LG Display came to CES 2024 with something to prove. It had transparent OLEDs in its Las Vegas showroom, a 480Hz gaming monitor and the company’s most advanced OLED panels equipped with META technology 2.0. While it may sound like promotional fluff (and there is some), LG Display is trying to address OLED’s biggest weakness in the face of ever-improving LEDs, MicroLEDs and the like. Using advanced microlens arrays (now called MLA+) and new algorithms, LG Display says it makes OLED 42 percent brighter than its predecessor.
At CES 2024, I am one take a closer look on prototype panels, heading to TVs later this year.
– Matt Smith
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It was co-designed by Teenage Engineering.
A new startup called Rabbit thinks our virtual assistants are a less than ideal implementation of artificial intelligence, and they’re not wrong. Rabbit’s dream is that you leave your apps behind to chat and interact with the radio for artificial intelligence instead of jabbing at your face with a distracting device.
The nifty piece of hardware (thanks, TE) is reminiscent of the Playdate handheld with its analog scroll wheel and “360-degree rotating eye,” but its coolest feature isn’t that we’ve seen it work. real life yet – is its ability to use interfaces rather than APIs or applications. You can teach him to use Photoshop to perform simple editing tasks and even play Diablo for you. You can then repeat these tasks at any time.
The Rabbit R1 is priced at $199 and is available for pre-order with an expected delivery date of late April.
The company also published a response to The New York Times lawsuit.
OpenAI and its biggest backer, Microsoft, are facing several lawsuits accusing them of using the copyrighted works of others without permission to train large language models (LLMs) of the past. OpenAI wrote in evidence to the UK House of Lords Communications and Digital Select Committee that “it would be impossible to train today’s leading AI models without using copyrighted material”.
In some lawsuits, plaintiffs accuse the companies of refusing to pay authors for their work and making huge financial gains from copyrighted material while building a billion-dollar industry.
It is relatively affordable at $1,500.
The ASUS Zenbook Duo has two screens and a removable Bluetooth keyboard that can be tucked inside for travel. This iteration stands out because its OLED panels are slightly larger than those on competing devices, at 14 inches, while offering 3K resolution, a 120Hz refresh rate, and stylus support. Plus, with a starting price of $1,500, it costs $500 less than the Yoga Book.
Whimsical in three colors.
The iPhone’s touchscreen killed the smartphone’s physical keyboard, so why not resurrect it with a case? The design of the clicks could not be simpler. It’s a silicone case with a physical keyboard underneath that comes with the iPhone 14 Pro, iPhone 15 Pro, and iPhone 15 Pro Max. Read on for our first impressions.