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“Experience Unveiling of Apple’s Intelligence and WWDC 2024 Event in One Place”

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Apple kicked off its weeklong Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC 2024) event today with the customary keynote at 1 p.m. ET/10 a.m. PT. But the biggest news came with the reveal of Apple Intelligence, the company’s big entrance into the competitive AI market. You can watch watch the archive over on Apple’s events page, or you can watch the YouTube archive right here and via the embed below. The latest reports have put a name to Apple’s AI efforts: Apple Intelligence, along with the caveat that not all recent Apple devices will be able to use the new system. And you can bet that many of iOS 18’s AI features will make their way to macOS 15, as well.

Oura’s Launch of a Fresh Labs Section for Experimenting with Innovative Features

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Smart ring manufacturer Oura is introducing a new section in its app called Oura Labs to test out new features and get user feedback. Oura said that Symptom Radar will monitor biometric signals such as body temperature range, respiratory rate, resting heart rate, and heart rate variability. “Oura Labs is our approach to recreate internal engagement for new features with users in a structured and formal way. Users will get to see a lot of early-stage ideas in Oura Labs,” Patel said. Users can provide direct feedback about these experimental features along with general feedback for the product through Oura Labs.

“Battle of the Billionaires: Elon Musk, Sam Altman, and the Fight for AI Domination”

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Watch: Elon Musk, Sam Altman and the rest of the billionaires are fighting over the future of AIThe scrap over who should run OpenAI, and how it should be managed is still the hottest topic in tech. Most recently, former co-founder and backer Elon Musk sued the AI company best known for ChatGPT and its work with Microsoft for what he considers to be an abandonment of its founding principals. That suit kicked off a storm of discussion amongst tech investors, some of whom have a stake in OpenAI. Is his view hurting work on open-source AI? Buckle up, everyone, it’s going to be one hell of a year for tech drama.

Farewell Flight: Ingenuity Helicopter Completes Final Journey on Mars for NASA

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Ingenuity, the small helicopter that’s been buzzing around the Red Planet for almost three years, has taken its final flight. NASA announced today that at least one of the helicopter’s carbon fiber rotor blades was damaged during its last mission, grounding it for good. As NASA Administrator Bill Nelson explained in a statement today, Ingenuity was up against the very, very thin Martian atmosphere, which is less than 1% as dense as Earth’s. It arrived on the Red Planet attached to the underside of the Perseverance rover, which is still active on Mars’ surface. Just last week, NASA experienced a two-day communications blackout with the little helicopter after it conducted what turned out to be its final flight.

Departed: Ingenuity helicopter says goodbye to Mars after final flight with NASA

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Ingenuity, the small helicopter that’s been buzzing around the Red Planet for almost three years, has taken its final flight. NASA announced today that at least one of the helicopter’s carbon fiber rotor blades was damaged during its last mission, grounding it for good. As NASA Administrator Bill Nelson explained in a statement today, Ingenuity was up against the very, very thin Martian atmosphere, which is less than 1% as dense as Earth’s. It arrived on the Red Planet attached to the underside of the Perseverance rover, which is still active on Mars’ surface. Just last week, NASA experienced a two-day communications blackout with the little helicopter after it conducted what turned out to be its final flight.

A Gap in Perspective: AI in 2021 vs. the Rest of the Startup Market in 2024

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It’s 2021 for AI while the rest of the startup market is stuck in 2024Listen here or wherever you get your podcasts. Hello, and welcome back to Equity, the podcast about the business of startups, where we unpack the numbers and nuance behind the headlines. This is our Monday show, in which we take a look back at the weekend and the week ahead. This time ’round, there was so much in the news that we had to greatly compress everything we wanted to talk about. Here’s the rundown:Like I said, it’s a busy start to the week!

‘s success “2023 Startups: Fading Away, Here’s to Thriving in 2024”

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As Brian, Mary Ann and Zack wrote earlier this week, we lost a lot of startups in 2023, but honestly, I don’t think that’s a bad thing. Startups aren’t meant to last forever — they either evolve into a fully fledged corporation with a growth trajectory, or they cease existing altogether. A tale of two pedalsTim Stevens did a deep dive, comparing the various driver assist systems currently on the market. The EV free-for-all (except not free): EV fast-charging networks are bracing for a turbulent 2024 as they grapple with Tesla’s expanding Supercharger dominance. : The New York Times is suing OpenAI and Microsoft, alleging they trained AI models on Times’ content without permission.