Author: Admin

  • ExpressVPN Releases Apple TV App: Our Hands-On Impressions

    One of the things I was most excited about when Apple announced TVOS 17 at its Worldwide Developers Conference this year was that the latest Apple TV operating system would finally support native virtual private network applications. At last, I’d be able to use a VPN to enhance my streaming experience on Apple TV. Now that TVOS 17 has been available for a few months, VPN providers have been slowly rolling out their apps for Apple’s streaming device. So when ExpressVPN — CNET’s Editors’ Choice best overall VPN — released its Apple TV app this month, I was eager to try it.

    Based on my initial experience, using ExpressVPN’s Apple TV app was easy enough, but its streaming performance was a bit of a headache. And that’s disappointing, because the main reason I would use a VPN on Apple TV is for streaming.

    Setup and functionality are a breeze…

    If you don’t have an ExpressVPN account already, you’ll need to purchase one before setting it up on your Apple TV. Also, you’ll need to ensure your Apple TV is running TVOS 17. Once you’ve done that, you can download the app to your Apple TV by searching for ExpressVPN in the App Store.

    You can sign in by manually entering your email and password, but I used the QR code option to sign in with my phone, and it took all of 10 seconds to get into my ExpressVPN account and connect to a server. The app is easy to use, but it’s extremely bare-bones. There are no options to change the protocol (it uses ExpressVPN’s proprietary Lightway protocol) or activate the kill switch, split-tunneling or advanced protection features like on its Fire TV Stick app. The only functionality that really exists on ExpressVPN’s Apple TV app is the ability to select a server, connect to it and disconnect from it. But that functionality is smooth, and connecting to a server takes a fraction of a second. I was impressed with how good the app looks and how simple it is to use. If accessing streaming content is your only concern, then you can mostly do without all the extra bells and whistles.

    … But streaming ability is inconsistent

    The setup and connection process went as smoothly as I could imagine, but the road started getting bumpy as soon as I fired up Netflix to start streaming.

    Right out of the gate, Netflix flashed an error message telling me that “a problem occurred” and said to “try again later.” The error message elaborates that “an SSL error has occurred and a secure connection to the server cannot be made.” Evidently, the issue is so common that ExpressVPN has a dedicated help article suggesting things like force quitting the Netflix app, watching something else or trying again in 15 minutes.

    It was a rough start and not at all what I expected from ExpressVPN, considering that its Amazon Fire TV Stick and Android TV apps work flawlessly for streaming. I tried servers in locations like the US, UK, Germany, France, Australia and Japan. Sometimes it worked just fine, but I got far more error messages than I had expected. I had to jump around and try different servers to finally stream something on Netflix. And when I tried a server in Japan, Netflix flew completely off the handle and logged me off. Only after I disconnected from the VPN could I log back in.

    ExpressVPN worked fine with other streaming sites I tested, such as Amazon Prime Video, Disney Plus and Hulu. I was able to watch National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation on Hulu without any issues using ExpressVPN’s Apple TV app. But the issues I faced trying to stream Netflix content on Apple TV using ExpressVPN were frustrating, almost to the point of feeling like a useless endeavor. Maybe the issue has to do with ExpressVPN’s Apple TV app being so new, or perhaps it has something to do with certain limitations or restrictions within the recesses of the TVOS operating system. I reached out to ExpressVPN for insight, and my contact there told me that it shouldn’t be an issue. However, the fact that the provider has a help article dedicated to the issue tells me I’m not alone. Either way, I hope ExpressVPN can resolve it sooner rather than later.

    In comparison, I also tested the Apple TV app for IPVanish, one of CNET’s other top VPNs, and had no issues accessing Netflix content. IPVanish’s Apple TV app is functionally similar to that of ExpressVPN, but currently has far superior Netflix streaming capabilities. If you’re a Netflix user wanting to use a VPN for Apple TV, I’d recommend IPVanish over ExpressVPN at this time.

  • Aston Villa vs. Arsenal Livestream: How to Watch English Premier League Soccer From Anywhere

    Aston Villa vs. Arsenal Livestream: How to Watch English Premier League Soccer From Anywhere

    Former Gunners boss Unai Emery will be highly motivated for his side to claim another big scalp on Saturday as Aston Villa host Arsenal.

    Villa emphasized their credentials as bona fide title challengers with a statement 1-0 win over Man City on Wednesday — a result that saw them leapfrog the defending champs to go third in the English Premier League table.

    While Villa’s win allowed Arsenal to open up a six-point lead over Man City, Gunners boss Mikel Arteta will also know that result will ensure his side’s opponents on Saturday will have grown confidence ahead of this now crucial game in the title race.

    Below, we’ll outline the best live TV streaming services for watching all of the action live wherever you are in the world.

    Declan Rice of Arsenal runs to the left, facing us

    Aston Villa vs. Arsenal: When and where?

    Aston Villa host Arsenal at Villa Park in Birmingham on Saturday, Dec 9. Kickoff is set for 5:30 p.m. GMT (that’s 12:30 p.m. ET and 9:30 a.m. PT in the US, and 4:30 a.m. AEDT on Monday in Australia).

    How to watch the Aston Villa vs. Arsenal game online from anywhere using a VPN

    If you’re unable to view the game locally, you may need a different way to watch — and that’s where a VPN can come in handy. A VPN is also the best way to stop your ISP from throttling your speeds on game day by encrypting your traffic, and it’s a great idea if you want an extra layer of privacy for your devices and log-ins while you’re traveling and connecting to Wi-Fi networks.

    With a VPN, you’re able to virtually change your location on your phone, tablet or laptop to get access to the game. So if your internet provider or mobile carrier sticks you with an IP address that incorrectly shows your location in a blackout zone, a VPN can correct that problem by giving you an IP address in your correct, non-blackout area. Most VPNs, like our Editors’ Choice, ExpressVPN, make it really easy to do this.

    Using a VPN to watch or stream sports is legal in any country where VPNs are legal, including the US, UK and Canada, as long as you have a legitimate subscription to the service you’re streaming. You should be sure your VPN is set up correctly to prevent leaks: Even where VPNs are legal, the streaming service may terminate the account of anyone it thinks is circumventing correctly applied blackout restrictions.

    Looking for other options? Be sure to check out some of the other great VPN deals taking place right now.

    Livestream Aston Villa vs. Arsenal in the US

    Saturday’s Aston Villa-Arsenal match is streaming on Peacock. You’ll need a Peacock Premium or Premium Plus account to catch the game live.

    Livestream the Aston Villa vs. Arsenal game in the UK

    Premier League rights in the UK are split between Sky Sports, Amazon Prime Video and TNT Sports (previously known as BT Sport). Aston Villa vs. Arsenal is exclusive to Sky Sports, showing on its Sky Sports Main Event, Premier League and Ultra channels. If you already have Sky Sports as part of your TV package, you can stream the game via its Sky Go app, but cord-cutters will want to get set up with a Now account and a Now Sports membership to stream the game.

    Livestream the Aston Villa vs. Arsenal game in Canada

    If you want to stream Aston Villa vs. Arsenal live in Canada, you’ll need to subscribe to Fubo Canada. The service has exclusive rights for this Premier League season.

    Livestream the Aston Villa vs. Arsenal game in Australia

    Football fans Down Under can watch this EPL fixture on streaming service Optus Sport, which is showing every Premier League game live in Australia this season.

    Quick tips for streaming the Premier League using a VPN

    • With four variables at play — your ISP, browser, video streaming provider and VPN — your experience and success when streaming EPL matches may vary.
    • If you don’t see your desired location as a default option for ExpressVPN, try using the “search for city or country” option.
    • If you’re having trouble getting the game after you’ve turned on your VPN and set it to the correct viewing area, there are two things you can try for a quick fix. First, log into your streaming service subscription account and make sure the address registered for the account is an address in the correct viewing area. If not, you may need to change the physical address on file with your account. Second, some smart TVs including Roku don’t have VPN apps you can install directly on the device itself. Instead, you’ll have to install the VPN on your router or the mobile hotspot you’re using (like your phone) so that any device on its Wi-Fi network now appears in the correct viewing location.
    • All of the VPN providers we recommend have helpful instructions on their main site for quickly installing the VPN on your router. In some cases with smart TV services, after you install a cable network’s sports app, you’ll be asked to verify a numeric code or click a link sent to your email address on file for your smart TV. This is where having a VPN on your router will also help, since both devices will appear to be in the correct location.
    • And remember, browsers can often give away a location despite using a VPN, so be sure you’re using a privacy-first browser to log into your services. We normally recommend Brave.
  • Stream the Hallmark Channel Without a Cable Provider

    Stream the Hallmark Channel Without a Cable Provider

    It’s December, and you can ride the wave of holiday movies on the Hallmark Channel. Though the Christmas in July programming sets the stage during the summer, fans truly immerse themselves in the festivities now. Don’t worry if you’ve missed out on Hallmark’s countdown so far, because it’s the perfect time to embrace the spirit and extend it into the new year.

    Streaming is the answer for those without access to the Hallmark Channel through a cable or satellite TV provider. While you may already be watching Hallmark Movies & More free content through a FAST (for “free, ad-supported television”) platform like Pluto TV, it’s the Hallmark Channel that is flush with new titles this season. Here’s where to stream it without cable and how a VPN can help your experience.

    Read more: Best Streaming Service of 2023

    man and woman stand at waterfront and look at each other

    Watch the Hallmark Channel on Peacock

    The least expensive streaming service that carries Hallmark Channel is Peacock. The app features a Hallmark hub where you can watch new movie and TV series releases live as they air on the broadcast network, or stream them on demand for up to three days. In addition to watching Hallmark titles on demand, viewers can check out three live channels on the streaming service that run content 24/7: Hallmark Channel, Hallmark Movies & Mysteries and Hallmark Drama. There is also some Spanish-language content available.

    Note: Ads play when you’re viewing content in the channels section, regardless of subscription type.

    How to watch the Hallmark Channel on a live TV streaming service

    Several live TV streaming platforms carry the network in their channel lineups, but we advise you to choose one that’s best for your budget and content preferences. Philo is a budget-friendly option, and it offers a free trial period. To learn more about live TV streaming offerings, read our channel comparison and this matchup between YouTube TV and Hulu Plus Live TV.

    Watch Hallmark Channel from anywhere using a VPN

    Perhaps you’re traveling abroad and want to stream Peacock while away from home. With a VPN, you’re able to virtually change your location on your phone, tablet or laptop to get access to Hallmark content from anywhere in the world. There are other good reasons to use a VPN for streaming too.

    A VPN is the best way to stop your ISP from throttling your speeds by encrypting your traffic. Using a VPN is also a great idea if you’re traveling and find yourself connected to a Wi-Fi network and want to add an extra layer of privacy for your devices and logins. Streaming TV can be a bit smoother with a reliable, quality VPN that’s passed our tests and security standards.

    You can use a VPN to stream content legally as long as VPNs are allowed in your country and you have a valid subscription to the streaming service you’re using. The US and Canada are among the countries where VPNs are legal, but we advise against streaming or downloading content on illegal torrent sites. We recommend ExpressVPN, but you may opt for another provider from our best list such as Surfshark or NordVPN.

    Follow the VPN provider’s instructions for installation and choose a country where the Hallmark Channel is streaming on Peacock (i.e. the US). Before you open the streaming app, make sure you’re connected to your VPN using your selected region. If you want to stream content on more than one device, it’s possible you’ll need to configure each one to ensure you are signed in. Go to settings and check your network connections to verify you’re logged in and connected to your VPN account. Now you’re ready to open Peacock to stream.

    If you run into issues with streaming, first make sure your VPN is up and running on its encrypted IP address. Double-check that you’ve followed installation instructions correctly and you’ve picked the right geographical area for viewing. If you still encounter connection problems, you may need to reboot your device. Close all apps and windows, restart your device and connect to your VPN first. Note that some streaming services have restrictions on VPN access.

  • Holiday Wish List: Current Meta Quest 3 Deals including Free Game and 6 Months of Meta Quest Plus

    Holiday Wish List: Current Meta Quest 3 Deals including Free Game and 6 Months of Meta Quest Plus

    If the latest Meta Quest 3is on your holiday wish list you’re not alone: it’s one of the best VR headsets when it comes to bang for your buck. While the games and apps for the Quest 3 are still in their early days, the headset offers a unique mixed-reality experience. Because it’s the newest headset and a big upgrade to the Meta Quest 2, you won’t find a lot of great deals for it, but you can pick the Quest 3 up at most retailers and get a free game thrown in. If you go for the 512GB model, most retailers also add six months of Meta Quest Plus. While those aren’t as great as a direct discount, the free game and subscription add up to around $100, so it’s about that much in savings you get.

    Unlike the Meta Quest 2 that came before it, the Quest 3 embraces both virtual reality and mixed-reality experiences, similar to Apple’s Vision Pro and last year’s Quest Pro. It costs a lot less than both those devices, though, with a $500 starting price.

    meta-quest-3-wrath-of-asgard-deal-ith-wa

    Other improvements over its predecessor include a new Qualcomm Snapdragon XR2 Gen 2 processor, better graphics, a higher-resolution display and improved controllers.

    We’ll continue to update this collection of Meta Quest 3 offers as more become available, so if nothing grabs you right now, check back later.

    Best Meta Quest 3 deals

  • Google Gemini AI Tries Outsmarting ChatGPT With Photo, Video Skills

    Google Gemini AI Tries Outsmarting ChatGPT With Photo, Video Skills

    Google has begun bringing a native understanding of video, audio and photos to its Bard AI chatbot with a new model called Gemini. Google Pixel 8 phone owners will be among the first to tap into its new artificial intelligence abilities.

    The first incarnations of the new technology arrived Wednesday in dozens of countries through Google Bard’s Gemini update, but only in English. It can provide text-based chat abilities that Google says improves AI abilities in complex tasks like summarizing documents, reasoning and writing programming code. The bigger change with multimedia abilities — for example understanding hand gestures in a video or figuring out the result of a child’s dot-to-dot drawing puzzle — will arrive “soon,” Google said.

    Gemini is a dramatic departure for AI. Text-based chat is important, but humans must process much richer information as we inhabit our three-dimensional, ever-changing world. And we respond with complex communication abilities, like speech and imagery, not just written words. Gemini is an attempt to come closer to our own fuller understanding of the world.

    Gemini comes in three versions tailored for different levels of computing power, Google said:

    • Gemini Nano runs on mobile phones, with two varieties available built for different levels of available memory. It’ll power new features on Google’s Pixel 8 phones, like summarizing conversations in its Recorder app or suggesting message replies in WhatsApp typed with Google’s Gboard.
    • Gemini Pro, tuned for fast responses, runs in Google’s data centers and will power a new version of Bard, starting Wednesday.
    • Gemini Ultra, limited to a test group for now, will be available in a new Bard Advanced chatbot due in early 2024. Google declined to reveal pricing details, but expect to pay a premium for this top capability.

    The new version spotlights the breakneck pace of advancement in the new generative AI field, where chatbots create their own responses to prompts that we write in plain language rather than arcane programming instructions. Google’s top competitor, OpenAI, stole a march with the launch of ChatGPT a year ago, but already Google is on its third major AI model revision and expects to deliver that technology through products that billions of us use, like search, Chrome, Google Docs and Gmail.

    “For a long time we wanted to build a new generation of AI models inspired by the way people understand and interact with the world — an AI that feels more like a helpful collaborator and less like a smart piece of software,” said Eli Collins, a product vice president at Google’s DeepMind division. “Gemini brings us a step closer to that vision.”

    OpenAI also supplies the brains behind Microsoft’s Copilot AI technology, including the newer GPT-4 Turbo AI model that OpenAI released in November. Microsoft, like Google, has major products like Office and Windows to which it’s adding AI features.

    AI gets smarter, but it’s not perfect

    Multimedia likely will be a big change compared to text when it arrives. But what hasn’t changed is the fundamental problems of AI models trained by recognizing patterns in vast quantities of real-world data. They can turn increasingly complex prompts into increasingly sophisticated responses, but you still can’t trust that they didn’t just provide an answer that was plausible instead of actually correct. As Google’s chatbot warns when you use it, “Bard may display inaccurate info, including about people, so double-check its responses.”

    Gemini is the next generation of Google’s large language model, a sequel to the PaLM and PaLM 2 that have been the foundation of Bard so far. But by training Gemini simultaneously on text, programming code, images, audio and video, it’s able to more efficiently cope with multimedia input than with separate but interlinked AI models for each mode of input.

    Examples of Gemini’s abilities, according to a Google research paper (PDF), are diverse.

    Looking at a series of shapes consisting of a triangle, square and pentagon, it can correctly guess the next shape in the series is a hexagon. Presented with photos of the moon and a hand holding a golf ball and asked to find the link, it correctly points out that Apollo astronauts hit two golf balls on the moon in 1971. It converted four bar charts showing country-by-country waste disposal techniques into a labeled table and spotted an outlying data point, namely that the US throws a lot more plastic in the dump than other regions.

    The company also showed Gemini processing a handwritten physics problem involving a simple sketch, figuring out where a student’s error lay, and explaining a correction. A more involved demo video showed Gemini recognizing a blue duck, hand puppets, sleight-of-hand tricks and other videos. None of the demos were live, however, and it’s not clear how often Gemini fumbles such challenges.

    Was Google’s Gemini video fake?

    Google touted Gemini in a demonstration video purporting to show it recognizing hand gestures, following magic tricks, and putting pictures of planets in order by how far the planets are from the sun — all from visual data. You should think of that as a dramatization of the Gemini’s true abilities, however.

    It’s not uncommon for promotional videos to make products look more glamorous than they truly are. In this case, you might think Gemini was processing video input data and spoken instructions. Google included some fine print: a disclaimer in the video that Gemini doesn’t respond as quickly, and a link in the video description to a discussion of how Google’s Gemini demo actually worked. You might not have noticed any of that, though. Google also followed up with a post on X, formerly Twitter, that shows how fast Gemini actually does respond.

    Still, the video doesn’t fundamentally misrepresent Gemini’s abilities, though outsiders haven’t generally been able to test it. It can accept spoken and video input.

    Gemini Ultra coming in 2024

    Gemini Ultra awaits further testing before appearing next year.

    “Red teaming,” in which a product-maker enlists people to find security vulnerabilities and other problems, is underway for Gemini Ultra. Such tests are more complicated with multimedia input data. For example, a text message and photo could each be innocuous on their own, but when paired could convey dramatically different meaning.

    “We’re approaching this work boldly and responsibly,” Google CEO Sundar Pichai said in a blog post. That means a combination of ambitious research with big potential payoffs, but also adding safeguards and working collaboratively with governments and others “to address risks as AI becomes more capable.”

    Editors’ note: CNET is using an AI engine to help create some stories. For more, see this post.

  • Beeper Mini Outage Disconnects the Android App from Apple’s iMessage

    Beeper Mini Outage Disconnects the Android App from Apple’s iMessage

    Beeper Mini’s key feature — allowing Android phones to send texts on Apple’s iMessage service — appears to have gone down during its first week of operation.

    Following reports from Beeper Mini users that messages weren’t sending or receiving on Friday, a post from the app’s X account said the team is now investigating why the iMessage integration is no longer working for sending or receiving texts. During my own testing of the Beeper Mini app Friday, attempting to send a text results in your message not being sent and an error message stating “failed to lookup on server: lookup request timed out.”

    Beeper Mini’s feature allowing users to unlink a phone number from Apple’s iMessage network may also be interrupted during the outage, which may lead to affected customers missing out on texts from an iPhone that’s trying to reach out over iMessage. Apple’s own deregister tool is accessible from Apple’s website, and that can be used by Android phone owners to regain access to receiving texts from iPhone users over SMS and MMS.

    Beeper co-founder Eric Migicovsky did not confirm the cause of the outage in an email to CNET, only saying that the app experienced “overwhelming interest.” Migicovsky did suggest the possibility that Apple may have blocked Beeper’s access. Apple did not respond to requests for comment by time of publication.

    “If it’s Apple, then I think the biggest question is — if Apple truly cares about the privacy and security of their own iPhone users, why would they try to kill a service that enables iPhones to send encrypted chats to Android users?” Migicovsky said.

    The new app launched Tuesday touting that it has “reverse-engineered” a way to access the iMessage network without using any Apple hardware or requiring an Apple ID. However the service is not affiliated with Apple, and at launch it supports many but not all of the texting features offered to people using iMessage on an iPhone, iPad or Mac.

    Beeper Mini itself plans to eventually incorporate other texting services, and make use of a $2-per-month subscription in order to fund its development. Beeper’s original app that was recently renamed to Beeper Cloud — which interconnects to several chat networks and uses a Mac relay to connect to iMessage — isn’t affected by the outage.

  • AI and You: Altman Says Humanity Needs to Solve for AI Safety, EU Agrees on ‘Historic’ AI Law

    AI and You: Altman Says Humanity Needs to Solve for AI Safety, EU Agrees on ‘Historic’ AI Law

    It’s been a minute since OpenAI CEO Sam Altman was ousted, returned five days later, and then reset the governing board at the maker of ChatGPT. If, like most of the world, you haven’t been following the plot twists after the board fired him for not being “consistently candid” in his communications, don’t worry. There are lots of insider looks and timelines and analysis pieces about the saga, and about the men who have starring roles in the future of AI, including Altman; Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and CEO Satya Nadella; Twitter/X owner Elon Musk; Google co-founder Larry Page; venture capitalists Reid Hoffman and Peter Thiel; and Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

    But the simple recap is this: power, ego and money pitted against concern and ethics. OpenAI has a valuation of more than $85 billion, and its investors, including Microsoft, didn’t want to see that evaporate with Altman’s departure, which set up a staff revolt and potential brain drain at the startup. At the same time, researchers, engineers and ethicists working on the tech were cautious and mindful of its possible implications for the future of humanity, which aren’t all positive, and how OpenAI’s leader was driving the tech forward.

    “The OpenAI debacle has illustrated that building AI systems is testing whether businesspeople who want to make money can work in sync with researchers who worry that what they are developing could eventually eliminate jobs or become a threat if technologies like autonomous weapons grow out of control,” wrote The New York Times in its Five Days of Chaos summation.

    “The crisis at OpenAI is personifying a question that has been boiling inside the AI industry and creating angst among technology giants and world leaders: Who can be trusted to open the Pandora’s box that artificial intelligence might represent?” noted The Wall Street Journal in its behind-the-scenes investigation.

    The take by The Atlantic magazine carries this headline: The Money Always Wins.

    Altman, who was on the shortlist for Time magazine’s person of the year, told What Now? With Trevor Noah this week (12 days after his ouster and rehiring) that he got so many messages in the 30 minutes after he was axed that it “broke” his iPhone.

    “I was in my hotel room, took this call, had no idea what it was going to be, and got fired by the board. It felt like a dream. I was confused. It was chaotic. It did not feel real. Obviously, like upset and painful. But confusion was just, like, the dominant emotion at that point … just in a fog, in a haze. I was, like, I didn’t understand what was happening. It happened in this, like, unprecedentedly, in my opinion, crazy way. And then in the next, like, half hour, my phone — I got so many messages that iMessage broke on my phone. I’m still, like, a little bit in shock and a little bit just trying to, like, pick up the pieces. You know, I’m sure as I have time to, like, sit and process this, I’ll have a lot more feelings about it.”

    In the hour-long conversation, Noah also asked about worries that genAI will cause the apocalypse. There are many questions about ChatGPT’s debut in November 2022, and whether the company had thought through the implications before setting off an arms race in Silicon Valley, goading Meta, Google and Microsoft to accelerate and fast-track their AI development. “Speed is even more important than ever,” a Microsoft executive told employees, according to The New York Times. It would, the exec reportedly said, be “an absolutely fatal error in this moment to worry about things that can be fixed later.”

    But can everything be fixed later? Altman, 38, told Noah it isn’t exactly possible to make generative AI completely safe. “We say airplanes are safe, but airplanes do still crash very infrequently, like amazingly infrequently, to me. We say that drugs are safe, but … the FDA will still certify a drug that can cause some people to die sometimes. And so safety is like society deciding something is acceptably safe, given the risk-reward trade-offs. And that, I think, we can get to. But it doesn’t mean things aren’t going to go really wrong.”

    As for his nightmare scenario, Altman said the risk-reward trade-offs mean humanity will just have to figure it out.

    “Society has, like, actually a fairly good — messy, but good — process for collectively determining what safety thresholds should be,” Altman told Noah. “I think we do, as a world, need to stare that in the face … this idea that there is catastrophic or potentially even existential risk, in a way that, just because we can’t precisely define it, doesn’t mean we get to ignore it either. And so we’re doing a lot of work here to try to forecast and measure what those issues might be, when they might come, how we would detect them early.”

    Yes, I’ll sleep better tonight. Won’t you?

    Here are the other doings in AI worth your attention.

    EU agrees on ‘historic’ AI legislation

    A month after the Biden administration released an executive order that aims to put guardrails around the development and use of AI, lawmakers in the European Union on Dec. 8 agreed to a “sweeping new law to regulate artificial intelligence, one of the world’s first comprehensive attempts to limit the use of a rapidly evolving technology,” The New York Times said.

    The AI Act, which will affect tech companies in the 27 countries in the EU and seek to protect 450 million consumers, “paves the way for what could become a global standard to classify risk, enforce transparency and financially penalize tech companies for noncompliance,” The Washington Post said. Companies risk fines of up to 7% of their global revenue.

    “Historic! The EU becomes the very first continent to set clear rules for the use of AI,” European Commissioner Thierry Breton posted on X. “The #AIAct is much more than a rulebook — it’s a launchpad for EU startups and researchers to lead the global AI race.”

    The law is expected to be finalized in 2024 and “would not take effect until 2025 at the earliest,” The Guardian noted.

    AI Alliance working on AI’s risk-reward conundrum

    IBM and Meta joined forces this week to launch the AI Alliance, a collaboration involving more than 50 companies, universities, research groups, science agencies and AI leaders, to ensure that “open innovation in AI benefits everyone and that it is built responsibly.”

    OpenAI isn’t among those signing on, nor is Google.

    “We believe it’s better when AI is developed openly — more people can access the benefits, build innovative products and work on safety,” said Nick Clegg, president of global affairs for Meta. The company created the free, open-source Llama 2 large language model, or LLM, which is an alternative to Open AI’s and Google’s technology.

    Google steps up AI arms race with Gemini, kind of

    Google, which lets people play with AI through its Bard chatbot, last week released an update to the Gemini LLM that powers its chatbot. The update is a “dramatic departure for AI,” according to CNET’s Stephen Shankland, and ups the ante with rival OpenAI. The game-changer: Gemini’s ability to move beyond text-based AI tasks, like summarizing documents and writing programming code, to understanding video, audio and photos. That means things like being able to figure out hand gestures in a video.

    “Text-based chat is important, but humans must process much richer information as we inhabit our three-dimensional, ever-changing world,” Shankland said. “And we respond with complex communication abilities, like speech and imagery, not just written words. Gemini is an attempt to come closer to our own fuller understanding of the world.”

    Google, which is working to outpace rivals including OpenAI and Meta, said it will deliver Gemini’s capabilities next year to the billions of people who use its products, including search, Chrome, Google Docs and Gmail. “For a long time we wanted to build a new generation of AI models inspired by the way people understand and interact with the world — an AI that feels more like a helpful collaborator and less like a smart piece of software,” Eli Collins, a product vice president at Google’s DeepMind division, told CNET.

    But there’s a little hitch. Shankland noted that though Google’s promotional video for the Gemini update “doesn’t fundamentally misrepresent Gemini’s abilities,” it’s in keeping with common promo clips that “make products look more glamorous than they truly are.” Google, he said, included a disclaimer in its video, saying Gemini doesn’t respond as quickly as shown.

    The bottom line: We’re in an AI arms race and companies are moving to get ahead. But as Bloomberg columnist Parmy Olson put it, “take Google’s latest show of sprinting ahead with a pinch of salt.”

    At least for now.

    Microsoft’s Seeing AI app is now available on Android

    In this week’s pick for tech for good, Microsoft said it made its free Seeing AI app available on the Google Play Store for the 3 million Android users out there and said it’s available in 18 languages, with plans to expand to 36 next year.

    Seeing AI narrates a person’s surroundings and is designed to help blind and low-vision people carry out tasks like reading mail, identifying products and hearing descriptions of photos,” wrote CNET’s Abrar Al-Heeti. “Users point their phone’s camera, snap a picture and then will hear a description.”

    The app has different categories for various tasks: the Short Text function speaks text aloud as soon as the text shows up in front of the camera, The People feature identifies folks around you. The Currency function identifies money. Meanwhile, the Scenes feature lets you hear a description of a setting you’ve photographed, allowing you to move your finger across the screen to hear the locations of different objects.

    Seeing AI can also identify colors and read handwritten text, like in greeting cards – very handy for those of us who get holiday cards from people with poor penmanship (not that I’m complaining about getting a card).

    In addition to English, the app is available in Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian Bokmal, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swedish and Turkish.

    What every chief exec should know about AI

    Still not sure what the genAI fuss is all about? Or maybe you think you know what it’s all about? Either way, McKinsey shared a 17-page guide back in May (which I just came across) entitled “What every CEO should know about generative AI.” It’s a useful primer, whether you’re chief of a company or not.

    Noting that ChatGPT reached 100 million users in just two months, McKinsey said, “It democratized AI in a manner not previously seen while becoming by far the fastest-growing app ever. Its out-of-the-box accessibility makes generative AI different from all AI that came before it. Users don’t need a degree in machine learning to interact with or derive value from it; nearly anyone who can ask questions can use it.”

    As for companies that “may see an opportunity to leapfrog the competition by reimagining how humans get work done,” McKinsey offers up an important caution that I think gets lost amid all the magical thinking about genAI: “Companies will also have to assess whether they have the necessary technical expertise, technology and data architecture, operating model, and risk management processes that some of the more transformative implementations of generative AI will require.”

    Happy reading.

    At McDonald’s, those fries will come with a side of AI

    At first glance, the news that McDonald’s will be using Google’s AI cloud technology to help its restaurants optimize operations seemed like the standard “look who signed on as a customer” story for Google.

    But I like the takeaway (pun totally intended) that it may mean the AI will enable McDonald’s restaurants to produce better burgers and fries for customers, who often use a mobile app or those self-service kiosks to order a meal. “The world’s biggest restaurant chain, noted The Street, says the move will collectively result in “customer benefits such as hotter, fresher food” around the fast-food chain’s global restaurant system.

    In case you didn’t know, McDonald’s has more than 38,000 restaurants around the world, in more than 100 countries.

    AI term of the week: Large Language Models (LLMs)

    With all the talk of the genAI arms raise in Silicon Valley, which is based on the technology in these companies’ LLMs, I thought it worthwhile to offer up a few definitions.

    The first is from venture firm Andreeesen Horowitz, which offers a simple one.

    “Large Language Model (LLM): A type of AI model that can generate human-like text and is trained on a broad dataset.”

    Market research firm Gartner offers up a slightly more detailed answer.

    “Large Language Models (LLMs): A specialized type of artificial intelligence (AI) that has been trained on vast amounts of text to understand existing content and generate original content.”

    And for an even more detailed answer, I went to The Alan Turing Institute:

    “Large Language Model: A type of foundation model that is trained on a vast amount of textual data in order to carry out language-related tasks. Large language models power the new generation of chatbots, and can generate text that is indistinguishable from human-written text. They are part of a broader field of research called natural language processing, and are typically much simpler in design than smaller, more traditional language models.”

    Editors’ note: CNET is using an AI engine to help create some stories. For more, see this post.

  • Snap Up Holiday Bargains During Best Buy’s Weekend Sale

    Snap Up Holiday Bargains During Best Buy’s Weekend Sale

    Holiday sales are in full swing, and if you’re looking to check some must-haves off your shopping list ahead of the festivities, Best Buy has a ton of discounts available on TVs, laptops, headphones, kitchen appliances and much more during its three-day weekend sale. Snag great gifts or splurge on something to treat yourself. Just note that these deals are set to expire Sunday, Dec. 10 at 9:59 p.m. PT (12:59 a.m ET), so be sure to get your order in before then if you don’t want to miss out on these savings.

    To help you make the most of these holiday bargains, we’ve gone through the sale and have highlighted some of the best offers. For example, you can score a $100 discount on the GoPro Hero 11 bundle that includes two extra batteries, a quick clip, a headstrap, a handler and a carrying case, bringing the price to just $300 — though this particular deal is exclusively available today, Dec. 8.

    Other big bargains that we expect to see throughout the weekend sale include a rare $41 discount on the Sonos One SL smart speaker that brings the price down to $159, as well as a massive markdown on the 48-inchLG A2 Series TV with an OLED screen, which drops the price from $1,300 to just $550. And anyone looking to add some home security cameras for extra peace of mind can get the 12-piece Arlo 4 Spotlight Camera security bundle for $270 — that’s a $330 savings on its usual list price.

    You’ll also find deep discounts on new kitchen appliances like the Bella Pro Series 8-quart air fryer for just $45 instead of $110 and the Keurig K-Select coffee maker for just $70 instead of the usual price of $150. There’s also an $80 discount on the ninth-gen Apple iPad, which makes a great holiday gift.

    Here are some more of our top picks from Best Buy’s three-day sale:

  • Tired of Being Your Family’s Tech Support? This Service Gets You Off the Hook

    Tired of Being Your Family’s Tech Support? This Service Gets You Off the Hook

    The holidays are here, which means lots of quality time with loved ones. If you’re the resident tech whiz in your family, however, it also means getting bombarded with requests for support. Your grandpa can’t figure out how to attach photos to an email. Your nephew wants help setting up the new video game console that Santa brought him. And your aunt somehow downloaded a virus while looking up pumpkin pie recipes.

    As both our homes and lives become increasingly digital, users who aren’t as tech savvy often don’t know how to get the most out of their purchases. According to Deloitte’s Connected Consumer survey released earlier this year, the average household has 21 devices, 41% of consumers said they disliked managing their tech and 28% said this management was “overwhelming.”

    There’s another way to help your loved ones get the tech support they need. Asurion has been helping consumers get the most out of their devices for over 30 years. With a network of over 10,000 tech experts, Asurion helps customers, both at home and on the go.

    Asurion's Phone Protect Plan

    Asurion protection plans often come with a device purchase, which is why you might recognize the name. But you can also purchase a standalone plan at any time, such as Asurion’s Phone Protect plan starting at $4.99 per month or its HomeDevice connect all your devices plan starting at $11.99 per month, in partnership with CNET.

    Here are some examples of the kinds of problems an Asurion expert can help you and your loved ones overcome.

    Get the most out of your smart TV

    Big-screen TVs are popular holiday gifts, but figuring out how to connect all your devices such as gaming consoles, streaming sticks and cable boxes can be a headache.

    If you need more help, Asurion’s experts can walk you through the ins and outs of that new big-screen TV, whether it involves figuring out the HDMI ports, connecting soundbars or mirroring your phone screen onto the display. They’ll even stick with you to ensure all your devices talk to each other by the end of the call.

    Set up and integrate new home gadgets

    Did your parents get new smartphones, tablets or smart home gadgets, such as video doorbells or smart speakers? Take the time to learn your way around these new devices from the start to prevent headaches down the road. Asurion’s team can help you set up devices, connect them to Wi-Fi, customize settings, install apps and answer any other questions about getting started and using them. Some extra support during setup can help your loved ones get the most out of these gifts.

    Streamline your computer for faster, more secure performance

    If your parents mention their computer is “acting funny”, you know it’s probably worse than it sounds. Innocent mistakes like clicking on phishing links or keeping all your files on your device can result in slow or compromised performance.

    Asurion’s tech team can diagnose issues like malware, viruses and storage drive problems. They can walk you through scanning for viruses, cleaning up unneeded files and popups, adjusting settings to boost speed and troubleshooting mysterious crashes or error messages.

    Asurion's HomeDevice Plan

    Troubleshoot Wi-Fi dead zones and slow internet speeds

    Sluggish internet and Wi-Fi dead zones can ruin holiday video calls or prevent loved ones from enjoying their smart home tech in every room of the house. Understand how Wi-Fi works and whether your current router is enough to meet your home connectivity needs.

    Asurion’s experts can analyze issues like modem problems, weak signal strength, device interference, incorrect router settings and more. They can suggest tips related to Wi-Fi extenders, the ideal router location or adjusting channels. They can also help you optimize your network settings for faster speeds and fewer dead zones.

    Bring it all together

    To get the most out of your smart home, take the time to get support and learn about how to integrate your home tech. This can include setting up solutions such as:

    • How to set up and manage different device permissions for adults and kids.
    • Printing documents wirelessly at home from your computer, tablet or phone.
    • Controlling your home’s smart lighting settings with Alexa.
    • Pairing smart locks and security systems with your video doorbell.
    • Streamlining voice command technology for your different devices.

    Asurion’s team can share countless tips for getting more out of your devices. Your family will love discovering new features.

    Give yourself or a loved one the gift of tech support. You’ll ensure you’re getting the most out of devices you’ve paid for, and you’ll free up more quality time along the way. Asurion’s friendly, knowledgeable experts can help you handle tech troubleshooting, and their plans include options in the event your device breaks. Learn more about Asurion’s Phone Protect plan or HomeDevice plan today to ensure your loved ones have the support they need all year long.

  • Take $100 Off This Roku Streambar and Wireless Bass Bundle for the Holidays

    Take $100 Off This Roku Streambar and Wireless Bass Bundle for the Holidays

    Looking to upgrade your TV experience? Adding a soundbar can go a long way to improving your audio, but having the right streaming system is also a major factor in your enjoyment. Amazon is combining the best of both worlds at an affordable price with this incredible bundle. The company has slashed the price of the Roku Streambar and Wireless Bass bundle by $100, meaning you’ll pay just $150 while this holiday deal is available.

    The Roku Streambar is our favorite smart soundbar on the market and won an Editors’ Choice award this year. It’s compact, sounds great for its size and offers Dolby Audio. It also plugs right into your TV’s HDMI ARC port, which makes for easy setup. Plus, this soundbar doubles as a media streaming device, adding the Roku interface with its wide selection of apps to your existing TV. It’s our favorite streaming interface, hands down — and it streams in 4K resolution.

    This bundle further sweetens the deal by adding Roku’s Wireless Bass subwoofer into the mix, which will enrich your sound quality without distortion. You’ll also get a Roku Voice Remote with TV controls, which makes searching for your favorite content a breeze.

    This bundle makes a great holiday gift for anyone, especially at this price. But if you’re looking for other stocking stuffers to delight your loved ones for even less, we’ve got more streaming device options worth checking out, as well as a roundup of gifts under $30.