercially license its technology. But as this Oracle deal makes clear, OpenAI needs more compute than Microsoft alone can give if it wants to keep up with demand and prevent future ChatGPT outages.

Microsoft and OpenAI are clearly sensitive about how this Oracle deal is perceived. On Wednesday, OpenAI issued a follow-up statement saying that “our strategic cloud relationship with Microsoft is unchanged” and that the new partnership “enables OpenAI to use the Azure AI platform on OCI infrastructure for inference and other needs.” (Inference refers to the act of running AI models in production through applications like ChatGPT.)

OpenAI also made clear that the pre-training of its frontier models “continues to happen on supercomputers built in partnership with Microsoft.”

There’s another level of awkwardness to OpenAI and Oracle working together: Oracle also provides infrastructure to xAI, Elon Musk’s OpenAI rival.

Read More 

Here are some last-minute deals you can still grab in time for Father’s Day

Video doorbells can make for great gifts — just be prepared to provide personal tech support. | Photo by Jennifer Pattison Tuohy / The Verge

We’re closing in fast on June 16th, which means Father’s Day is right around the corner. If you haven’t already nabbed a gift for your pops or any other dads in your life, well, you’re starting to cut it close. But don’t fret; we’ve got some excellent last-minute gift ideas to consider.

The annual celebration of all things dad is often filled with campy and played-out gifts like ties, socks, and overtly macho power tools. Our Father’s Day gift guide offers plenty of inspiration for last-minute shoppers, but if you need a shortcut, we’ve rounded up some alternative ideas below, along with a few discounted picks ripped directly from our gift guide. Of course, to qualify as one of these “last-minute deals,” they must be discounted and slated to arrive in time, so be sure to double-check the shipping details if you’re concerned about timing.
Smart home deals

Amazon’s colorful Echo Pop smart speaker is still selling for its second-best price of $19.99 ($20 off) at Amazon, Best Buy, and Target. The tiny wedge of a speaker sounds pretty good for its size if you want to stream music to it, and it makes a great addition or starting point to an Alexa-powered smart home ecosystem. Read our review.

Headphone, earbud, and speaker deals

JBL’s Charge 5 Bluetooth speaker, which makes a nice gift if your dad likes a fair bit of bass in his tunes, is selling for around $139.95 ($40 off) at Amazon and Best Buy. Its jumbo-sized battery doubles as a power bank, too, which is great for long trips or time spent outdoors.

Sonos’ ongoing Father’s Day deals will continue through June 16th. The promo extends sizable discounts to the Era 100 and Era 300 smart speakers as well as various soundbars. The Era 100 represents the most affordable option, one you can pick up in time for Father’s Day at Amazon and Best Buy for $199 ($50 off).

Apple deals
The second-gen AirPods Pro with USB-C are selling for $189.99 ($60 off) at Best Buy, Walmart, and Amazon. Apple’s top-tier earbuds offer excellent sound quality and noise cancellation, not to mention added dust resistance. Apple just announced some nifty new features during its WWDC 2024 keynote, too, including one that will allow you to respond to Siri with a head nod in lieu of talking in public or noisy environments. Read our review.

The new 11-inch iPad Air with an M2 chip and 128GB of storage is on a modest sale for $569 ($30 off) at Amazon and arrives in time for Father’s Day if you’re a Prime member or opt for expedited shipping. The new Air arguably sits in an odd spot between the cheaper 10th-gen iPad and the new OLED iPad Pros, but hey, at least with that M2 processor, your dad will be able to use Apple’s upcoming AI features with it (make of that what you will).

Streaming device deals
If you want to get your dad a 4K streamer for as little as possible, Amazon and Best Buy are selling Amazon’s latest Fire TV Stick 4K for $29.99 ($20 off). It doesn’t have the faster performance and Wi-Fi speeds afforded by the Max version (now $39.99), but it will certainly get the job done.

Gaming deals

The PlayStation Portal is sometimes called the “DadStation” by its fans, as streaming games off your PlayStation 5 to a comfy handheld frees up the TV for family members. But you can also do that with a Backbone controller and a phone for much less. Pretty much all versions of the improved second-gen Backbone One are $20 off through Father’s Day, dropping the price to $79.99. You can get it in black with a USB-C port (Amazon / Best Buy) or in a white PlayStation layout with USB-C (Amazon / Best Buy). You can even grab a discounted model with a Lightning plug at Amazon if your dad uses an older iPhone.
Computer accessory deals

8BitDo’s Retro Mechanical Keyboard has dropped to lower prices before, but the deep-cut Famicom version with its Hiragana sub-legends remains a great value of a nostalgia trip for $89.90 ($10 off) at Amazon. It makes for a great entry-level mechanical keyboard, especially since it comes with fun oversized A and B macro buttons that can be programmed to carry out all kinds of functions. You just want to be sure your dad will be okay with its loud, clicky switches (but really, that’s part of the charm).
Miscellaneous deals

The Fanttik X8 portable tire inflator, one of the car / bike picks from our Father’s Day gift guide, is on sale at Amazon in green for $39.57 (about $20 off) when you clip the on-page coupon. The small automated pump allows you to dial in a desired tire pressure up to 150 PSI, and it charges via USB-C.
Some other fun ideas from our gift guide that are currently discounted include CMYK’s terrific tabletop game Wavelength and the paperback version of Liu Cixin’s The Three-Body Problem trilogy. The lighthearted “geez, you think ya know a guy” game is $31.49 ($8 off) at Amazon and Walmart, while the novels — which recently got the Netflix treatment — are going for $34.49 (around $24 off) at Target, Walmart, and Amazon.
If your dad is a bookworm, he may just love the Glocusent book light, which offers a USB-C LED light to rest on your neck for nighttime reading. And you’ll probably love that it’s on sale at Amazon right now starting at just $17.99 ($15 off).

Video doorbells can make for great gifts — just be prepared to provide personal tech support. | Photo by Jennifer Pattison Tuohy / The Verge

We’re closing in fast on June 16th, which means Father’s Day is right around the corner. If you haven’t already nabbed a gift for your pops or any other dads in your life, well, you’re starting to cut it close. But don’t fret; we’ve got some excellent last-minute gift ideas to consider.

The annual celebration of all things dad is often filled with campy and played-out gifts like ties, socks, and overtly macho power tools. Our Father’s Day gift guide offers plenty of inspiration for last-minute shoppers, but if you need a shortcut, we’ve rounded up some alternative ideas below, along with a few discounted picks ripped directly from our gift guide. Of course, to qualify as one of these “last-minute deals,” they must be discounted and slated to arrive in time, so be sure to double-check the shipping details if you’re concerned about timing.

Smart home deals

Amazon’s colorful Echo Pop smart speaker is still selling for its second-best price of $19.99 ($20 off) at Amazon, Best Buy, and Target. The tiny wedge of a speaker sounds pretty good for its size if you want to stream music to it, and it makes a great addition or starting point to an Alexa-powered smart home ecosystem. Read our review.

Headphone, earbud, and speaker deals

JBL’s Charge 5 Bluetooth speaker, which makes a nice gift if your dad likes a fair bit of bass in his tunes, is selling for around $139.95 ($40 off) at Amazon and Best Buy. Its jumbo-sized battery doubles as a power bank, too, which is great for long trips or time spent outdoors.

Sonos’ ongoing Father’s Day deals will continue through June 16th. The promo extends sizable discounts to the Era 100 and Era 300 smart speakers as well as various soundbars. The Era 100 represents the most affordable option, one you can pick up in time for Father’s Day at Amazon and Best Buy for $199 ($50 off).

Apple deals

The second-gen AirPods Pro with USB-C are selling for $189.99 ($60 off) at Best Buy, Walmart, and Amazon. Apple’s top-tier earbuds offer excellent sound quality and noise cancellation, not to mention added dust resistance. Apple just announced some nifty new features during its WWDC 2024 keynote, too, including one that will allow you to respond to Siri with a head nod in lieu of talking in public or noisy environments. Read our review.

The new 11-inch iPad Air with an M2 chip and 128GB of storage is on a modest sale for $569 ($30 off) at Amazon and arrives in time for Father’s Day if you’re a Prime member or opt for expedited shipping. The new Air arguably sits in an odd spot between the cheaper 10th-gen iPad and the new OLED iPad Pros, but hey, at least with that M2 processor, your dad will be able to use Apple’s upcoming AI features with it (make of that what you will).

Streaming device deals

If you want to get your dad a 4K streamer for as little as possible, Amazon and Best Buy are selling Amazon’s latest Fire TV Stick 4K for $29.99 ($20 off). It doesn’t have the faster performance and Wi-Fi speeds afforded by the Max version (now $39.99), but it will certainly get the job done.

Gaming deals

The PlayStation Portal is sometimes called the “DadStation” by its fans, as streaming games off your PlayStation 5 to a comfy handheld frees up the TV for family members. But you can also do that with a Backbone controller and a phone for much less. Pretty much all versions of the improved second-gen Backbone One are $20 off through Father’s Day, dropping the price to $79.99. You can get it in black with a USB-C port (Amazon / Best Buy) or in a white PlayStation layout with USB-C (Amazon / Best Buy). You can even grab a discounted model with a Lightning plug at Amazon if your dad uses an older iPhone.

Computer accessory deals

8BitDo’s Retro Mechanical Keyboard has dropped to lower prices before, but the deep-cut Famicom version with its Hiragana sub-legends remains a great value of a nostalgia trip for $89.90 ($10 off) at Amazon. It makes for a great entry-level mechanical keyboard, especially since it comes with fun oversized A and B macro buttons that can be programmed to carry out all kinds of functions. You just want to be sure your dad will be okay with its loud, clicky switches (but really, that’s part of the charm).

Miscellaneous deals

The Fanttik X8 portable tire inflator, one of the car / bike picks from our Father’s Day gift guide, is on sale at Amazon in green for $39.57 (about $20 off) when you clip the on-page coupon. The small automated pump allows you to dial in a desired tire pressure up to 150 PSI, and it charges via USB-C.
Some other fun ideas from our gift guide that are currently discounted include CMYK’s terrific tabletop game Wavelength and the paperback version of Liu Cixin’s The Three-Body Problem trilogy. The lighthearted “geez, you think ya know a guy” game is $31.49 ($8 off) at Amazon and Walmart, while the novels — which recently got the Netflix treatment — are going for $34.49 (around $24 off) at Target, Walmart, and Amazon.
If your dad is a bookworm, he may just love the Glocusent book light, which offers a USB-C LED light to rest on your neck for nighttime reading. And you’ll probably love that it’s on sale at Amazon right now starting at just $17.99 ($15 off).

Read More 

Roku TV owners complain that motion smoothing is stuck ‘on’ after an update

Illustration: The Verge

Somebody, call Tom Cruise — several Roku TV owners say that motion smoothing is suddenly enabled on their TVs with no way to turn it off.
Contributors on Reddit and in Roku’s community forum reported seeing the change on TCL TVs running on Roku OS 13, as did a few staffers on The Verge. However, for others who have access to “Expert” picture settings, the same update is in place without a change, and the settings to control it are still available.
For some people experiencing the problem, they said this is the first time their TV offered Roku’s motion smoothing feature at all and that there’s nowhere in any menu (either the standard settings or the picture settings available while watching TV) to turn it off. The update notes for Roku OS 13 mention a new “Roku Smart Picture” feature that will optimize based on the content being watched, so there may be a bug there. However, people in older threads have reported similar issues with some Roku devices before.
A Roku community moderator responded on the forum that the team is looking into the incident. Roku also offered its typical instructions for disabling the settings, which involves clicking the Star button on the remote during playback and heading to the Action Smoothing submenu under Advanced Picture Settings.

The Verge has reached out to Roku for further comment and will update this story when we hear back.
The smooth motion feature has been known by many brand names over the years, like Action Smoothing for Roku, TruMotion for LG, Motionflow for Sony, and Auto Motion Plus for Samsung TVs. It attempts to reduce motion blur by inserting fake frames that increase frame rates for TVs with high refresh rates. It can be useful while watching fast-motion sports, but some complain it can take away the cinematic look of movies made for 24fps and create a hyperrealistic soap opera vibe instead.
Naturally, a lot of people who work in film and television aren’t a fan. Star Wars: The Last Jedi director Rian Johnson once went so far as to say it makes “movies look like liquid diarrhea.”

Illustration: The Verge

Somebody, call Tom Cruise — several Roku TV owners say that motion smoothing is suddenly enabled on their TVs with no way to turn it off.

Contributors on Reddit and in Roku’s community forum reported seeing the change on TCL TVs running on Roku OS 13, as did a few staffers on The Verge. However, for others who have access to “Expert” picture settings, the same update is in place without a change, and the settings to control it are still available.

For some people experiencing the problem, they said this is the first time their TV offered Roku’s motion smoothing feature at all and that there’s nowhere in any menu (either the standard settings or the picture settings available while watching TV) to turn it off. The update notes for Roku OS 13 mention a new “Roku Smart Picture” feature that will optimize based on the content being watched, so there may be a bug there. However, people in older threads have reported similar issues with some Roku devices before.

A Roku community moderator responded on the forum that the team is looking into the incident. Roku also offered its typical instructions for disabling the settings, which involves clicking the Star button on the remote during playback and heading to the Action Smoothing submenu under Advanced Picture Settings.

The Verge has reached out to Roku for further comment and will update this story when we hear back.

The smooth motion feature has been known by many brand names over the years, like Action Smoothing for Roku, TruMotion for LG, Motionflow for Sony, and Auto Motion Plus for Samsung TVs. It attempts to reduce motion blur by inserting fake frames that increase frame rates for TVs with high refresh rates. It can be useful while watching fast-motion sports, but some complain it can take away the cinematic look of movies made for 24fps and create a hyperrealistic soap opera vibe instead.

Naturally, a lot of people who work in film and television aren’t a fan. Star Wars: The Last Jedi director Rian Johnson once went so far as to say it makes “movies look like liquid diarrhea.”

Read More 

The Windows on Arm chip race heats up with a challenger to Qualcomm

Photo by Walid Berrazeg / Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

Intel, Nvidia, AMD, and Qualcomm are the household names in chips — but in 2025, the popular but lesser known MediaTek might make a play to join them. Reuters reports that the Taiwanese chip company is now preparing an AI PC chipset to launch in late 2025 specifically for Windows PCs. Currently, Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X Elite is the alleged MacBook Air-beating talk of the town, and MediaTek wants a piece of that action.
According to Reuters, the new MediaTek chip will reportedly be aimed at the same Microsoft Copilot Plus PC program that Qualcomm helped kick-start with Microsoft. There’s apparently an opening for chipmakers like MediaTek there now that Microsoft’s exclusivity arrangement with Qualcomm for Arm-based versions of Windows is finally ending this year.
MediaTek isn’t the only one taking advantage of the lapsed Qualcomm deal; Nvidia and AMD plan to have Arm PC chips in 2025, too. But that Nvidia chip may be partially powered by MediaTek as well! That’s what we heard in a report from Taiwan’s United Daily News last month, and Reuters now confirms MediaTek is helping with that separate chip, too. There’s even a rumor floating around that MediaTek and Nvidia may be working on a Steam Deck-sized gaming chip.

Why would Nvidia need MediaTek when it already builds its own Arm chips? (The Nintendo Switch has used Nvidia Tegra chips from the start.) I’m not entirely sure. MediaTek is a fabless chipmaker, meaning it doesn’t manufacture chips itself. As far as MediaTek’s own separate chip goes, Reuters says it uses Arm’s “ready-made designs,” likely meaning it adopts Arm’s already-designed processing cores instead of something MediaTek came up with on its own.
And speaking of those ready-made designs, they may power yet another Windows+Arm competitor for Qualcomm, too. “Executives at Arm have said one of its customers used the ready-made components to build a chip in roughly nine months for a design that is already complete, which MediaTek’s is not,” writes Reuters.
Feels like things are heating up again in the laptop space!

Photo by Walid Berrazeg / Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

Intel, Nvidia, AMD, and Qualcomm are the household names in chips — but in 2025, the popular but lesser known MediaTek might make a play to join them. Reuters reports that the Taiwanese chip company is now preparing an AI PC chipset to launch in late 2025 specifically for Windows PCs. Currently, Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X Elite is the alleged MacBook Air-beating talk of the town, and MediaTek wants a piece of that action.

According to Reuters, the new MediaTek chip will reportedly be aimed at the same Microsoft Copilot Plus PC program that Qualcomm helped kick-start with Microsoft. There’s apparently an opening for chipmakers like MediaTek there now that Microsoft’s exclusivity arrangement with Qualcomm for Arm-based versions of Windows is finally ending this year.

MediaTek isn’t the only one taking advantage of the lapsed Qualcomm deal; Nvidia and AMD plan to have Arm PC chips in 2025, too. But that Nvidia chip may be partially powered by MediaTek as well! That’s what we heard in a report from Taiwan’s United Daily News last month, and Reuters now confirms MediaTek is helping with that separate chip, too. There’s even a rumor floating around that MediaTek and Nvidia may be working on a Steam Deck-sized gaming chip.

Why would Nvidia need MediaTek when it already builds its own Arm chips? (The Nintendo Switch has used Nvidia Tegra chips from the start.) I’m not entirely sure. MediaTek is a fabless chipmaker, meaning it doesn’t manufacture chips itself. As far as MediaTek’s own separate chip goes, Reuters says it uses Arm’s “ready-made designs,” likely meaning it adopts Arm’s already-designed processing cores instead of something MediaTek came up with on its own.

And speaking of those ready-made designs, they may power yet another Windows+Arm competitor for Qualcomm, too. “Executives at Arm have said one of its customers used the ready-made components to build a chip in roughly nine months for a design that is already complete, which MediaTek’s is not,” writes Reuters.

Feels like things are heating up again in the laptop space!

Read More 

Sony buys Alamo Drafthouse Cinema

An Alamo Drafthouse theater. | Image: Sony and Alamo Drafthouse

Sony Pictures Entertainment has acquired the popular movie theater chain Alamo Drafthouse Cinema, the two companies announced on Wednesday.
Sony, which will oversee the theaters under a new Sony Pictures Experiences division, says it “will preserve Alamo Drafthouse’s distinctive movie-dining experience,” according to a press release. Alamo will continue to operate “all 35 of its cinemas across 25 metro areas under the Alamo Drafthouse brand,” and current CEO Michael Kustermann will remain in that role. Alamo’s Fantastic Fest film festival will still be operated by the company.
Sony is acquiring Alamo Drafthouse from Altamont Capital Partners, Fortress Investment Group, and Alamo founder Tim League — a group that took ownership of Alamo after it filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2021.
Sony’s acquisition is particularly notable given that it’s happening after the 2020 termination of the Paramount Consent Decrees. The decrees, resulting from a 1948 Supreme Court decision, forced movie companies to sell the theaters they owned to spur competition and create consumer choice. With so many ways for viewers to see films nowadays, the decree was reversed by the Department of Justice.
Since then, Sony isn’t the only movie distributor that has purchased theaters; Netflix has cinemas in New York and Los Angeles.

An Alamo Drafthouse theater. | Image: Sony and Alamo Drafthouse

Sony Pictures Entertainment has acquired the popular movie theater chain Alamo Drafthouse Cinema, the two companies announced on Wednesday.

Sony, which will oversee the theaters under a new Sony Pictures Experiences division, says it “will preserve Alamo Drafthouse’s distinctive movie-dining experience,” according to a press release. Alamo will continue to operate “all 35 of its cinemas across 25 metro areas under the Alamo Drafthouse brand,” and current CEO Michael Kustermann will remain in that role. Alamo’s Fantastic Fest film festival will still be operated by the company.

Sony is acquiring Alamo Drafthouse from Altamont Capital Partners, Fortress Investment Group, and Alamo founder Tim League — a group that took ownership of Alamo after it filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2021.

Sony’s acquisition is particularly notable given that it’s happening after the 2020 termination of the Paramount Consent Decrees. The decrees, resulting from a 1948 Supreme Court decision, forced movie companies to sell the theaters they owned to spur competition and create consumer choice. With so many ways for viewers to see films nowadays, the decree was reversed by the Department of Justice.

Since then, Sony isn’t the only movie distributor that has purchased theaters; Netflix has cinemas in New York and Los Angeles.

Read More 

Tesla’s $50 billion question comes down to the wire

Illustration: Lille Allen / The Verge

On Thursday, Tesla shareholders will face a stark choice: approve Elon Musk’s enormous pay package, the largest ever awarded to a chief executive, or risk him picking up his ball and going home.
The shareholder meeting on Thursday is a referendum on Musk’s tumultuous leadership, in which he took a relatively niche startup, wrested it away from its founders, and turned it into what is arguably one of the most consequential car companies in modern history. To reward him for this feat, shareholders are being asked to cast an unprecedented vote on Musk’s compensation — to the tune of $50 billion — for the second time.
Last January, a Delaware court judge invalidated Musk’s pay package, first approved in 2018, arguing that the process was flawed because shareholders lacked insight into its development and that Tesla’s board was too chummy with its already very rich CEO. Incensed, Musk pulled some strings to set up another vote, while also pushing for a proposal to reincorporate Tesla in Texas as a way to avoid the scrutiny of Delaware’s shareholder-favoring court system.
Tesla’s board says the pay package is needed to secure Musk’s attention — even as it becomes less clear that money is what really motivates him.
“If I were a shareholder, I would be asking myself for starters whether the $50 billion Elon Musk is requesting in exchange for his full attention would in fact secure it,” said Gregory Shill, a professor at the University of Iowa College of Law, “or if, as some colleagues have argued, it would be unlikely to.”
“One simple purpose”
In a letter to shareholders last week, Tesla board chair Robyn Denholm argued that for Musk to receive his historic compensation, he needed to hit certain operational thresholds and boost the company’s stock and valuation — and he did. In 2020, the company became the most valuable automaker in the world with a market capitalization of over $400 billion. In 2021, it briefly reached a $1 trillion valuation.
The original proposal “had one simple purpose,” Denholm said, “to keep Elon focused on Tesla and motivated to achieve the Company’s incomparable ambitions.” Tesla must “retain Elon’s attention and motivate him to continue to devote his time, energy, ambition and vision to deliver comparable results in the future,” she added.
Musk, in typical fashion, was more blunt: give me 25 percent of the company or I’ll spin out the AI division into another company, he said on X.

The question of the CEO’s “attention” and “focus” is unique among Fortune 500 companies. No other company has a chief executive who seems so uninterested in the job he is most known for. Musk spreads himself dangerously thin, overseeing SpaceX, The Boring Company, Neuralink, X Corp., and xAI, the AI startup that just received $6 billion in financing. And while Tesla is the source of Musk’s wealth and popularity, it’s obvious his attention has wandered considerably in recent years.
On Wednesday, Tesla posted a lengthy list of its accomplishments under Musk, including vehicle delivery growth and milestones in developing the company’s Full Self-Driving software that Musk has argued will eventually lead to fully autonomous vehicles.
The company makes no mention of the last six months of turbulence, including several rounds of layoffs, a nearly 30 percent drop in share price, and rampant price cutting, leading to the lowest profit margins in six years. Many observers have noted that the recent slowdown in EV sales growth appears to be entirely localized within Tesla, which still commands over 50 percent of the market. Unsold Teslas are piling up in parking lots in numbers so large they can be viewed from space.
The question of the CEO’s “attention” and “focus” is unique among Fortune 500 companies
Samantha Crispin, a partner at Texas-based law firm Baker Botts and chair of the corporate department, said these difficulties could sway certain investors, depending on when they bought into the Tesla story.
“A recent investor that hasn’t seen the type of return on investment, like somebody who would have invested pre-2018, they may well have a very different point of view,” Crispin told The Verge.
“Unpredictable”
The vote has quickly emerged as a showdown between institutional investors — large funds that include Tesla shares in their pooled investments — and retail investors, also known as mom-and-pop shareholders, who own individual stocks.
Tesla has the largest share of retail investors in the S&P 500, according to Reuters, to the tune of 43 percent. On X, Musk claims he has the vast majority of their support, which comes as little surprise. Musk actively courts the favor of mom-and-pop investors, sparing with them on Twitter, allowing them to ask questions during earnings calls, and inviting them to lavish events at his factories. This time around, Tesla is offering factory tours led by Musk himself to a select group of shareholders to entice them to vote.
The only problem is that retail investors have historically proven apathetic about voting their shares. When they do vote, they tend to favor management. But most often, they don’t even bother.
“Retail investors can be much more unpredictable,” Crispin said, “in terms of how they may end up voting on a matter [or] whether or not they actually show up to vote.”
Meanwhile, several top proxy advisory firms have recommended voting against the proposal, arguing it is too “excessive” and would dilute the value for individual shareholders — which bodes poorly for Musk’s chances.
“A known quantity”
Even if Musk wins the vote, he wouldn’t automatically become $50 billion richer. That’s because Tesla has yet to file its appeal to the Delaware court’s ruling, which it would need to do in order to allow Musk to receive his compensation. A positive outcome would feature prominently in said appeal and could lead to the judge’s ruling being overturned.
Tesla shareholders are also being asked to approve a proposal to reincorporate the company in Texas. That could work against Tesla’s effort to convince the Delaware courts to reverse its ruling. And it could sink its support among institutional investors, which have long preferred Delaware because of its predictability.
“Retail investors can be much more unpredictable”
“It’s a known quantity with many decades of established legal precedent that people respect, and Texas is an unknown quantity in that regard,” said Stephen Diamond, an expert on corporate governance at Santa Clara University’s law school. Diamond also noted that reincorporation to Texas requires a higher vote threshold than the compensation vote, which may also make it harder to accomplish.
All of these issues will be on display at Tesla’s Austin factory on Thursday. The fanboys will be there, as will the average shareholders alongside the big investors, the sovereign wealth funds, and money managers. Musk has long argued that Tesla isn’t a simple car company — it’s really a tech company. In fact, it’s an AI and robotics company attempting to capture the zeitgeist alongside tech’s other big players.
He’s clearly a true believer. Tomorrow’s vote will be the ultimate decision on whether everyone else buys it, too.

Illustration: Lille Allen / The Verge

On Thursday, Tesla shareholders will face a stark choice: approve Elon Musk’s enormous pay package, the largest ever awarded to a chief executive, or risk him picking up his ball and going home.

The shareholder meeting on Thursday is a referendum on Musk’s tumultuous leadership, in which he took a relatively niche startup, wrested it away from its founders, and turned it into what is arguably one of the most consequential car companies in modern history. To reward him for this feat, shareholders are being asked to cast an unprecedented vote on Musk’s compensation — to the tune of $50 billion — for the second time.

Last January, a Delaware court judge invalidated Musk’s pay package, first approved in 2018, arguing that the process was flawed because shareholders lacked insight into its development and that Tesla’s board was too chummy with its already very rich CEO. Incensed, Musk pulled some strings to set up another vote, while also pushing for a proposal to reincorporate Tesla in Texas as a way to avoid the scrutiny of Delaware’s shareholder-favoring court system.

Tesla’s board says the pay package is needed to secure Musk’s attention — even as it becomes less clear that money is what really motivates him.

“If I were a shareholder, I would be asking myself for starters whether the $50 billion Elon Musk is requesting in exchange for his full attention would in fact secure it,” said Gregory Shill, a professor at the University of Iowa College of Law, “or if, as some colleagues have argued, it would be unlikely to.”

“One simple purpose”

In a letter to shareholders last week, Tesla board chair Robyn Denholm argued that for Musk to receive his historic compensation, he needed to hit certain operational thresholds and boost the company’s stock and valuation — and he did. In 2020, the company became the most valuable automaker in the world with a market capitalization of over $400 billion. In 2021, it briefly reached a $1 trillion valuation.

The original proposal “had one simple purpose,” Denholm said, “to keep Elon focused on Tesla and motivated to achieve the Company’s incomparable ambitions.” Tesla must “retain Elon’s attention and motivate him to continue to devote his time, energy, ambition and vision to deliver comparable results in the future,” she added.

Musk, in typical fashion, was more blunt: give me 25 percent of the company or I’ll spin out the AI division into another company, he said on X.

The question of the CEO’s “attention” and “focus” is unique among Fortune 500 companies. No other company has a chief executive who seems so uninterested in the job he is most known for. Musk spreads himself dangerously thin, overseeing SpaceX, The Boring Company, Neuralink, X Corp., and xAI, the AI startup that just received $6 billion in financing. And while Tesla is the source of Musk’s wealth and popularity, it’s obvious his attention has wandered considerably in recent years.

On Wednesday, Tesla posted a lengthy list of its accomplishments under Musk, including vehicle delivery growth and milestones in developing the company’s Full Self-Driving software that Musk has argued will eventually lead to fully autonomous vehicles.

The company makes no mention of the last six months of turbulence, including several rounds of layoffs, a nearly 30 percent drop in share price, and rampant price cutting, leading to the lowest profit margins in six years. Many observers have noted that the recent slowdown in EV sales growth appears to be entirely localized within Tesla, which still commands over 50 percent of the market. Unsold Teslas are piling up in parking lots in numbers so large they can be viewed from space.

The question of the CEO’s “attention” and “focus” is unique among Fortune 500 companies

Samantha Crispin, a partner at Texas-based law firm Baker Botts and chair of the corporate department, said these difficulties could sway certain investors, depending on when they bought into the Tesla story.

“A recent investor that hasn’t seen the type of return on investment, like somebody who would have invested pre-2018, they may well have a very different point of view,” Crispin told The Verge.

“Unpredictable”

The vote has quickly emerged as a showdown between institutional investors — large funds that include Tesla shares in their pooled investments — and retail investors, also known as mom-and-pop shareholders, who own individual stocks.

Tesla has the largest share of retail investors in the S&P 500, according to Reuters, to the tune of 43 percent. On X, Musk claims he has the vast majority of their support, which comes as little surprise. Musk actively courts the favor of mom-and-pop investors, sparing with them on Twitter, allowing them to ask questions during earnings calls, and inviting them to lavish events at his factories. This time around, Tesla is offering factory tours led by Musk himself to a select group of shareholders to entice them to vote.

The only problem is that retail investors have historically proven apathetic about voting their shares. When they do vote, they tend to favor management. But most often, they don’t even bother.

“Retail investors can be much more unpredictable,” Crispin said, “in terms of how they may end up voting on a matter [or] whether or not they actually show up to vote.”

Meanwhile, several top proxy advisory firms have recommended voting against the proposal, arguing it is too “excessive” and would dilute the value for individual shareholders — which bodes poorly for Musk’s chances.

“A known quantity”

Even if Musk wins the vote, he wouldn’t automatically become $50 billion richer. That’s because Tesla has yet to file its appeal to the Delaware court’s ruling, which it would need to do in order to allow Musk to receive his compensation. A positive outcome would feature prominently in said appeal and could lead to the judge’s ruling being overturned.

Tesla shareholders are also being asked to approve a proposal to reincorporate the company in Texas. That could work against Tesla’s effort to convince the Delaware courts to reverse its ruling. And it could sink its support among institutional investors, which have long preferred Delaware because of its predictability.

“Retail investors can be much more unpredictable”

“It’s a known quantity with many decades of established legal precedent that people respect, and Texas is an unknown quantity in that regard,” said Stephen Diamond, an expert on corporate governance at Santa Clara University’s law school. Diamond also noted that reincorporation to Texas requires a higher vote threshold than the compensation vote, which may also make it harder to accomplish.

All of these issues will be on display at Tesla’s Austin factory on Thursday. The fanboys will be there, as will the average shareholders alongside the big investors, the sovereign wealth funds, and money managers. Musk has long argued that Tesla isn’t a simple car company — it’s really a tech company. In fact, it’s an AI and robotics company attempting to capture the zeitgeist alongside tech’s other big players.

He’s clearly a true believer. Tomorrow’s vote will be the ultimate decision on whether everyone else buys it, too.

Read More 

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