This week, DJI and Insta360 had a strange Friday situation when they announced a 360 camera and a drone, respectively, Tech, the other is generally known.
We also hear that Operai is afraid of his next AI, and the United Kingdom faced Saftey’s law online.
You can update these stories and more in the scope of this week of the seven largest technological news.
7. We find my skechers
This week, Skechers debuted the new Find My Skechers. They look like their shoes sneakers abroad, but hidden in each heel is a cut that is perfect for an Apple Airtag.
This Bluetooth tracker can be used to help you track your child if you are in an unknown place, or help you locate any lost shoe, whether out of place while it was out of place or while preparing in madness to get to school.
Although when we survey the parents, the reactions were mixed. Predominantly because the target age range, young children and young children, exceeds their shoes every six months to one year. In its cheapest, find that my sketchers cost $ 52 per pop, which is a lot to regularly disburse.
6. The United Kingdom faced the online security law
This week, Great Britain was affected by the latest provisions of the online Security Law, presenting age verification measures designed to help prevent young people from accessing inappropriate age content. However, the new requirements have frustrated many adults.
A petition to repeal the United Kingdom online security law obtained more than 450,000 signatures in just a few days, and some have tried all kinds of solutions when trying to play the system with the photo mode of Death Stranding.
Most people are on board with the idea behind the rules, but are not interested in needing to share their identification with websites, especially foreign websites, since they are worried that their data can be poorly managed. Despite the concerns, the government has said that it will not repeal the measures.
5. Google Home crisis worsened
Last week, we report a growing number of complaints about Google Home devices, with Smart Home devices not handling the commands correctly or vomiting other errors.
This week, it seems that the problem got worse, and many report that their voice controls for smart lights were now completely broken and did not work at all.
The situation has become so bad that the American law firm Kaplan Gore has announced that it has “begun to investigate a possible class action” against Google because many users now report broken functionality, despite the fact that most of these devices have worked well in the past.
4. Dji Osmo 360 landed
The 360 camera space has been dominated by Insta360 for years, but finally has adequate competition after the arrival of the DJI Osmo 360. In addition, the Gopro Max 2 is soon joined, which was recently mocked by Gopro.
Taking into account that it is DJI’s first incursion into the market, OSMO 360 impresses from the beginning, delivering what DJI says they are several first in the industry, the most notable of which are its 1 -inch twin sensors with 8k videos recording up to 50 fps. These sensors are effectively twice the size of the Insta360 x5, our current 360 favorite camera, and should give the DJI model the advantage for image quality, especially with a color of 10 bits richer.
According to specifications, OSMO 360 has the advantage over the X5, but it is the use of the real world that matters most, and the X5 is our favorite model for a reason. It has a stellar duration of the battery, and its lenses can be replaced in case of damage. We are currently carrying out our versus practice of the two models, and is creating a titanic battle.
3. INSTA360 revealed the world’s first 360 drone
Dji is not used to having competition in the heavens, but this week, his first serious opponent for years flew to the city. The undisputed king of the 360 cameras, Insta360, has announced his new antigravity platform, which will soon give us the first drone with a 360 degree camera.
Well, but what is the benefit of a flying chamber and who sees everything? The main one is that, in theory, you will not need to worry about firing aerial videos while flying, because you can rethink them later. We are eager to experience that in person when the antigravity drone is completely launched at the end of this month.
2. Chatgpt helped us study
Chatgpt has added a new feature called mode of study to its free and free accounts converted by the famous chatbot into an unpaid study tutor for their children. Parents are often scared about the chatgpt using their children to avoid learning something, but the mode of study is different. It is quite sure that children use because they teach them how to get to the answer, instead of simply giving them the answer. It is more an interactive round -trip talk about the question that arises, which encourages them to learn as they advance.
Of course, you don’t need to let your children have fun with him. You can use the study mode to learn any new topic. Having the ability to convert the chatgpt into a suitable tutor is quite useful, so whatever you want to learn, be it a new language or how to encode, now you have the perfect excuse to start.
1. Openii was scared by his AI
The Operai CEO, Sam Altman, revealed details about the tests of his GPT-5 company (the next-generation brain for chatgpt) saying that AI was scared and compared it to the Manhattan project.
The exaggerated analogy could evoke a certain level of acute scientific minds that reach a great advance, but their other comments made Openai seem reckless or incompetent.
Even if you are exaggerating, we do not know if any of those descriptions should be attached to the type of company that could decide how the next generation’s power is implemented.