Anyone who tells you the tech industry is boring needs to take a closer look. I see innovation everyday that continues to inspire and amaze me. Take xMEMS, which just unveiled the world's first solid state speaker. Earbuds may never be the same! https://lnkd.in/eFnrPJC5
Jeremy Kaplan’s Post
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It's a delight being part of the Future team! Success like this comes straight from the people that make it happen, and Future is full of the brightest folks in the biz.
The latest Comscore data release heralds an important landmark for Future's Technology brands – we’ve achieved a three-year unbroken stint as the UK’s largest Technology News publisher, reaching 9.2M unique users in June. What’s more, our individual sites, TechRadar and Tom's Guide consistently reach more tech enthusiasts in the UK than any other technology sites. While any success generally requires a smile or two from fortune, Future's market-leading position has certainly been achieved by design rather than accident, so I hope you will forgive this moment of reflection. Our objective at Future is to inform, educate and inspire people by connecting them with their passions. We do this through creating trusted, expert content and our strategy has been based upon uniting brands that enable us to reach this goal – aligning generalist brands with more niche brands so we can go deeper into specialist sectors. Technology is no exception and we are intensely proud of our stable of market-leading brands. TechRadar and T3 are what we think of as ‘legacy Future’ brands. They were bolstered through the acquisitions in 2018 of What Hi-Fi? and Purch, the latter bringing Tom's Guide and Tom's Hardware into the fold, while brands such as Android Central and Windows Central followed in 2019 from the Mobile Nations acquisition. While our portfolio has been crafted carefully over time, with a helping hand from acquisitions, consumer technology is very much part of Future's organisational DNA – we began with one computing magazine (Amstrad Action) nearly 40 years ago in a small town in Somerset, England. So our recent success should be seen as the continuation of a long tradition, handed down through passionate hands, of understanding the needs of readers and ensuring that we serve them better than anyone else. With Comscore we are looking through an exclusively digital lens, of course, but Future’s Technology brands remain a strong presence in print, with the UK’s best-selling computing title Computeractive, the multi-award winning T3 and the high-end audio bible What Hi-Fi? serving 200,000 readers a month. We also boast a number of enduringly successful events, such as The T3 Awards, The What Hi-Fi? Awards and The PC Pro Awards. Success is not something that should be taken for granted and our passion is fuelled by an incredible depth of editorial talent that lives and breathes the same hopes and fears as our readers. Nobody can say what the media landscape will look like in three years’ time, but I have every confidence that if we continue to put our readers first then Future’s Technology brands will continue to engage passionate audiences, as they have done very effectively for nearly 40 years. #digital #comscore #publishing #media #technology #journalism
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Oof, 1.5 stars, says Mark Spoonauer of Tom's Guide. AI-only gadgets are only just emerging. They clearly still have some growing up to do.
Rabbit R1 review: Avoid this AI gadget
tomsguide.com
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Not just serving on the board, Samsung's Paul Hearty was named chair of the Advanced Television Systems Committee (ATSC) standards body. Interesting, given that LG, one of the world's biggest TV makers, isn't shipping ATSC 3.0 tuners due to "patent concerns." I hope Samsung can help its competitor work through these issues ... #ATSC3 should be a big leap forward (if it ever gets off the ground). #TVStandards
ATSC recently sat down with Paul Hearty, PhD, Chief Standards Strategist, Digital Media Systems at Samsung Research America (SRA), to discuss his role in ATSC. He was recently elected to serve on the ATSC Board of Directors. Dr. Hearty is definitely "Someone You Should Know!" #atsc #atsc3 #nextgentv #broadcasting
Someone You Should Know: Paul J. Hearty, PhD, Samsung Research America - ATSC : NextGen TV
atsc.org
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People are constantly fretting that CES is getting stale, that innovation is over, and so on. They couldn't be more wrong. I had the opportunity to chat with Robert Schwartz of Starcom about some of the biggest trends from #@CES2024, and the thing that stood out most to me was the enormous number of areas where innovation is alive and thriving. Tech is such a powerful force for good in our lives -- I love being part of it!
For the latest episode of Starcom’s On Marketing podcast, Future's very own Jeremy Kaplan (Content Director, Tech) sat down with host Robert Schwartz (CMO, Starcom) to unpack all of the trends and topics that dominated #CES2024. 🎙 Hear what he had to say: https://lnkd.in/ePUXyfx3
CES wrap up with Jeremy Kaplan of Future
open.spotify.com
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Future's planning a bigger presence than ever before at #ces2024! If you're hitting the show, make time to see two of our smartest editors moderating panels on #smarthome trends!
Get smart home-savvy with Future at CES -- catch Tom's Guide U.S. Editor in Chief Mike Prospero and Laptop Magazine Editor in Chief Sherri L. Smith moderating home innovation conversations at the Venetian on Thursday, January 11. Register below -- see you there! Home Sweet Safe Smart Home: https://lnkd.in/eB-P8m9C Elevate Your Space: https://lnkd.in/e_vBfjWq
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Is it a huge update? Not really. In fact, you might not notice it at all. But this is a really really important step on the path to the #AIPC, a term you'll be sick of by the end of CES next week https://lnkd.in/eHgQBzxp
Windows 11 PCs to come with a Copilot key as Microsoft pushes forward with AI
tomshardware.com
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The NYTimes copyright infringement lawsuit against OpenAI and Microsoft underscores what Avram Piltch has been arguing about #AI on Tom's Hardware since the get go: "The popular models are built on a foundation of stolen intellectual property," as he noted in this morning's op ed. It's well worth a read!
AI’s Dreadful December: Lawsuits, plagiarism and child abuse images show the perils of training on data taken without consent.
tomshardware.com
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We're counting down the days, not until Xmas or NYE but #ces2024, when the year ahead in gadgets and technology gets trotted out and put on display. Here's my list of the top trends that will drive the show, from health tech and smart home to AI, AI, and more AI https://lnkd.in/ev-5uq7Z
6 trends to watch for at CES 2024: AI everywhere, Meteor Lake laptops, smart appliances, metaverse, and more
techradar.com
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Huge news from Microsoft this morning, capping a soap opera that AI could never have written. What a whirlwind!
We remain committed to our partnership with OpenAI and have confidence in our product roadmap, our ability to continue to innovate with everything we announced at Microsoft Ignite, and in continuing to support our customers and partners. We look forward to getting to know Emmett Shear and OAI's new leadership team and working with them. And we’re extremely excited to share the news that Sam Altman and Greg Brockman, together with colleagues, will be joining Microsoft to lead a new advanced AI research team. We look forward to moving quickly to provide them with the resources needed for their success.
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CEO - Accessibility dot Net, Inc. | Publisher - Freedom Of Text dot Com | Get Smart Learn About Computers on Audible
1yThat is awesome! The day is coming when the glasses you wear will be hearing aids grabbing audio in a 360 fashion and piping it to speakers that sit in your ears! Justin Osmond