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Archive for the ‘mobile phones’ category: Page 29

Nov 14, 2023

AI Pin Wants To Be A Star Trek Communicator And Kill Smartphones

Posted by in categories: mobile phones, robotics/AI, wearables

Published 6 seconds ago.

We’re getting one step closer to wearable Star Trek technology in the form of a new device called the “Ai Pin.” (via Humane). The AI Pin was created by a startup company called Humane, which is primarily led by ex-Apple employees who want to transform how we interact with our devices.

Nov 13, 2023

AI-powered headphones let users choose what they hear

Posted by in categories: information science, mobile phones, robotics/AI

The devices are controlled via voice commands or a smartphone app.


Active noise control technology is used by noise-canceling headphones to minimize or completely block out outside noise. These headphones are popular because they offer a quieter, more immersive listening experience—especially in noisy areas. However, despite the many advancements in the technology, people still don’t have much control over which sounds their headphones block out and which they let pass.

Semantic hearing

Continue reading “AI-powered headphones let users choose what they hear” »

Nov 13, 2023

Foxconn, Maker of iPhones, Unveils Foxtron Model V Electric Pickup Truck

Posted by in categories: mobile phones, transportation

Meet Taiwan’s first homegrown electric pickup truck comes from a familiar source: Foxconn, otherwise known as Hon Hai Technology Group.

Nov 10, 2023

Silicon Valley’s Big, Bold Sci-Fi Bet on the Device That Comes After the Smartphone

Posted by in categories: mobile phones, robotics/AI

Humane, a company started by two former Apple employees, says its new artificial intelligence pin can stop all the scrolling. Can it live up to the hype?

Nov 10, 2023

Longevity Neurotech report

Posted by in categories: evolution, government, mobile phones, neuroscience

DBS delivers electric currents to an electrode implanted in the brain.


Neurotechnology – or – while still an emerging industry, has attracted both major capital investments, and extensive media coverage in recent years. As tech relentlessly searches for the next “big tech platform” in the aftermath of the smartphone era [1], we propose that the answer may lie within our own minds. At NTX Services, we definenology as any technological intervention that interacts with the brain or central nervous system either directly or indirectly, and as attempts to integrate human and machine to enhance both, applications of the technology are broad ranging.

Often described as a new field, is actually based on decades of academic research, previously held back from commercialization at scale due to technological limitations, and slow changes in government policies and regulations. Although humans have been researching the brain and its bioelectrical signals since the 1600s [2], the first major breakthrough in was the invention of the electroencephalogram (EEG) by Hans Berger in 1929 [3]. Since this initial invention, several key developments have influenced the evolution of the industry until 2016, when Neuralink was founded [4].

Nov 10, 2023

ChatGPT is about to make AI as personal as your iPhone

Posted by in categories: mobile phones, robotics/AI

GPTs are the start of something big.

Nov 10, 2023

Former Apple designers launch $700 Humane AI Pin as smartphone replacement

Posted by in categories: mobile phones, robotics/AI

The Humane AI Pin is designed to replace your smartphone, allowing the user to make calls, send texts and look up information through voice controls. It also has a laser display, turning your palm into a mini screen that can show the time, date or what’s nearby.

“There are no wake words so it’s not always listening or always recording,” Chaudhri said at the beginning of a 10-minute launch video on the company’s website. “In fact, it doesn’t do anything until you engage with it, and your engagement comes through your voice, touch, gesture or the laser ink display.”

In addition to the upfront cost of the device, customers will have to pay a $24 monthly data subscription to T-Mobile, the company said. Having a separate phone number means that, unlike smart watches, the pin isn’t tethered to a smartphone.

Nov 10, 2023

Scientists create hydrogels which can be controlled with electricity

Posted by in categories: computing, mobile phones

So, what an international team of scientists from Sweden and Germany have done is create hydrogels that can be controlled with electricity. This means they can easily connect them to electronic devices like computers and smartphones.

Nov 10, 2023

Chptr, a memorialization app for gathering and sharing memories of loved ones, raises $1.5M

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, mobile phones

Chptr, an app for sharing and holding onto memories of lost loved ones, has raised $1.5 million in seed funding. The app is designed to give people a way to encapsulate the life of their loved ones by inviting others to share and store stories, images, audio messages, videos and more all in one place.

The startup was founded in 2020 by Rehan Choudhry, who came up with the idea for the app when he was helping his wife, a news anchor at CBS New York, put together video tributes for the first victims of COVID-19 in New York City. Choudhry told TechCrunch in an interview that the pair was reaching out to the families, friends, neighbors and colleagues of the victims to paint a picture of what their life was like.

“The thing I realized after talking to a lot of families was that these videos served as almost a reunion point for people that they will continue to grieve around,” Choudhry said. “We noticed that the grieving process that would normally take 90 days was extended to months because they had something to rally around. So then the question for me was why doesn’t everyone on the planet have access to this because we all have smartphones and social media. So I went down the rabbit hole of discovery and it brought me to Chptr.”

Nov 10, 2023

Noise-canceling headphones could let you pick and choose the sounds you want to hear

Posted by in categories: climatology, mobile phones, robotics/AI

The technology that makes it possible, called semantic hearing, could pave the way for smarter hearing aids and earphones, allowing the wearer to filter out some sounds while boosting others.

The system, which is still in prototype, works by connecting off-the-shelf noise-canceling headphones to a smartphone app. The microphones embedded in these headphones, which are used to cancel out noise, are repurposed to also detect the sounds in the world around the wearer. These sounds are then played back to a neural network, which is running on the smartphone; then certain sounds are boosted or suppressed in real time, depending on the user’s preferences. It was developed by researchers from the University of Washington, who presented the research at the ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology (UIST) last week.

The team trained the network on thousands of audio samples from online data sets and sounds collected from various noisy environments. Then they taught it to recognize 20 everyday sounds, such as a thunderstorm, a toilet flushing, or glass breaking.

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