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Everything you need to know about the tech at the Paris Olympics

The Paris 2024 Summer Olympics are about to begin, with the first events kicking off on July 24th and competition ending on August 11th. (You can see the full schedule on the Olympics website.) If you’re a Peacock subscriber, you’ll be able to watch live coverage of every event and take advantage of features like enhanced multiview and, um, daily recaps featuring an AI-generated version of Al Michaels’ voice.

Here’s our coverage of the biggest tech stories out of the Olympics.

  • Google’s Gemini AI will be all over the Paris Olympics broadcast

    Photo collage of the Olympic rings over a photo of the Olympic rings illuminated on the Eiffel Tower.
    Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge, Getty Images

    Google has bought itself the title of “official AI sponsor for Team USA,” and when the 2024 Olympics broadcast starts on July 26th, you will be reminded of that frequently. NBCUniversal’s partnership with Google will put many of the company’s AI-powered features front and center during the event.

    The broadcast will include Google Maps’ 3D views of venues like the Versailles, Stade Roland Garros, and the Aquatics Centre, as well as tidbits about what events will occur at each location. The imagery pulls from the Immersive Views added to Maps over the last few years that represent certain landmarks and areas of interest with photorealistic models.

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  • Comcast will have high bitrate, low latency 4K feeds of the Olympics.

    NBCUniversal owner Comcast announced tweaks it’s adding for the Paris Olympics on X1, like a customizable home screen and an “enhanced” 4K feed for the USA Network’s 24/7 broadcast sent over cable to X1 boxes.

    ...enhanced 4K brings together 4K video delivered over Comcast’s network at its highest bitrate, Dolby Vision® for life-like picture quality, Dolby Atmos immersive audio, and ultra-low latency

    A support page explains, “Enhanced 4K will be available on XG1v4 (low latency feed) and Hi-Fi on Xi6 (30 Mbps and low latency).”

    Disclosure: Comcast, which owns NBCUniversal, is also an investor in Vox Media, The Verge’s parent company.


    Simulated TV screen with a split showing higher quality “enhanced” 4K on one side
    Comcast 4K vs. enhanced 4K, delivered over the managed network as a cable channel.
    Image: Comcast
  • Uber will let you see average fares and wait times for different cities

    Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

    Uber rolled out a new update that lets users search average fares and wait times for planned trips in other cities. The company said it wants to give people who are planning trips or vacations more visibility into how much it will cost to book Uber rides when they get there.

    The update will give people access to fare and wait time details in approximately 10,000 cities globally, Uber says. The change rolls out starting on Tuesday, July 16th.

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  • Japan’s Olympic athletes will wear outfits designed to block infrared cameras

    Vector illustration of the Paris 2024 Olympics logo.
    Image: The Verge

    At the 2024 Paris Summer Olympics, Le Monde reports that athletes on Japan’s volleyball, track and field, and other teams will be competing in outfits made from a new fabric that can better absorb infrared light. Similar to stealth aircraft that avoid detection by deflecting radar signals away from detectors, the fabric absorbs and prevents infrared light from reaching cameras and infrared sensors.

    Some devices have unintentionally demonstrated how the infrared sensing used in night vision goggles and thermal cameras can reveal the unseen, like the OnePlus 8 Pro’s “Photochrom” color filter that worked like X-ray vision on the thin shell of an Apple TV. When used on people, infrared photography can reveal the lines of a person’s body or the undergarments they’re wearing beneath a thin layer of clothing, such as those worn by athletes.

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  • NBC’s Paris Olympics coverage will have AI-generated recaps, split screen, and more

    Photo collage of the Olympic rings over a photo of the Olympic rings illuminated on the Eiffel Tower.
    Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge, Getty Images

    The Paris 2024 Olympics are nearly here. The opening ceremony starts on July 26th, and this year’s events run through August 11th. On the main NBC channel, you can see hours of live morning and afternoon coverage of events like swimming and gymnastics ahead of a three-hour primetime recap, to go along with livestreams of every sport and event and full event replays on Peacock.

    One key aspect of NBC’s Peacock coverage will be an Olympics hub, which spotlights major events happening live, lets you browse by sport and by “star athlete,” offers an interactive schedule, and includes an up-to-date count of medal standings.

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  • An AI version of Al Michaels will deliver Olympic recaps on Peacock

    Al Michaels looks on from the sideline prior to an NFL football game between the Tennessee Titans and the Pittsburgh Steelers at Acrisure Stadium on November 2nd, 2023, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
    Photo by Cooper Neill / Getty Images

    Legendary sportscaster Al Michaels is going to give daily, personalized recaps of the Paris Olympics on Peacock — well, an AI-generated Al Michaels voice will. In practice, the effect is a lot like hearing a sports announcer’s voice in a video game like Madden, except it’s spitting out lines about real-life sports, which, in this case, means custom Olympics coverage.

    Here’s how it works. To set up what NBC is calling “Your Daily Olympic Recap” in the Peacock app, you’ll provide your name (the AI voice can welcome the “majority” of people by their first name, NBC says in a press release) and pick up to three types of sports that are interesting to you and up to two types of highlights (for example, “Top Competition” or “Viral & Trending Moments”). Then, each morning, you’ll get your Michaels-led rundown.

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  • Athletes sound warning about extreme heat at Summer Olympics

    A man leaps to hit a tennis ball on an Olympic court. Another man is crouching on the court in front of him.
    New Zealand’s Marcus Daniell (TOP) and Michael Venus compete against USA’s Austin Krajicek and Tennys Sandgren during their Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games men’s doubles tennis match for the bronze medal at the Ariake Tennis Park in Tokyo on July 30th, 2021.
    Photo by Vincenzo Pinto / AFP via Getty Images

    Athletes are raising concerns about how extreme heat might affect the Summer Olympic Games in Paris, according to a new report. They’re worried that soaring temperatures pose serious health risks to competitors and spectators, not to mention their performance suffering.

    Average temperatures during the months when the Summer Olympics are typically held have risen by more than 3 degrees Celsius (5.4 degrees Fahrenheit) since the last time the Games were held in Paris in 1924, according to the report. Every fraction of a degree of difference can have an impact, considering even a 0.5 degree Celsius rise in core body temperature can increase a person’s heartbeat up to 10 beats per minute. In a worst-case scenario, that can lead to heat exhaustion that could worsen into heatstroke without any intervention.

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