Apple has unveiled the Apple Vision Pro, a spatial computer that seamlessly combines digital content with the physical world, incorporating a fully three-dimensional user interface controlled by a user's eyes, hands, and voice.
Featuring visionOS, the world's first spatial operating system, Vision Pro allows users to interact with digital content in a way that feels like it is physically present in their space.
Apple Vision Pro can transform any space into a personal movie theatre, enables users to capture and relive memories, access a range of app experiences, and features an advanced Spatial Audio system.
Apple has announced its first spatial computer, the Apple Vision Pro, with an impressive resolution of 23 million pixels but some users criticize the dot pitch of the display and discomfort for extended use.
The headset is priced at $3,500, limiting its consumer adoption, but could be used for remote work, presentations, and gamers.
The headset has potential use cases in various fields, including AR‐based instruction, home decoration, and watching movies alone. However, concerns about discomfort, battery life, cost, and lack of killer apps remain.
The U.S. Patent Office has proposed new rules that could make it more difficult for everyday users and creators to challenge wrongly granted patents.
The proposed rules could offer new protections to patent trolls, making it impossible for organizations like EFF to file patent challenges altogether.
Supporters who care about a fair patent system are urged to file comments using the government's public comment system to express their opposition to the proposed rules.
The USPTO is attempting to limit IPRs for invalidating patents without protection domains, which the EFF believes will limit challenges to patents that should be open to all.
Patent challenges should be open to all, regardless of for-profit or non-profit status, as organizations of all sizes are protected by challenges from others.
The suggested USPTO rule change to limit third-party challenges to frivolous patents deemed non-litigious could have a chilling effect on innovation, according to critics.
Former lead developer of Rust, Graydon Hoare, reveals significant differences between the Rust language as it exists today and the Rust he originally envisioned.
Hoare's priorities for Rust included simplicity over performance and expressivity, which differs from the community's focus on "zero cost abstraction" and expressive features.
The Rust community has created a successful and popular language that differs from Hoare's original vision, which he believes would have been unpopular.
Users report a decline in quality and accuracy of Google's search results, with an emphasis on sponsored content- Some attribute the decline in quality to Google's focus on generating revenue through ads and AI predictions- Alternative search engines like Kagi are emerging due to Google's perceived decline.
My Reddit account was banned after adding my subs to the protest- The post details how a user added their subreddits to a protest for racial justice and was subsequently banned from the platform for violating community guidelines.
They express frustration with their inability to appeal the ban and argue that it is an infringement on their right to free speech.
The post has garnered significant attention and debate on the censorship and moderation practices of social media platforms.