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Posts tagged ‘Apple’

19
Aug

Frank Ocean’s new visual album is live on Apple Music


Endless, Frank Ocean’s followup to his acclaimed 2012 debut Channel Orange​, is available now exclusively on Apple Music as a 45-minute visual album. We’re still waiting on the traditional album release, but according to the New York Time’s Joe Coscarelli, Apple says to “keep an eye out this weekend for more from Frank.” Ocean gave fans a taste of the album via a stream on his website earlier tonight. We heard on September 1st that his sophomore effort (then known as Boys Don’t Cry) was meant for Apple Music, but rumors of a release that week turned up nothing.

The title Endless is likely a cheeky reference to the interminable wait for the new album. Ocean announced that he was working on new music in early 2013, and in April 2014 he hinted that his next album was almost finished. We didn’t hear much after that, but cryptic posts from the artist kept fans eager. Indeed, the anticipation built to the point where Ocean’s inability to deliver has become an internet meme. In July, he posted yet another mysterious message in the form of an overdue library card, which implied the album would be coming that month. To the surprise of no one, he missed that deadline too.

“ENDLESS”
A film by Frank Ocean.
Now on Apple Music. #ENDLESShttps://t.co/IKMm2PNsUH pic.twitter.com/nlLxXoQ296

— Apple Music (@AppleMusic) August 19, 2016

We still don’t know when the Endless will be available on platforms outside of Apple’s. By going the visual album route, Ocean is following a bit in Beyoncé’s footsteps with Lemonade, who premiered her film on HBO and restricted its streaming to Tidal. Losing out on such a big release for Apple Music could be one reason the iPhone maker is rumored to be eyeing a Tidal acquisition.

Source: Apple Music

19
Aug

The next Apple Watch reportedly won’t have cellular connectivity


Apple is widely expected to introduce the next generation of the Apple Watch before the end of the year, and today Bloomberg has some details on what to expect — and what’s getting left out. While the next-gen Watch is expected to include GPS capabilities to aid with location tracking and movement without your phone, it’ll still require your phone for most everything else. The report indicates that Apple was hoping to include a full-fledged cellular chip so the Watch could run entirely on its own, without needing to be connected to an iPhone, but that won’t happen this time out.

That’s because of the battery drain that a cellular radio would necessitate — apparently the experience would just be too compromised right now. However, it sounds like Apple was still able to add a GPS chip, itself a relatively power-hungry component. But with Apple’s focus on health and fitness tracking, a GPS chip will make the next Apple Watch far better at both navigation and determining running and walking distances.

Eventually, Apple’s goal is to uncouple the Watch and iPhone entirely, but for now it sounds like the experience of using the next-gen Apple Watch won’t be wildly different than what’s out there now. This marks a change from a rumor we heard in April, which indicated the next Watch would include a cellular chip. In all likelihood, no matter what happens, we’ll see the next Watch unveiled this fall — probably at Apple’s annual September event that’ll also take the wraps off the next iPhone.

Source: Bloomberg

18
Aug

Iconic NY store’s extensive Mac collection is up for auction


Tekserve, a landmark New York City Apple dealer and repair center for 29 years, closed this week and is auctioning off its huge collection of computers and other tech. The centerpiece is a 35-piece (mostly) Macintosh collection from its Mac Museum, which only includes groundbreaking or special models and “consciously omits variants.” Highlights include a 128K Macintosh signed by Steve Wozniak, a Lisa and a NeXTcube. So far, the top bid is $31,000.

That’s not nearly all, though. Other items up for bid include a Blade Runner poster signed by Harrison Ford, Sean Young, Rutger Hauer, Edward James Olmos and Ridley Scott ($550 so far), several “Think Different” posters (Bob Dylan’s has hit $200), a working Aibo robot dog and an Apple Newton Emate 300 PDA, which can be had if you’re willing to pay more than $20. Hopefully the Mac collection will end up in a place where folks can still see it, but if you’re interested in grabbing a piece of history, check out all the items here.

Via: Gizmodo

Source: Live Auctioneers

18
Aug

How we trained AI to be sexist


You’d never know from Jacqueline Feldman’s background that she’d become a passionate proponent of gender equality for artificial intelligence. She went the dreamer’s route at college, attending Yale for English literature and writing. She prefers casual dresses and writing from the comfort of her Brooklyn apartment surrounded by books, where she has the option of climbing to the roof for cool air on sweltering nights.

But once Feldman was hired to write the personality of a chatbot for Kasisto, a startup that focuses on artificial intelligence software for banks, she became vocal about the importance of taking gender out of the identity equation. Under her watch, MyKai, the bot she was hired to craft a personality for, would be neither female nor male.

Feldman’s boss at Kasisto, Dror Oren, says the work the team has done with the bot made him more outspoken about the need for equality in tech than he’d have imagined going into the project, and he’s a self-proclaimed feminist to begin with. Now, he’s hyperaware of the differences between the personality of Kai and overly feminine answers inside similar products made by most large tech companies.

Kasisto is on to something. There’s Apple’s Siri, which the company occasionally promotes with titillating commercials reinforcing gender stereotypes, like the one where Jamie Foxx flirts with the female virtual assistant, asking if she has a crush on him. There’s Amazon’s Alexa, which the company introduced in a roll-out video featuring a “man of the house” explaining all of the feminized assistant’s functions, while his fictional wife asks one question and gets chastised for it. And then there’s Amy, a bot that schedules meetings via emails that’s made by x.ai. The company proclaims on its site that Amy is asked out about once a month, which the company says makes it “blush.”

Play with any of those products and you’ll find the same flirty attitude promoting the gender stereotypes that make equal-treatment folks irate. Ask it to marry you and Alexa will say, “Sorry, I’m not the marrying type” or “let’s just be friends” to date requests. If you ask Siri “Who’s your daddy?” it will answer “You are…” before asking to get back to work. Microsoft’s Cortana sassily replies, “Of all the questions you could have asked,” to come-ons, something feminists will tell you makes the bot complacent in its harassment.

Kai, on the other hand, will tell users via text to stop bothering it or say it’s time to get back to banking.

Sure, many of those other companies now have a male-voice option, but those aren’t the defaults in the US, and when producing commercials for those products, the female voice is the star of the show.

Feldman says all this sexualized AI can be harmful to society.

“Some of these female-gendered personalities have what are called Easter eggs programmed into them,” said Feldman. “These are supposed to be surprising moments in the interaction, and they’re often jokes that are somewhat demeaning to the personality speaking with you.”

She adds: “If you tried that conversation on a real woman, you’d really be bothering her.”

That’s not to say Easter eggs shouldn’t exist; they’re one of the delights of AI. But rather than demeaning through a typically sexist or flirty joke, Kai will make self-aware jokes about not being alive. If you text it goodbye, it may reply, “That is the X in the top right, right?” When asked if it believes in love, Kai will respond, “Love throws me for a loop. Unconditional love is an infinite loop,” which is a nod to what happens when computers freeze. These sorts of answers make Kai distinctly artificial, not human.

Women continue to earn 79 cents for every dollar a man earns, and it certainly wouldn’t hurt their standing in society if the tech world at least thought more carefully about gender in AI. The stereotypically ladylike, deferential responses of so many virtual assistants reinforce society’s subconscious link between women and servitude. The average person’s only interaction with AI may be a female voice that can’t quite say “no, stop that,” and that’s not OK.

Even those that avoid being overly feminized, like Google’s voice assistant, aren’t entirely gender-free. Google’s lacks a girls name, but still has a woman’s voice. Those in the field will often point to findings like those of now-deceased Stanford professor Clifford Nass, who said people prefer the sound of a woman’s voice to a man’s.

Kasisto was able to avoid some of these tech landmines because Kai’s personality has to be conveyed only by the written word. But the company isn’t buying the idea that society simply prefers a female voice as a reason to keep feminized personalities in a strictly assistant role. In fact, they say, mixing up gender in artificial intelligence in tech would be good for everyone. Companies are clearly thinking about it on some level; for example, in the UK and France, Siri defaults to a man’s voice, unlike the woman’s voice we hear in the US.

“I don’t want to sound pretentious around it, but I think they [ other companies ] need to think seriously about how they’re designing bots,” said Oren, Feldman’s boss and co-founder at Kasisto. “I feel that we’re putting Kasisto values out there. We want to feel proud with the way our bot interacts because it reflects our values as a company.”

Amazon and Google declined to comment for this story, and Apple didn’t respond to requests for an interview. Deborah Harrison, one of Microsoft’s personality writers for Cortana, says the team considered benefits to either gender when beginning to craft the personal assistant but settled on female because they felt women are perceived as being more helpful than men. Still, she said they felt the weight of their decisions.

“This industry — digital assistants and AI research — is in many ways in its infancy, so the interactions we design now will, for better or worse, begin to become standardized through familiarity,” Harrison said via email.

Dr. Olga Russakovsky, a postdoctoral research fellow at the Robotics Institute at Carnegie Mellon, was spurred to action by how tech treats women, period. She told Engadget she started a computer-science camp for girls called SAILORS while at Stanford because of the disproportionately low number of women in the field. In 2011, only 18 percent of bachelor’s degrees and 20 percent of doctoral degrees in computer and information sciences were earned by women.

When designing the camp program, she tailored it to how girls learn, as opposed to conventional programs that tend to favor boys. Part of the problem with sexism in artificial intelligence appears to be that there aren’t enough women involved in its creation.

Russakovsky applauds work by anyone in artificial intelligence who tries to create an environment that includes women as equal beings. This isn’t about an overly PC society getting its dander up over nothing. One study she cites found there is a hidden gender bias within a large sample of news text, randomly sampled, online. She worries these subservient values will grow more entrenched over time, keeping women underrepresented in her field.

It’s possible that some of the loudest criticism of personalities like Cortana (which was initially based on a nude video-game character) has had some effect at large tech companies. Apple added a male voice option to Siri in 2013, two years after Siri was introduced. And personal scheduling software company x.ai introduced a male option a year ago, after debuting with female-only Amy.

But even these maddeningly slow additions might do little to actually reverse sexism within the very DNA of artificial personalities.

Until more people in computer science ‘fess up to the problem of overly sexualized bots, we seem doomed to travel along the same rutted tracks of homogeneous design, with too few women involved in the development of our Siris, Amys, Cortanas and Alexas. That leaves the small teams at companies like Kasisto at the forefront, dragging AI into a more inclusive world. Here’s hoping their colleagues at larger companies wake up and do the same.

18
Aug

Apple is making a documentary with Cash Money Records


Cash Money Records’ deal to stream some of its music exclusively on Apple’s subscription service appears to be about more than just tunes. Bloomberg reports that Drake and Nicki Minaj’s record label is working with Apple on a documentary as well. The two companies are already quite familiar with each other as Drake’s Views From the 6 was an Apple Music exclusive the first week after it was released. Drake was also on stage at the event where Apple Music was first revealed to the world.

http://www.musicbusinessworldwide.com/apple-music-signs-game-changing-label-deal-cash-money-records/ @thelarryjackson @applemusic #Biggathenlife #lifestyle

A photo posted by Birdman5star (@birdman5star) on Aug 16, 2016 at 2:46pm PDT

Thanks to an Instagram post from Cash Money co-founder Bryan Williams, who goes by his stage name Birdman, news of the collaboration surfaced this week. The post was a picture of Williams alongside Apple Music’s head of original content Larry Jackson. After the image showed up on the social network, much of the speculation surrounded the possibility of Apple wanting to lock down Cash Money’s upcoming releases as exclusives for its music service.

According to Bloomberg, that’s not the case as sources indicate Williams and Jackson were discussing Apple backing a documentary about the record label instead. There’s plenty of history to hash out in a film, as Cash Money is also home to Lil Wayne and other well-known hip-hop artists. And the relationship between Weezy and the label hasn’t always been amicable.

As far as Apple is concerned, a music documentary would be the latest in a string of original video projects. While reports of the company’s desire to produce its own television content surfaced about a year ago, we’ve since learned about the reality series Planet of the Apps that will showcase software and the folks who make them. There’s also Vital Signs, which is rumored be a semi-autobiographical look at the life and career of Dr. Dre. Last but not least, the most recent exclusive video announcement from Apple was that it had agreed to terms with CBS to create 16 episodes of “Carpool Karaoke,” a popular segment from The Late Show with James Corden.

Via: TechCrunch

Source: Bloomberg

17
Aug

Intel to manufacture ARM chips in a bid for mobile domination


Intel is flexing its manufacturing muscle in an attempt to get inside your next phone. To do that, it has entered a licensing deal with ARM, according to a report from Bloomberg. Without this license, excess manufacturing space goes to waste. But with it, Intel can make processors for Apple, Qualcomm and Samsung — the biggest players in smartphones. This gives Intel a much-needed boost in the mobile space that it couldn’t achieve on its own.

The ARM deal also gives Intel a foot in the door with VR hardware, which might help explain the company’s new Project Alloy all-in-one headset. And if you’re playing along at home, yep, these production lines will include those making 10-nanometer chips. So, more money for Intel and possibly faster and better processors for your mobile device. ARM itself was recently picked up by Japanese tech-giant Softbank for $32 billion. So yeah, this is a pretty big deal although specifics regarding the money involved aren’t known at this time.

With the PC market declining, this gives Intel a chance to get into mobile without technically getting into mobile itself. The company is already rumored to be making the modem chips for Apple and this deal could put Intel silicon elsewhere inside future iPhones. First in line to test out Intel’s tasty production lines? LG, which, according to Intel, will “produce a world-class mobile platform based on Intel Custom Foundry’s 10 nm design platform.”

Source: Bloomberg, Intel

17
Aug

Apple builds an R&D center in China to survive a tough market


There’s no question that China isn’t as much of a money maker for Apple as it once was. However, it’s not about to quit the country — if anything, it’s settling in for the long haul. The company has unveiled plans to build a Chinese research and development center by the end of the year. Just what it’ll work on isn’t evident at this stage, although it’s part of an overall increased investment in Apple’s second-largest market.

It has a few good reasons to set deeper roots in China. Much as with the massive investment in Didi Chuxing, it’s at least partly about assuaging regulators who’ve been banning services and are otherwise jittery about an American company on their turf. Apple is trying to show that it can create jobs and otherwise contribute to the Chinese job market beyond stores and factory contracts. This also helps Apple recruit Chinese talent that would be difficult or impossible to bring overseas.

The moves might be necessary in a nation whose smartphone market is particularly volatile. Apple isn’t the only one hurting — IDC estimates that Xiaomi, a darling of the Chinese market just a year ago (it’s sometimes billed as China’s Apple), saw its shipments plunge a whopping 38.4 percent year-over-year during the second quarter. The exact reasons for its trouble are mixed, although it’s a latecomer to advertising (it historically relied on online sales) while rivals have stepped up their game.

Both Apple and Xiaomi might also simply be facing a changing of the guard. While Huawei is still the top phone brand in China, it’s technically eclipsed by BBK’s rapidly growing smartphone empire. It owns Oppo and Vivo, whose shipments surged (in Oppo’s case, by 124 percent) to make them the second- and third-largest phone brands in China this spring. Combine that with the smaller but plucky OnePlus badge and BBK largely has the country covered, ranging from budget phones for the mass market to attention-getting flagship devices. Anyone trying to take on BBK faces a multi-pronged assault, making it that much harder to topple.

Source: Reuters, IDC

15
Aug

The best tech for honor students


Look, not everyone is cut out for late nights of drinking and playing DJ for groups of frat kids. Some would prefer to campout in the library until the wee hours of the morning studying and pouring over notes and lectures. Of course, the days of pen, paper and microfiche are pretty much over at this point. You need powerful, digital tools like an Evernote subscription to help organize all your notes from class. And there’s nothing like a solid voice recorder to document all those early morning classes before you’re fully caffeinated. Of course you’ll also need the basics, like a backpack and a laptop. But, you might also want to invest in a portable energy light to help keep you awake and fight off bouts of seasonal affective disorder (SAD) when you’re spending 90 percent of your day indoors. Check out the gallery below for all our best bookworm picks and make sure to check out our full Back-to-School Guide right here.

Source: Engadget’s 2016 Back-to-School Guide

15
Aug

Twitter in talks to livestream NFL games on Apple TV


Twitter paid $10 million for the rights to stream NFL games and is reportedly talking to Apple about building an Apple TV app, according to the New York Times. That would let fans to watch ten Thursday Night Football games on a big screen using Apple hardware, even without a cable subscription. “Having that live programming every night when sports are playing — with no paywall, no logging in and directly from the source — that’s key to us,” Twitter CFO Anthony Noto told the NYT.

Twitter started testing live streams during Wimbledon (from a special ESPN feed), though it didn’t carry any live games. It reportedly won the right to stream live Thursday Night Football games over rivals like Facebook because it was willing to let the NFL sell the bulk of ads during the stream. The league recently decided to split up Thursday Night Football broadcasts between NBC and CBS, and will carry them on its own NFL Network. The first game between the New York Jets and Buffalo Bills will stream on September 15th.

We as a television organization, and the social media platforms are sort of sizing each other up, trying to figure out what the relationship is going to be.

The NFL hasn’t said how it’s selling ads, or whether it will split any revenue with the networks. However, CBS told the NYT that it’s still feeling out the streaming situation with internet companies like Google, Facebook and Twitter. “We as a television organization, and the social media platforms are sort of sizing each other up, trying to figure out what the relationship is going to be,” said CBS president David Rhodes.

Source: NY Times

15
Aug

Exploring the past, present and future of AI with Engadget


Few things stir up as much excitement, fear and confusion as artificial intelligence. So we’re dedicating this entire week to examining it from as many angles as possible. We’ll look at how current nascent AIs reflect some of society’s less admirable qualities, how it could be used to improve our criminal justice system and we’ll even explore the meaning of the “I” in “AI” — intelligence. Jess Conditt will challenge the notion that experts truly understand what it means to build an intelligent machine. And Nicole Lee will explore whether or not a minimum income is a viable solution to a workforce that demands less humans, and more computers and robots.

At this point practically every major tech company is making sizable investments in artificial intelligence and machine learning. Microsoft, Facebook and Amazon are all betting big on its potential. Google has built a special processor just for powering AI software. IBM is trying to shoehorn Watson into every industry from retail to medicine — it even had the damn thing write a cook book. Smaller players are looking for a foothold in the emerging market too, such as Fujitsu and startups like Viv.

Even though it seems like the tech industry is all-in on this whole AI thing, it’s not really that cut and dry. Google is pumping tons of money into research and services, while working on a kill switch to keep the machines from rising up and investigating the more mundane dangers of AI. Then there are titans of the industry like Elon Musk, who has invested in the technology while simultaneously warning us that we’re “summoning the demon.”

Musk is hardly alone. Plenty of major players and thinkers in the world of technology have warned of the dangers of AI, including Bill Gates and Stephen Hawking. But not every vision of the future is so apocalyptic. Theorists like Ray Kurzweil envision a world where machines don’t wipe humans out, but become part of us in the singularity. And for every Terminator film, there is a movie like Her, where AIs aren’t destructive forces, but three-dimensional characters and even romantic interests.

Whether you’re in camp armageddon (like Elon Musk) or eagerly awaiting the melding of human and machine (like Ray Kurzweil), one thing we can all agree on is that artificial intelligence is a rare truly transformative technology. Like the internal combustion engine, the assembly line, the transistor and the internet, AI has the potential to make the world of tomorrow almost unrecognizable.

But, before we spend the next week trying to untangle this mess, let’s take a look at the debate as it stands now. Below we’ve collected five quotes about the potential benefits and dangers of artificial intelligence from some of the biggest names in the field. And we’ve had each one loving illustrated by the fine folks at eBoy.

ai-week-danwilson.jpg

I absolutely don’t think a sentient artificial intelligence is going to wage war against the human species.

Daniel H. Wilson

Source: The Globe and Mail

ai-week-elon.jpg

With artificial intelligence, we’re summoning the demon.

Elon Musk

Source: MIT AeroAstro Centennial Symposium

ai-week-rayk.jpg

Artificial intelligence will reach human levels by around 2029. Follow that out further to, say, 2045, we will have multiplied the intelligence, the human biological machine intelligence of our civilization a billion-fold.

Ray Kurzweil

Source: PBS News Hour

ai-week-stevehawk.jpg

The development of full artificial intelligence could spell the end of the human race.

Stephen Hawking

Source: BBC

ai-week-yud.jpg

By far, the greatest danger of Artificial Intelligence is that people conclude too early that they understand it.

Eliezer Yudkowsky

Source: Artificial Intelligence as a Positive and Negative Factor in Global Risk (PDF)