Bildschirmprobleme: Berichte über eingebrannte OLEDs beim iPhone 15
Das iPhone 15 Pro weist bei einigen Nutzern nur wenige Wochen nach seiner Markteinführung Displayprobleme mit dem OLED auf. (iPhone 15, Apple)
Just another news site
Das iPhone 15 Pro weist bei einigen Nutzern nur wenige Wochen nach seiner Markteinführung Displayprobleme mit dem OLED auf. (iPhone 15, Apple)
Die Frage-und-Antwort-Plattform Stack Overflow hat mehr als 140 Mitarbeiter entlassen, um die Kosten zu senken. Das entspricht 28 Prozent der Belegschaft. (KI, Wirtschaft)
Microsoft Intune, die cloudbasierte MDM- und MAM-Lösung, ermöglicht Unternehmen den Schutz ihrer essenziellen Daten und die Umsetzung von Sicherheitsrichtlinien. Die Golem Karrierewelt zeigt, wie. (Golem Karrierewelt, Microsoft)
Microsoft Intune, die cloudbasierte MDM- und MAM-Lösung, ermöglicht Unternehmen den Schutz ihrer essenziellen Daten und die Umsetzung von Sicherheitsrichtlinien. Die Golem Karrierewelt zeigt, wie. (Golem Karrierewelt, Microsoft)
There’s a Kickstarter campaign for a gadget that effectively breathes new life into old film cameras by replacing film with a digital sensor, and it’s kind of awesome that digital image sensor literally goes where the film used to live. Bu…
There’s a Kickstarter campaign for a gadget that effectively breathes new life into old film cameras by replacing film with a digital sensor, and it’s kind of awesome that digital image sensor literally goes where the film used to live. But of course not everything fits inside, which means that the bulk of the new […]
The post Lilbits: Turning old film cameras into digital cameras, Apple’s next-gen MacBooks, and undervolting the Steam Deck appeared first on Liliputing.
Will we see an iPad Air refresh, a new Pencil, or nothing this fall?
Over the past few days, there have been many conflicting rumors and reports, some from usually reliable sources, about Apple's plans for the next wave of iPad updates. But on close examination, the rumors may not be as contradictory as it seems.
First up was an email blast from Bloomberg's Mark Gurman on Sunday. Noting that he had written in July that we would see iPad refreshes before the end of the year, he appeared to walk that back, writing, "a new entry-level iPad, iPad Air and iPad mini are all in development with faster chips, but I don’t believe updates of any significance are imminent."
He pointed to his prior reporting that Apple plans a major iPad Pro update with an OLED screen next year, but not before 2023's end.
NYT asked the court to intervene and unseal secretive testimony in its entirety.
Dozens of exhibits from the Google antitrust trial are still being hidden from the public, The New York Times Company alleged in a court filing today.
According to The Times, there are several issues with access to public trial exhibits on both sides. The Department of Justice has failed to post at least 68 exhibits on its website that were shared in the trial, The Times alleged, and states have not provided access to 18 records despite reporters' requests.
Google's responses to document requests have also been spotty, The Times alleged. Sometimes Google "has not responded at all" to requests to review public exhibits. Other times, Google responds, but "often does not provide the exhibit in its entirety," The Times claimed, including limiting public access to "particular page(s) of the exhibit shown to a given witness."
Computer science student Luke Farritor won $40,000 from the Vesuvius Challenge.
Hundreds of badly charred ancient Roman scrolls found in a Roman villa have long been believed to be unreadable, but a 21-year-old computer science student at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln has successfully read the first text hidden within one of the rolled-up scrolls using a machine learning model. The achievement snagged Luke Farritor a $40,000 First Letters prize from the Vesuvius Challenge, a collaboration between private entrepreneurs and academics offering a series of rewards for milestones in deciphering the scrolls.
A second contestant, Youssef Nader, received a smaller $10,000 First Ink prize for essentially being the second person to decipher letters in a scroll. The main prize of $700,000 will be awarded to the first person to read four or more passages from one of the scrolls by December 31, and the founders are optimistic that this goal is achievable in light of these most recent breakthroughs.
As previously reported, the ancient Roman resort town Pompeii wasn't the only city destroyed in the catastrophic 79 AD eruption of Mount Vesuvius. Several other cities in the area, including the wealthy enclave of Herculaneum, were fried by clouds of hot gas called pyroclastic pulses and flows. But still, some remnants of Roman wealth survived. One palatial residence in Herculaneum—believed to have once belonged to a man named Piso —contained hundreds of priceless written scrolls made from papyrus, singed into carbon by volcanic gas.
Flip phones are all the rage again thanks to foldable OLED displays that allow device makers to make modern touchscreen phones that can fold in half. But a few decades ago a flip phone was a phone with a number pad on the bottom a screen on top. Japan…
Flip phones are all the rage again thanks to foldable OLED displays that allow device makers to make modern touchscreen phones that can fold in half. But a few decades ago a flip phone was a phone with a number pad on the bottom a screen on top. Japanese smartphone company P-Up World’s latest phone […]
The post This Japanese flip phone combines modern specs with a retro number pad appeared first on Liliputing.
The popular developer forum is still hunting for a “path to profitability.”
Stack Overflow used to be every developer's favorite site for coding help, but with the rise of generative AI like ChatGPT, chatbots can offer more specific help than a 5-year-old forum post ever could. You can get instant corrections to your exact code, optimization suggestions, and explanations of what each line of code is doing. While no chatbot is 100 percent reliable, code has the unique ability to be instantly verified by just testing it in your IDE (integrated development environment), which makes it an ideal use case for chatbots. Where exactly does that leave sites like Stack Overflow? Apparently, not in a great situation. Today, CEO Prashanth Chandrasekar announced Stack Overflow is laying off 28 percent of its staff.
In a post on the Stack Overflow blog, the CEO says the company is on a "path to profitability" and "continued product innovation." You might think of Stack Overflow as "just a forum," but the company is working on a direct answer to ChatGPT in the form of "Overflow AI," which was announced in July. Stack Overflow's profitability plan includes cutting costs, and that's the justification for the layoffs. Stack Overflow doubled its headcount in 2022 with 525 people. ChatGPT launched at the end of 2022, making for unfortunate timing.
Of course, the great irony of ChatGPT hurting Stack Overflow is that a great deal of the chatbot's development prowess comes from scraping sites like Stack Overflow. Chatbots have many questions to answer about the sustainability of the web. They vacuum up all this data and give nothing back, so what is supposed to happen when you drive all your data sources out of business?