How to Turn Off Apple Intelligence Notification Summaries on Your iPhone

So you finally got the iOS 18.1 Apple Intelligence update, you got through the waitlist, and you enabled the Notification Summary feature as you signed up. It's natural: you're curious and it's easy to do. And, as Apple says, you can disable and customize it later on in Settings.

Well, now is later. If you've been using Notification Summaries for a while, you might be scratching your head as to their usefulness. The new Apple AI feature uses local LLMs to automatically condense multiple messages from the same chat, or from a group chat, into one succinct sentence. It can do this for long iMessage threads and emails, too.

But its summaries aren't always correct. Sometimes, they can be really far off, in my experience. If you're finding this feature more annoying than useful, here's how you can easily turn it off for all apps, or alternatively, just for the Messages or Mail app.

How to turn off and customize notification summaries

Turning off Notification Summaries Preview for iPhone.
Credit: Khamosh Pathak

Like many Apple Intelligence features, there is an off switch for Notification Summaries. Go to Settings > Notifications > Summarize Previews, and from the top, disable the Summarize Previews feature.

Alternatively, you can also disable the Summarize Previews feature on a per-app basis. In the Summarize Previews screen itself, you'll see a list of all installed apps that can send you notifications. Here, scroll down and tap the toggle next to the app you want to disable summaries for. Now, all notifications from that app will show up like they used to.

To Summarize, or Not to Summarize?

Example of Apple Intelligence Notification Summaries on iPhone.
Credit: Khamosh Pathak

After a couple weeks of testing, and now public release, the jury is still out on AI notification summaries. If you're okay keeping an eye on the feature, and not believing everything it tells you (generally a great policy in everything AI), you can get a lot out of it. Especially if you regularly have to deal with lots and lots of WhatsApp and iMessage threads from work or group chats.

For me, personally, I've seen little to no benefit from it, at least yet. Yes, Apple Intelligence can give me the gist of a long-winded message, and that sounds useful, but I always end up checking the message myself anyway, to be sure it got it right. I did find it useful, though, when I got an accurate summary of multiple transactions I made across the day, and what my bank balance was by the end.

Online, people have shared instances where Apple's LLM has wildly misinterpreted messages, or delivered bad breakup news with starkly non-empathetic language. As these models develop, hopefully they can get better. And if you're someone who is inundated with countless messages that are the same, or similar, I can see how notification summaries could be quite useful.



from News https://ift.tt/32KumYj
via IFTTT

You Can Grab the Google Pixel Tablet for $80 Less Right Now

The Google Pixel Tablet, with its aluminum build and choice of porcelain or hazel finishes, looks good and feels comfortable to hold, for when you're lounging around with a book or a show—and right now, it's down to $319 from $399. It has an 11-inch screen (2560x1600 resolution) which reportedly displays vivid colors and handles sunlight surprisingly well, and a four-speaker audio setup that is clear but a bit light on bass. If you’re into more booming sound, this might feel lacking but for everyday streaming or calls, it gets the job done nicely.

Powered by Google’s Tensor G2 chip, the Pixel Tablet is a solid device for multitasking, with this PCMag review reporting smooth performance even with a dozen apps open at once. This is especially handy for anyone who juggles tasks regularly and relies on split-screen functions. Connectivity-wise, it supports Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.2, so you’re all set for reliable streaming and device pairing. Additionally, it comes with 128GB of internal storage, but if you need more, you can double it to 256GB for an extra $80 right now ($100 regularly).

On the camera front, the Pixel Tablet’s 8MP lenses on both the front and back are built more for video chats than photography, with its continuous-framing feature keeping you centered during Google Meet calls. Battery life might be underwhelming if you're hoping for all-day use, with tests showing just over five hours of streaming at full brightness (compared to Google’s claimed 12 hours). Your mileage may vary. You can recharge it with a USB-C cable or use Google’s optional $129 Charging Speaker Dock, which adds value as a charging stand and audio booster (but adds cost). This dock also lets the Pixel Tablet switch into a voice assistant and smart display, a pretty cool feature for those wanting a bit more from their tablet. When docked, it even supports casting with its built-in Chromecast, multi-room audio, and smart display and speaker functions.

If a smart display is what you're looking for, the Google Nest Hub Max at $229 could make a good option. But if it's a powerful tablet that you want, you might want to consider the renewed Apple iPad Pro, now at $449 (down from $549).



from News https://ift.tt/LTYa2Nx
via IFTTT

Google Just Announced a Bunch of New AI Features for Maps

Google Maps is one of those apps that basically does everything I want it to: I punch in my destination, I'm guided to that destination, then I turn the app off. That's not to say there's zero room for improvement, of course. As such, it's always intriguing whenever Google announces a new slew of features and changes for Maps. This time around, many of those changes just happen to be AI-powered.

Of course, everyone's all-in on AI right now. And Google being Google, the company is using its AI platform, Gemini, to run some of these new features. Most are launching today, but some are also rolling out in the coming weeks. Here's what's new.

Google wants you to ask Gemini where to go

Rather than search for specific destinations, Google wants you to use its AI chatbot for advice on what to do. The company says you can ask Gemini things like "fun fall activities," "interactive date ideas," or "things to do on a relaxing Sunday," and the bot will generate suggestions in Google Maps. I guess that saves you a trip to, um, Google. This feature is rolling out today.

Gemini will summarize all those reviews for you

Generating summaries is one of the features companies advertise most for their AI programs. Apple Intelligence summarizes your notifications, for example, while Google tries to summarize multiple sources into one AI-generated explanation—with sometimes disastrous results.

However, the company wants you to trust Gemini to summarize Google Maps reviews for you: Rather than sift through any number of reviews to determine whether a location is worth your time, Google's view is you should glance at the Gemini summary to learn all you need to. If you want to see where it gets that summary from, you can always look at the reviews themselves.

Google continues to build AI features that generate information based on the work of others—whether that's independent users reviewing a restaurant on Google Maps, or sources across the internet writing articles. This is a minor version of that, but it goes to show that AI-powered feature are often enabled by free participation from users, not by the companies themselves.

This feature launches today.

Check out more stops on your route

Google wants to make it easier to find interesting deviations on your current route: The company says things like "charming local cafes" and "quirky roadside attractions" will pop up if you swipe up on your route preview. If you see something you like, you can add it to your route. This feature also launches today.

Ask Gemini about your destination

You can also check in with Gemini with questions about your destination: That includes things like “are reservations recommended?” “what’s the parking situation?” or “is there indoor seating?" This is coming to Maps today, but will roll out to Search in general in the coming months.

Immersive View Expansion

Google is expanding the list of cities compatible with Immersive View: This feature uses AI to build a 3D image of a city from street view images, and has been slowly rolling out for about the past year and a half. Google says now, the feature is available in more than 100 cities, and will grow to 150 by the end of the year.

There's also now Immersive View for routes, which will highlight things like parking lots, bike lanes, and difficult driving sections. You can pick a spot along your journey to investigate it further. This particular Immersive View feature rolls out Nov. 11.

In addition to Immersive View expansion, Google is also adding more details to general directions. You should know more about which lane you're supposed to be in at any given time, which should reduce those times when you suddenly need to change lanes to make a turn or enter a freeway. That comes out next week.

Report hazards to Waze with your voice

This isn't really about Google Maps, but Google owns Waze so I guess it makes the press release. In any case, this is probably the most useful new feature here. Waze now lets you report hazards on your route using your voice, which is a fantastic update. It never sat right with me that a feature meant for making driving safer required users to fiddle with their phones while driving. That said, you still need to interact with your phone for this feature, but you only need to tap the reporting button before speaking what you're seeing. This option is launching in beta today, in English.

In addition to this Waze feature, Google Maps users will be able to report new types of weather disruptions, like flooded or low-visibility roads. That feature comes out next week in the US, India, Canada, and Australia.

Making it easier to know what to do when you've arrived

Google is working on new features for after you've reached your destination. Maps will light up your destination in the app and highlight available parking, as well as detailed instruction for getting to your destination once you leave your car. You'll also see business information here, so you'll know if your destination is open or closed by the time you get there. This feature is rolling out starting next week.



from News https://ift.tt/sQAFBhp
via IFTTT

This iRobot Roomba Hybrid Vacuum and Mop Is $600 Off Right Now

The iRobot Roomba Combo j9+ is currently available for $799, down from $1,399, making it a great option if you’re looking for a smart hybrid vacuum that adapts to your home. It’s designed to make cleaning easier by identifying the areas in your home that collect the most dirt and prioritizing those areas during its cleaning runs. The auto-fill dock and base station of this vacuum are major time-savers as well. The dock reportedly holds up to 30 days' worth of water or cleaning solution, keeping the vacuum’s internal tank topped up without much effort on your part. Meanwhile, the base station handles the dustbin for you by automatically emptying it into a replaceable bag that can hold up to 60 days of dirt, depending on how often you use it.

Setting up the Combo j9+ is pretty straightforward—just plug it in, slide the vacuum into place, boot it up, download the iRobot app, and follow the instructions. Just a heads up though: It's said to be slightly inconvenient to press the prompted button while simultaneously checking the vacuum's indicator lights during setup (since they’re hidden when docked). Once you’re all set up, you can run the mapping process, which takes about 40 minutes for a two-bedroom apartment. The obstacle-avoidance tech on the Combo j9+ works well—if it bumps into something during its first run, it figures out what went wrong and prompts you to create a keep-out zone in the app.

The app lets you schedule cleanings, check status updates, and adjust settings like mopping water levels and floor passes. It also integrates with smart home features like geofencing, and it works with Alexa, Google Assistant, or Siri for easy voice commands and cleaning routines.

The Combo j9+ can vacuum and mop at the same time, or you can set it to just vacuum if that’s all you need. While vacuuming, it automatically boosts suction when it detects dirtier areas; in hybrid mode, it knows the difference between carpet and hard floors, extending and retracting the mop arm whenever needed. You can fill the mopping liquid reservoir with water or compatible cleaning solutions like those from iRobot or Bona.

For pet owners, the Pet Owners Official Promise is a big plus—iRobot guarantees a replacement if the vacuum runs over pet waste, which is a lifesaver considering how older models have struggled with that issue. It also has a pretty solid battery life, running for about 115 minutes in auto mode, according to this PCMag review.



from News https://ift.tt/5eW37L2
via IFTTT

My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: Sony WH-1000XM5 Headphones

Audio enthusiasts need no introduction to Sony's 1000X series. They've been around since 2016, improving on the previous iteration to eventually land on the Sony WH-1000XM5, the best over-ear headphones for audio your money can buy. If you're willing to splurge, it's a good time to do so. The WH-1000XM5 are currently $299.99 (originally $399.99)—$1.99 less than the lowest price they've ever been, according to price-checking tools.

I have been a loyal customer of the 1000X line for many years as my go-to headphones for most activities. The WH-1000XM5 came out in May of 2022 to an "outstanding" review from PCMag for their top-notch audio quality, but also for their exceptional audio when using its best-in-class active-noise canceling (ANC) (most headphones lose their audio quality when using ANC). The headphones are also well-designed to be comfortable for long sessions.

The ear controls use tapping and swiping, which aren't my favorite, but it's where all the modern headphones are moving toward. There's an app that comes with the headphones that lets you adjust your EQ settings to your liking, including what the swiping and tapping functions do on your headphones.

A great touch on these headphones that is often neglected is a Stereo 3.5mm connection, perfect for those who want to use a wired cable without worrying about battery life. Speaking of battery life, Sony says you can expect about 30 hours, but it will vary depending on your usage of ANC. They are compatible with AAC, LDAC and SBC codecs and have multipoint connection (you can pair them with more than one device at the same time).

If you're looking for the best headphones for audio quality with ANC you can buy right now, check out the WH-1000XM5. With their current discount, you'll be getting the best and the best price.



from News https://ift.tt/yTr7RLh
via IFTTT

How to Keep So-Called 'No-Damage' Hooks From Ruining Your Walls

Hanging stuff on your walls is a great way to decorate and spruce up your home or add some storage to the place, but that comes with a downside: holes in your walls. Depending on your skill level with spackling and whether you own or rent, a few holes in the wall might not seem like a big deal, but if you’re uncertain of your ability to fix them up and/or worried about losing a security deposit as a result, you might hesitate to drill or hammer into the wall.

Enter so-called “no-damage” adhesive products like Command hooks. In theory, these products stick to your wall, hold enough weight to be useful, and then can be removed without leaving a mark or hole behind, protecting your walls and security deposit from damage. In general, these products work as advertised (as long as you follow the instructions), but they can actually damage your walls if you’re not careful. Instead of assuming you’re safe and paying the price when the time comes to move out and remove everything, keep the following details in mind any time you’re using a “no-damage” adhesive product on your walls.

Know your surfaces

No-damage adhesive products like Command hooks aren’t magic. They’re just specially formulated adhesives, and they absolutely will not stick to just anything. Your first step when planning to hang some on your walls is to read the instructions and make sure you’re putting them on an appropriate surface. Most of these products won’t work well on unfinished wood, exposed brick (or any irregular surface), or any kind of fabric or wallpaper, for example.

The condition of the wall matters, too. If the surface is grimy, crumbling, or peeling, there’s a good chance the adhesive won’t hold. And if the wall was painted recently, you’re better off waiting—the paint needs to be fully cured before you put an adhesive product on it, or it might take the paint right off the wall. For oil-based paints, that’s about a week, but for latex paints you should wait about a month before you put those hooks up.

Clean the walls

When was the last time you dusted your walls? You should be cleaning your walls annually, at least, but a lot of folks don’t bother—especially if they’re renting. But if you’re planning to stick any kind of adhesive on them, cleaning the walls is essential (that’s why it’s literally step one of the instructions on a Command hook). Particles and dirt can get between the adhesive and the wall, weakening the bond, and residue can undermine the bond as well.

That doesn’t mean you should just wipe down the wall with whatever cleaning product you have lying around. Most cleaning products will actually leave behind a residue that can interfere with adhesion, so you’re supposed to use rubbing alcohol.

Appropriate climate

No-damage adhesives are designed to be removed, and as a result they’re more fragile than some other adhesive products. They’re pretty finicky about the climate of the room they’re in, for example—they won’t work well if the space is very cold or very hot (the temperature range is officially 50° to 105° Fahrenheit for most indoor Command products).

You also have to consider humidity. If you’re hanging something on the wall of a bathroom, make sure you buy a product designed for a bathroom and other damp areas, otherwise the humidity and moisture can cause your hooks and shelves to slide off the wall. Luckily, these are pretty easy to find.

Correct removal procedure

The most dangerous moment for your security deposit or pristine, undamaged wall comes when you remove the supposedly no-damage adhesive. Again, you should consult the instructions that came with the product to ensure you’re doing it the right way. But just as important are your expectations: You’ll probably have more trouble getting the adhesive off your wall than you assume, and you’ll probably have some residue left behind (no damage doesn’t mean no residue).

So have a small toolkit ready to go when the time comes to pull everything off the walls:

  • A hair dryer can soften up adhesive that doesn’t want to pull free.

  • A putty knifecan get behind adhesive and gently pry it away from the wall. You can also use dental floss—slide it behind a hook that won’t come off and gently saw downward until it’s free.

  • A microfiber cloth and some warm water should get any residue off the wall, but if it’s stubborn the putty knife can be used to scrape it off (gently). If it really doesn’t want to come off you can try a little more rubbing alcohol to scrub it off.



from News https://ift.tt/JFZkxLz
via IFTTT

Get In Line Now to Try Apple's AI Image Generator Early

The latest iOS 18.1 update finally brought with it some of the Apple Intelligence features that were promised way back in June. But new Siri and Photos features are just a small sliver of what Apple has planned. The next roll-out, coming sometime in December, will finally add ChatGPT integration, Visual Intelligence, and the much awaited Genmoji and Image Playground to the mix. While the final release is still far out, you can install the Developer Beta to try out the features right away.

How to enable AI features with iOS 18.2 Developer Beta

The name of the game is "waitlist." Apple Intelligence itself is already a waitlisted feature, even for iOS 18.1 users. And within the iOS 18.2 beta, there's already another waitlist for Image Playground, Genmoji, and Image Wand.

But let's take this step by step. First, update to the iOS 18.2 Developer Beta. To do this, go to Settings > Software Update > Beta Updates and choose the iOS 18.2 Developer Beta. Then hit the Back button and wait for a moment until you see the iOS 18.2 Beta option pop up. Tap on Update Now to get started.

If you don't see it, first make sure your iPhone is updated to the latest available software. You might also be asked to log in to Apple's Developer website with the Apple ID associated with your iPhone.

Apple Intelligence and Image Playground waitlist.
Credit: Khamosh Pathak

After updating to iOS 18.2, you'll first need to sign up for the Apple Intelligence waitlist (if you don't already have it enabled). Go to Settings > Apple Intelligence & Siri and tap the toggle next to Apple Intelligence to get started (read on here for more details).

We aren't done yet. Next, you'll need to sign up for the Image Playground waitlist to enable the generative images features in Image Playground, Genmoji, and Image Wand. Open the Image Playground app, tap Request Early Access, and then wait. Unlike the Apple Intelligence beta, which usually gets approved in just a couple of hours, you might need to wait weeks to get access to the Image Playground beta. Apple is letting users in quite slowly here.

Chat with ChatGPT

Before we get into the waitlisted features, let's talk about some of the features you can use right away. ChatGPT integration is ready to go as soon as you get Apple Intelligence and update to iOS 18.2. Ask Siri a slightly complicated question, like "plan a three-day trip to Paris" and Siri may politely ask if it can throw things off to ChatGPT instead. Tap Use ChatGPT, and in a second or two, you'll get a long ChatGPT response right where Siri would normally pop up. You can scroll through to read, and you can bring up Siri to ask follow-up questions, too. You can also tap the Copy button in the top-right corner to copy the response. As of writing, ChatGPT can only answer questions in text, so it can't interact with images. Siri features like taking action based on what you see on screen, multi-context app actions, and so on will be shipping later on, early next year.

Using ChatGPT on iPhone with Siri interface.
Credit: Khamosh Pathak

There are some Settings options to play with. In Settings > Apple Intelligence & Siri > ChatGPT, you can disable the popup that asks you to confirm if you want to use ChatGPT, so Siri will direct questions it can't handle straight to ChatGPT without asking for permission first (you can also just start your query with "Ask ChatGPT" to go straight to it, and any ChatGPT generated responses will still be clearly marked). You can also sign in with a ChatGPT account to keep a record of your requests (access to paid models will come down the line). From here, you can also easily disable the whole ChatGPT feature.

Look Up Anything With Visual Intelligence

The new beta also enables the Visual Intelligence feature that's exclusive to the iPhone 16 series. Press and hold the Camera Control and you'll see a new camera interface. Take a photo of something, anything, and Apple will show you relevant info about the photo subject. If it's a phone number, you will get an option to call it; if it's a restaurant, you'll see reviews and photos of dishes.

Visual Intelligence in iOS 18.2 Beta.
Credit: Khamosh Pathak

You'll also see an "Ask" icon to the left. Here, you can ask questions about what you're seeing and Apple will send the image to ChatGPT for help. It's like using the ChatGPT app, but in a native iPhone interface. You'll get a response from ChatGPT, and you can continue to ask follow-up questions, like with Siri.

Finally, there's a feature similar to Google Lens, but in an iPhone wrapper. If you tap the Image Search icon to the right of the shutter button, Apple will show you web results for images similar to what you're looking at. Because the data is coming from Google, I've had a lot of luck finding similar results.

Create Your Own Genmoji And AI Images

As we mentioned above, the Image Playground features have their own waitlist, and Apple is being quite stringent with the approval process. I, myself, haven't gotten in yet. If you install the iOS 18.2 Beta, expect a couple of weeks before you can demo these features.

It all starts with the new Image Playground app. In the new AI image generation app, Apple says you can create images in two styles using built-in themes and tools. It's a standalone app but it's also part of apps like Messages, Pages, Keynote and Freeform. There are a couple of ways to use this. In the app, you can start by describing an image that you want to create, where you'll then choose to use the animated style or a sketched style. Or, if you're in Messages, you can create an image based on context from the Messages thread. Apple is working to put up plenty of guardrails around this feature, so hopefully it will be safe from abusive imagery.

Generating images using Image Playground on iPad.
Credit: Apple

Genmoji lets you create emoji-style sticker images using a prompt or photos of your contacts or friends, for more casual use.

Creating Genmoji on iPhone
Credit: Apple

Image Playground also extends to the Notes app in the form of the Image Wand feature. Here, you can draw a sketch, select it with the Image Wand, and Apple will give you options to zhuzh it up with an animated or cartoon style. It should also work in blank space, where it will generate imagery based on the text of your notes instead.

Updates to Writing Tools

Writing Tools update on iOS 18.2
Credit: Apple

There's also a new update to the just-released Writing Tools feature that makes it more dynamic. In iOS 18.1, you're stuck with a couple of pre-baked options for rewriting text, like "Professional" or "Friendly." In the iOS 18.2 beta, you can use the Describe Your Change feature to get specific about the rewrite. You can say "write this in a more excited tone" or "write it like a haiku," and Apple will do it for you.

Set Your Default Messaging and Phone Apps

Setting default apps for calling and messaging in iOS 18.2.
Credit: Khamosh Pathak

Outside of Apple Intelligence, there's a new menu option in Settings. When you go to the recently added Apps section in Settings, you'll see a brand new Default Apps hub at the top. Here, you can change the default apps for email, messaging, calling, call filtering, and browsing. The Messaging and Calling sections are new, and no, it's not just limited to the EU: users worldwide can see this. As of writing, this feature isn't functional for me, but it should start working once the update reaches the wider public.



from News https://ift.tt/0iRP3jV
via IFTTT

What's New on Prime Video and Freevee in November 2024

Prime Video had a packed October lineup but will be a little lighter in November when it comes to original content. First up is Cross (Nov. 14), a thriller series starring Aldis Hodge as a D.C. homicide detective working with his partner (played by Isaiah Mustafa) to track down a serial killer. After a number of failed adaptations, the 90s cult film Cruel Intentions is getting another attempt at a reboot (Nov. 21) in an eight-episode series starring Sarah Catherine Hook and Zac Burgess as step-siblings deceiving their way around Greek life at their D.C. college.

You can also stream the anime film Look Back (Nov. 7), directed by Kiyotaka Oshiyama and based on Tatsuki Fujimoto's Shonen Jump story, and sci-fi comedy My Old Ass (Nov. 7), a coming-of-age film starring Aubrey Plaza as the older version of the 18-year-old character played by Maisy Stella. The latter premiered at the 2024 Sundance Film Festival. Plus, there are two comedy specials coming to the platform in November: Jeff Dunham's Scrooged-Up Holiday Special (Nov. 19) and Kaleb Cooper's The World According To Kaleb: On Tour (Nov. 29).

Prime Video will also air Election Night Live with Brian Williams on Nov. 5 and the platform's second Black Friday matchup between the Las Vegas Raiders and the Kansas City Chiefs (Nov. 29) in addition to the ongoing Thursday Night Football broadcast.

Here’s everything else coming to Prime Video and Amazon-owned, ad-supported Freevee in November, including a slate of holiday content .

What’s coming to Prime Video in November 2024

Arriving November 1

  • 12 Days of Christmas Eve

  • 3 Ninjas Knuckle Up

  • 50 To 1

  • A Knight's Tale

  • Absolute Deception

  • Across The Universe

  • Agent Cody Banks

  • Agent Cody Banks 2: Destination London

  • Airplane II: The Sequel

  • Airplane!

  • All Saints

  • Almost Christmas

  • Anacondas: The Hunt For The Blood Orchid

  • Anger Management

  • Apache

  • Bad Company

  • Battlefield Earth

  • Battleship

  • Big Night

  • Blizzard

  • Blown Away

  • Bobby Jones: Stroke of Genius

  • Boomerang

  • Bucky Larson: Born To Be A Star

  • Carrie (1976)

  • Carrie (2013)

  • Casualties Of War

  • Catch Me If You Can

  • Catch-22

  • Children of Men

  • Cold Mountain

  • Comes A Horseman

  • Cowboys & Aliens

  • Crazy In Alabama

  • Dear Christmas

  • Dear John

  • Death Wish 3

  • Death Wish 4: The Crackdown

  • Death Wish II

  • Die Hard

  • Disturbia

  • Double Team

  • Driven

  • Dumb And Dumber To

  • Dune

  • Equals

  • Escape From Alcatraz

  • Exodus

  • F/X

  • Fame

  • Flash of Genius

  • Flight

  • Gladiator

  • Gone Baby Gone

  • Good Boy!

  • Good Will Hunting

  • Gorky Park

  • Gosford Park

  • Guns Of The Magnificent Seven

  • Harriet the Spy

  • Hell is for Heroes

  • Hour Of The Gun

  • How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days

  • Identity Thief

  • In & Out

  • Invasion of the Body Snatchers

  • It Takes Two

  • Jacob's Ladder

  • Jingle All the Way

  • Escape from L.A.

  • John Grisham's The Rainmaker

  • Johnny Mnemonic

  • Just Like Heaven

  • Kill Your Darlings

  • Kingdom of Heaven

  • Les Miserables

  • Leviathan

  • Libre

  • Loch Ness

  • Lords of Dogtown

  • Mario Puzo's The Godfather, Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone

  • Margot At The Wedding

  • Mean Girls

  • Meet John Doe

  • Men

  • Michael Jackson's This Is It

  • Midnight in Paris

  • Mr. Mom

  • Murphy's Law

  • Neighbors

  • Of Gods and Men

  • One Direction: This Is Us (Extended Cut)

  • Pan's Labyrinth

  • Play Misty For Me

  • Popeye

  • Radio Flyer

  • Rambo III

  • Reba McEntire's Christmas In Tune

  • Return Of The Seven

  • Ride Along With Gag Reel

  • Rio Lobo

  • Roboshark

  • Rosemary's Baby

  • Roxanne

  • Run Lola Run

  • Rust

  • Santa Claus: The Movie

  • Saving Silverman

  • School of Rock

  • Scrooged

  • She's So Lovely

  • Silver Linings Playbook

  • Slackers

  • Small Soldiers

  • Sonic the Hedgehog

  • Star Trek VIII: First Contact

  • Steel Magnolias

  • Steve Jobs

  • Still of the Night

  • Straw Dogs

  • Surviving Christmas

  • Target

  • The Animal

  • The Apartment

  • The Aviator

  • The Christmas Edition

  • The Eiger Sanction

  • The Family Stone

  • The Godfather

  • The Godfather, Part II

  • The Good Shepherd

  • The Great Escape

  • The Holiday

  • The Italian Job

  • The King's Man

  • The Lady In The Van

  • The Magnificent Seven

  • The Magnificent Seven Ride

  • The People vs. Larry Flynt

  • The Pursuit Of Happyness

  • The Saint

  • The Soloist

  • The Spectacular Now

  • The Swan Princess And The Secret Of The Castle

  • The Swan Princess Christmas

  • The Terminator

  • The White Buffalo

  • The Wonderful Country

  • The Theory of Everything

  • To Sleep With Anger

  • Tom & Jerry

  • Tower Heist

  • Turbulence

  • Ultraviolet

  • Universal Soldier: Day Of Reckoning

  • Walk of Shame

  • Walking Tall

  • War of The Worlds

  • Zona Mortal

  • Bones S1-16

Arriving November 5

  • Back to Black

  • Election Night Live with Brian Williams

Arriving November 7

  • Look Back

  • My Old Ass

  • Citadel: Honey Bunny

Arriving November 8

  • Every Minute Counts

Arriving November 9

  • ONE Fight Night on Prime Video

Arriving November 11

  • Me Before You

Arriving November 14

  • Cross

Arriving November 15

  • The Night Before Christmas in Wonderland

Arriving November 19

  • Abigail

  • Jeff Dunham's Scrooged-Up Holiday Special

Arriving November 20

  • Wish List Games

Arriving November 21

  • Cruel Intentions (2024)

  • Dinner Club S3

Arriving November 22

  • The Meg

Arriving November 24

  • Coraline

Arriving November 26

  • It's In the Game

Arriving November 28

  • Oshi no Ko

Arriving November 29

  • The World According To Kaleb: On Tour

  • Black Friday Football

What’s coming to Freevee in November 2024

Arriving November 1

  • A Perfect Day

  • Christmas with the Kranks

  • Copshop

  • Earth to Echo

  • House at the End of the Street

  • Passengers

  • Puss in Boots

  • Rampage

  • She's the Man

  • The Edge of Seventeen

  • The LEGO Movie

  • Think Like a Man

  • Think Like a Man Too

Arriving November 7

  • Moonbound

Arriving November 13

  • UglyDolls

Arriving November 28

  • The Secret: Dare to Dream



from News https://ift.tt/EgUpQTD
via IFTTT

The Best New Microsoft Copilot Features You Can Use Right Now

Microsoft's AI chatbot, Copilot, has been steadily growing and adding new features since its introduction last year. (At that time, Microsoft called it Bing Chat.) As with all things AI, it can be difficult to keep up with the changes and new features, but Microsoft is updating Copilot at a steady clip.

Here are some of the best features and changes Microsoft has brought to Copilot this year.

Copilot has an app now

If you're still using the Copilot web app, feel free to keep doing so. However, since the beginning of 2024, Microsoft has offered Copilot as a dedicated mobile app as well. You can choose to use the experience signed in or signed out, but signing into your Microsoft account gives you access to more features (including bypassing the very strict prompt limit). As of October, the Copilot app (and site) even have a new look.

Everyone can use Copilot in Microsoft 365 (if you pay)

One of Copilot's flagship features is its integration with Microsoft 365. Microsoft turned the bot into an AI Clippy, adding AI assistant options to apps like Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote. However, Copilot in 365 was only available to business users—the rest of us that use these apps outside of work were out of luck.

That changed early in 2024, when Microsoft rolled out Copilot support in Microsoft 365 to all Copilot Pro users. As long as you subscribe to the plan for $20 per month (and you have a separate Microsoft 365 subscription), you can try out Copilot in this suite of apps. While it's a pricey subscription, if you're interested in Copilot, it might be worth the price, since Microsoft is adding most of Copilot's new features to Microsoft 365 apps.

You can use Copilot in Outlook

Previously, if you wanted to use Copilot in Outlook, you needed to head to the web app or go the long way through Microsoft Teams. Since May 2024, however, Microsoft has offered Copilot support in the Outlook app itself. That makes it easier to use some of the new Copilot features in Outlook, like email draft coaching and choosing the tone of a draft (e.g. neutral, casual, formal), to help manage your email. Since July, Copilot has been able to recognize the email you're reading so it drafts an appropriate response when asked.

Use Microsoft Designer in Copilot

As of September 2024, you're now able to pull AI generated images into both Word and PowerPoint documents. You can prompt Copilot from the chat window, ask for an image of your choosing, and add the results to your document. Copilot will also search Microsoft's stock image library for you if you don't want to make something new.

Reference files when prompting Copilot

Since May 2024, you've been able to pull in files from your device, SharePoint, and OneDrive when prompting Copilot. If you want the bot to summarize a Word doc, or to have the context of a Powerpoint presentation when responding to your prompt, just type a / when prompting to pull up the file locator.

Since June, you've been able to reference PDFs as well, and ask Copilot to compare two referenced documents and explain the differences between them. Starting in July, Microsoft added the ability to generate summaries from multiple referenced files. And, as of September, you've been able to use Copilot to compare up to five documents side-by-side in OneDrive as well.

Catch-up with Copilot

In July 2024, Microsoft rolled out "Catch-up," which lets you use Copilot to, well, catch up on what's going on with your work. Copilot should be able to tell you about projects that are due, give you the latest updates on those tasks, and pull up relevant conversations with coworkers. Copilot can also identify time periods now, so you can ask it for a document you first made back in February, for example.

New options in Word with Copilot

In 2024, Microsoft has given Copilot in Word a boost. Here are some of the highlights:

  • Use Rewrite on specific sections of a document.

  • Highlight a portion of text to summarize and share.

  • Create tables from your text.

  • Make new tables based on the format of previous tables in your doc.

  • Confidential docs are labeled as confidential when referencing them in new docs.

  • Pull from up to three other files to create new content.

  • Rework text, lists, or tables, and ask for an explanation of the selected information.

  • Search the web for content or information directly from Word.

  • Pull in emails, meeting notes, and contacts when writing in Word.

  • Copilot now has expanded paste options.

New features for Copilot in Excel

Microsoft has been adding new Copilot features to Excel this year as well. Since the beginning of this year, here's what you've been able to do:

  • Request a chart of your data.

  • Ask Copilot follow-up questions, including requesting clarifications to previous responses.

  • Generate formula column options with one prompt.

  • Use Copilot to figure out why you're running into issues with a task.

  • Ask Copilot to generate a formula column.

  • Copilot can reason with data ranges that only have one row of headers.

  • As of September, Copilot is now fully integrated in Excel.

Copilot in PowerPoint

Since June 2024, Microsoft has added new Copilot functionality to PowerPoint. Here are the features you can expect to find:

  • Copilot can add an agenda slide to your presentation.

  • Create presentations from PDFs.

  • Start a presentation from a Word document without copying links into the deck.

  • Copilot can summarize and answer questions about presentations.

Copilot in OneNote

OneNote actually has had quite a few new Copilot features since January 2024. If you have access to Copilot in OneNote and frequently use the app, here's what you can look for:

  • Create notes from audio recordings and transcriptions, then ask Copilot to summarize the notes and arrange them in different ways.

  • Create to-do lists with Copilot.

  • Copilot can search through information within your organization for added context to your requests.

  • Ask Copilot to organize your notes for you.

  • Copilot now recognizes handwriting, so you can scribble out a prompt in the chat window.

Copilot for Teams got an upgrade

If you use Copilot in Teams, you may notice now that the bot can now automatically take notes during meetings. If you head to Recap the meeting, you can get a summary of what your team or the call just talked about.

You may also see a new Copilot option attached to the top of your Teams chats. This lets you quickly prompt Copilot inside chats, pulling in documents with the / key. You'll also see that Teams will alert you when AI is being used in a meeting, such as when Copilot is in use without transcriptions.

In addition, you can use AI writing tools in Teams to rewrite or adjust the tone of your messages.

Coming soon

Microsoft adds new Copilot features every month, which they announce on both the latest updates blog post as well as a dedicated monthly "What's New" update, such as this post from September 2024.

However, we know some features that are on their way. Earlier this month, Microsoft announced Copilot Voice, a new feature that lets you have a more natural conversation with the chatbot. In addition, the company is working on Copilot Daily, which uses AI to summarize the day's top headlines. There's also "Think Deeper," a feature in testing that gives Copilot more time to analyze your prompts, with the goal of delivering a more complete and useful result.



from News https://ift.tt/Ijdx0iX
via IFTTT

11 Practical, Everyday Uses for AI Tools

Almost two years into the "AI revolution," you’re probably sick of hearing about all the ways artificial intelligence will either transform the world into a utopia, or replace you at your job and ruin the environment. The fear and anxiety are exhausting, but so is the hype—and so far it's a lot of just that, hype. Sure, many AI-powered apps are useful, but those are tightly focused pieces of software, and far from the loose, ask-me-anything platforms like ChatGPT or Gemini.

And if you’ve used one of those AI platforms, you already know that AI frequently gets things wrong, sometimes in hilariously public ways. Often, AI-powered gadgets that promise to revolutionize the way you interact with the world don't seem to do much of anything. The fact is, aspects of AI can be useful, but AI is hardly all-powerful. And when it seems that AI isn't doing much more than generating music no one wants to listen to and books no one wants to read, you’re not wrong to wonder whether the technology has any real, practical uses.

As it turns out, it does, provided you limit the scope and keep your expectations in check. Here are nine ways AI platforms actually can make your life just a little easier right now.

If you’re trying to keep your grocery costs low or need to create recipes and shopping lists for specific dietary needs, you know that it can be an overwhelming job that eats up a lot of time, between chasing down the best prices, sourcing coupons, and picking ingredients. AI can really help out here (there are even specific grocery AI bots out there you can use, like Buzzfeed’s Tasty): You can literally tell it your dietary restrictions, food preferences, and budget, and ask it to create meal plans and make shopping lists for you. Alternatively, you can feed the contents of your pantry into these tools and ask for recipes you can make without shopping for anything else. You'll still want to gives the recommendations a once-over to make sure they actually make sense to you and meet your needs, but it's easier than starting from scratch.

Managing your schedule

Are your days less organized and more an anxiety-filled rush? AI may be able to help. You can give an AI platform your to-do list, your basic schedule (work hours, meetings, lunch plans, etc.) and ask it to create a schedule for your day. This way, instead of having to puzzle out how much time each task should take, a machine can do it for you, and you can always tweak it by modifying your prompt with requests for more down time or by adding background tasks for peak efficiency. For a bonus, throw in a tool like Reclaim, which analyzes your calendar and schedule to find ways to claw back more free time.

Handle simple correspondence

AI tools like ChatGPT can’t always be trusted to write long, research-heavy documents—they have a tendency to blatantly lie and make up sources—but they are actually very good at short, boring stuff like emails, especially the template-friendly stuff like customer service contacts, thank you notes, or RSVPs and the like. These kinds of messages aren’t hard to write and don’t take much of your time, but that also makes them well within AI’s limited skill set, and every one you offload to ChatGPT is five to ten minutes of your life back.

Start brainstorming

This is perhaps one of the greatest strengths of AI, because it’s where all that weirdness that makes an AI bot think there are only two “Rs” in the word strawberry becomes a positive. AI is great at just throwing suggestions at you in response to a prompt. Whether it’s ideas for activities to keep kids busy, party planning ideas, new shows to watch, or gift ideas, AI can save you some time by dumping a long list of suggestions in just a few seconds.

Build a packing list

If you’re going on a trip, especially to a destination you’ve never been to before, you can provide an AI Chatbot (or a specific app like PackPoint) with where you’re going, how long you’re staying, and a brief list of probable activities and it can generate a packing list for you. Not only can AI help you choose what you’ll need to bring, it can even suggest things to pack that you might not have otherwise considered.

Calculate the cost of a DIY project or renovation

When you’re renovating your home, the math can get kind of difficult faster than you might think. While there are plenty of calculators online to help you figure out how many tiles, gallons of paint, or deck planks you need, AI can be a lot more accurate and flexible, because you can feed all the specifics into the prompt, including all the weird corners and features of your floor or room—plus, it can show you its math so you can check it against reality and adjust your prompts if things don't look quite right. It can then also help you estimate costs and create lists of tools and materials you’ll need for the job.

Summarizing anything

The age of the quick, pithy podcast or the YouTube video that immediately showed you what you want to know is long gone—and the age of the four hour podcast or video is here. Even if you watch or listen to something at 2X speed, that’s a lot of time to invest. Well, your favorite AI Chatbot can summarize it for you very effectively, so if all you want out of a podcast or video is the information it contain, serve it up to AI and get a clear, bulleted summary in return—with time stamps included, so you can jump to specific points to listen for yourself.

Handle everyday math

Math is mysterious (to many of us—and to AI Chatbots), yet it’s how the universe works. If you struggle with any math beyond a grade school level, you already know that there are tons of calculators and other tools online to help you do math—but those only help if you know the calculation you need to do in the first place. For example, I asked ChatGPT the following:

I have 300 books and a bookcase with five shelves that is 30 inches wide and 80 inches tall. Can I fit all the books on in the bookcase?

And it responded with:

Let's assume each shelf is evenly spaced, and we can use all the height available for books.

  • Shelf height per shelf: 80 inches / 5 shelves = 16 inches per shelf

  • Total linear shelf space (width of each shelf multiplied by the number of shelves): 30 inches × 5 shelves = 150 linear inches of shelf space

Estimating Space Occupied by the Books:

  • Let’s assume the average thickness of each book is about 1 inch (this can vary widely depending on the type of books, but we’ll use this as a rough average).

Therefore, 300 books would require approximately 300 linear inches of space.

Conclusion:

  • Total available space: 150 linear inches

  • Space required for 300 books: 300 linear inches

Since the space required (300 inches) is much greater than the space available (150 inches), you will not be able to fit all 300 books in the bookcase.

As you can see, while AI is famously not always great at doing math, what makes it useful despite that deficiency is the fact that you can ask it to perform calculations based on your description of a problem, telling you what math you need and walking you through the process. This allows you to take AI’s work and check it using other available tools, because now you know the right question to ask.

Practice for an interview

Trying for a new job can be a nerve-wracking (and seemingly endless) experience these days. If you actually get to the interview stage, you know you need to practice. While having a real, live person throw questions at you might be the best way to prepare, AI can step in and help you practice for those interviews very effectively. And AI tools have one advantage over your buddy: They won’t get tired of going over the same question over and over again.

Writing online ads (and pricing what you sell)

If you’ve ever tried to sell something, you know that composing an ad that lures in potential buyers with the right mix of data and drama can be a challenge. Large language models excel in this sort of writing, though, so you can feed the specifics of your item and terms into a chatbot and ask it to just create the ad for you, even making suggestions for what you should change to either maximize profit or move it more quickly You’ll want to let it know where your ad will appear, the basic info about the item, and anything else it might need to know. Then sit back and let it compose a compelling piece of salesmanship that saves your precious time for figuring out how to spend your profits.

Quickly formatting text files

If you regularly record phone conversations or dictate voice notes, you know that even the best transcription services often turn lengthy audio recordings into monolithic blocks of text that lack punctuation, paragraph breaks, or other helpful elements. The good news is that large language models are very good at seeking out quotes, organizing dialogue, and finding logical spots for paragraph breaks. You can even ask it to add in speaker names or dialogue tags, and it will do a reasonably good job at it. Text manipulation of any kind is kind of AI’s whole deal, so any time you have a text file to clean up, AI can save you some time. (Just make sure to check its work after, as it might miss some things or introduce new errors.)



from News https://ift.tt/Zy73AxE
via IFTTT

Six Ways You Can Use AI to Better Manage Your Email

Technology seems to be advancing at lightning speed, but somehow, we're all still often communicating like it's 1994: Email is very much still a thing for both personal and business use, and it's not going away anytime soon. While you can't change society's communication protocols, what you can change is your approach to email itself. That is to say, if you're so inclined, you can introduce a little modern technology, in the form of artificial intelligence tools, into a much older messaging standard.

Whether these new AI tools are particularly useful for how you engage with email is a matter of personal preference. However, these tools do exist, and companies will continue to build and develop them. Whether you're interested in improving your communication skills generally or you're looking for a virtual assist to finally get to inbox zero, consider these six ways you can use AI alongside your email.

On accessing AI tools in email

There are plenty of dedicated AI apps out there for all types of purposes—email writing or otherwise—but you can safely ignore the vast majority of them. For one, they usually want your money: Help Scout, for example, has assembled a roundup of different AI email assistants, including its own, that range from $4 to a whopping $49 per user per month. (Their own program costs $40 per user per month, for what it's worth.) That is, in this AI-skeptic's humble opinion, absurd.

Rather, if you're interested in incorporating AI into your email workflow, I believe you're better off relying on either free, accessible tools, such as Copilot's free chatbot, or trying the programs built into the email apps and platforms you already use. For the latter, I'm thinking of options like Microsoft's Copilot with Outlook, which isn't cheap, either—it requires two subscriptions to use: Copilot Pro ($20 per month), and Microsoft 365 ($6.99 per month or $69.99 per year).

Either option can get you there for the most part, but below, I'll also cover one particular situation in which you'll need to look to a paid third-party solution.

How to use AI with your email

Drafting your messages

If you spend a lot of your day (or, perhaps, the majority of it) writing emails, you may feel a bit burnt out when crafting that last message before closing time. One of AI's "promises" is that it can handle the busywork for you. In this case, you can try relying on it to write your emails on your behalf, so you don't have to type each and every one of them out yourself.

You don't need to have AI running directly in or alongside your email app of choice in order to do this, of course. You could always ask your chatbot of choice to draft an email about a subject of your choice, and then copy and paste the results into your email.

However, if you're set up for it, you can rely on built-in tools to do the same. Copilot, for example, works directly in Outlook, via the Draft with Copilot feature. You type out the type of message you want (i.e. Inform the team we have the green light on the project, with a deadline of the end of the month), and it will write up your email.

No matter which method you use, the AI likely responds to feedback, as well. Seeing as AI is prone to error, you may have to make some corrections. Your AI of choice likely supports revisions to their outputs. If the email the AI drafted isn't quite hitting the mark, you can share what you'd like to see instead, and the AI will rewrite the message accordingly. How the bots take in your feedback will likely depend on how they're designed. For Copilot, for example, you can either simply send another prompt with your revisions, or choose the "Regenerate" option that gives another go at the draft.

Proofreading your writing

Spellcheck has probably saved your neck more than a few times. (I know it has saved mine.) But while spellcheck is great at catching misspelled words, and grammar checks similarly spot issues with syntax, they aren't a replacement for an outside editor who can take an objective look at your writing as a whole, and identify areas that need improvement.

If you don't have a colleague available to scan your email draft, you can try using an AI tool to catch things you might have missed yourself. Let's say you decided to write the email yourself, but you don't trust your own eyes to read over it thoroughly and catch any errors or awkwardness. You can copy the text of the email and paste it into a chatbot, and ask the bot to proofread your writing for both spelling and grammar mistakes, as well as for overall clarity.

Once the text looks good to both you and the bot, just copy and paste it back into your email app, and send it off.

Receiving coaching on your writing

Going beyond simple proofreading, Microsoft has a feature called "Coaching by Copilot" that offers advice on how to improve your email writing skills. It might help for those times you feel like your email needs to be punched up, but you're not sure how or where.

Copilot will offer advice on three key categories: Tone (perhaps you could be a bit more formal in your message to a client), Reader Sentiment (maybe there's room to address the recipient's concerns more than you do), and Clarity (are you giving enough details in your response to answer the recipient's questions?) Copilot will also offer specific examples of things you could say that fit its advice. If you like any of the suggestions, you can copy and paste them into your email.

Email coaching with Copilot
Credit: Microsoft

Changing the tone of your messages

AI developers have long advertised their technologies as excellent tools for rewriting your drafts in a different tone of voice. If your first attempt at an email is too informal, for example—perhaps because you've let latent frustrations through, or because you're too used to messaging friends rather than coworkers—you can try tagging in a bot to rewrite the piece with a more professional tone. If your writing tends to be stoic and stilted, you can task the AI with making it more fun and lighthearted, depending on who you're sending the email to.

Copilot in Outlook, for instance, offers these tools in an edit menu in the "Draft with Copilot" function. You can choose from "Direct," "Neutral," "Casual," "Formal," or "Make it a poem." (Companies frequently enjoy adding at least one "fun" tone change to the mix, whether or not you actually use it.)

Use these features with caution, however. AI writing has its quirks and tendencies that may be apparent to anyone with a keen eye for it. You may notice some flowery language when AI tries to rewrite a message to be more personal, or strange word choices when making a message more serious.

Summarizing a long email or message thread

Even if you don't want to use AI for any creative work, it might appeal to you when reading through lengthy emails or long message threads. If you have Copilot in Outlook, for example, you'll find a new "Summarize" button at the top of your inbox. Using it, the AI will scan through one particular email or a thread, and summarize the key points for you. Copilot will also attach numbers to specific highlights, so you can see where in the email or thread the bot pulled that information from.

Copilot summarizing an email thread
Credit: Microsoft

Managing your inbox

Surprisingly, most mainstream email AI bots are mostly designed for creating and summarizing emails, and don't offer many features for actually managing your inbox. They tend to prioritize text generation over message management.

I imagine that will change in the near future (I'd be shocked if Microsoft doesn't invest in AI email management solutions), but until then, you do need to look to third-party options if you want to experience these features here and now.

One option that seems decent is Sanebox, an AI-powered extension you can use with most email services, including Outlook. Here's a brief overview of the key AI features:

  • There's SaneLater, which filters less important message out of your inbox for you to check later.

  • Sanebox then filters future emails from these senders to this folder.

  • If the email in question is a newsletter, advertisement, or any other message you don't want to see again, there's SaneBlackHole, which filters out these emails and trashes them on your behalf.

  • Finally, there's the Email Deep Clean: You can task the AI to look for emails older than a specific date, and it rounds up the messages it thinks you don't need in your archives. You'll receive a list of all emails it finds, and choose whether to save them, or delete them.



from News https://ift.tt/PsndN3c
via IFTTT

CES 2025: Govee’s New Pixel Light Will Remind You of a Lite Brite

We may earn a commission from links on this page. Today at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) , Govee is debuting a series of new light p...