Asus ROG Phone 8 series brings AI features, 3x telephoto, and more: Details

Asus ROG Phone 8 series brings AI features, 3x telephoto, and more: Details


Taiwanese electronic maker Asus has unveiled the ROG Phone 8 series smartphones at the Consumer Electronics Show 2024. The series has two models, the ROG Phone 8 and the ROG Phone 8 Pro Edition, both powered by the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 system-on-chip. Asus said that the ROG Phone 8 has evolved from a gaming phone into a premium device, with a slimmer and lighter body, and thinner bezels than its predecessor.


“The ROG Phone 8 series has been completely reimagined, maintaining its impeccable gaming credentials while widening its appeal to anyone seeking an extraordinary everyday phone”, said Asus.


Asus ROG Phone 8 series: What is new


Among the notable updates in the Asus ROG Phone 8 series is the new AI-powered features such as AI Grabber, Semantic Search, AI generated wallpapers, and AI noise-cancelling. Asus said its AI Grabber feature is capable of extracting texts directly from games. Explaining the Semantic Search, Asus said the feature is designed to perform contextual search even in the gallery for searching photos using keywords.


Another notable change in the models is apparent on the rear profile. While the vanilla ROG Phone 8 gets the regular RGB lighting on the ROG logo, the Pro model features a new Anime Vision Mini-LED display on the back panel. The Anime Vision LED display features 341 mini LEDs that can display preset or user created animations.


ROG Phone 8 series: Specification


Colours: ROG Phone 8 Pro: Phantom Black / ROG Phone 8: Rebel Grey, Phantom Black


Display: 6.78-inch AMOLED display, FHD+, 165Hz (refresh rate), 2500nits (peak brightness)


Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3


RAM: 12GB, 16GB, 24GB


Storage: 256GB, 512GB, 1TB


Rear Camera: 50MP (Primary) with 6-axis Hybrid Gimbal Stabiliser + 13MP wide-angle + 32MP telephoto with 3x optical zoom


Front Camera: 32MP RGBW


Battery: 5,500mAh, 65W fast wired charging, 15W wireless charging


Protection: IP68 rating


Connectivity: Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.3, 3.5mm headphone jack

First Published: Jan 09 2024 | 10:54 AM IST



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Apple disputes EU tech rules labelling its 5 App Stores as one service

Apple disputes EU tech rules labelling its 5 App Stores as one service


The company contends that iMessage is not a NIICS as it is not a fee-based service and it does not monetise it via the sale of hardware devices nor via the processing of personal data


Apple has challenged EU tech rules designating its five App Stores as a single core platform service subject to onerous obligations, saying that EU regulators have misinterpreted and misapplied the new legislation that took effect last May.


The company also disputed the characterisation of its operating system iOS as an important gateway for business users to reach end users and the interoperability obligation that goes with that label.

 


The iPhone maker challenged the Digital Markets Act (DMA) in November last year but did not provide details.

 


The European Commission made “material factual errors, in concluding that the applicant’s five App Stores are a single core platform service,” Apple said in its plea to the Luxembourg-based General Court, Europe’s second-highest.

 


The company in its argument to the EU competition enforcer said it operates five App Stores on iPhones, iPads, Mac computers, Apple TVs and Apple Watches, with each designed to distribute apps for a specific operating system and Apple device.

 


DMA requirements that would affect Apple include allowing third parties to inter-operate with its own services and letting business users promote their offers and conclude contracts with their customers outside its platform.

 


Apple’s lawsuit also took issue with the Commission’s designation of its messaging service iMessage as a number-independent interpersonal communications service (NIICS) that prompted an EU investigation into whether it should comply with DMA rules.

 


The company contends that iMessage is not a NIICS as it is not a fee-based service and it does not monetise it via the sale of hardware devices nor via the processing of personal data.

First Published: Jan 08 2024 | 11:49 PM IST



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US Supreme Court rejects X Corp's surveillance disclosure challenge

US Supreme Court rejects X Corp's surveillance disclosure challenge



The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday rejected a request by Elon Musk’s X Corp to consider whether the social media company, formerly called Twitter, can publicly disclose how often federal law enforcement seeks information about users for national security investigations.


The justices declined to hear X’s appeal of a lower court’s ruling holding that the FBI’s restrictions on what the company could say publicly about the investigations did not violate its free speech rights under the U.S. Constitution’s First Amendment.

 


X had said it was “critical” for the justices to take up the case to establish clear standards for when and how tech companies can speak about government demands for confidential information about their users for surveillance.

 


“History demonstrates that the surveillance of electronic communications is both a fertile ground for government abuse and a lightning-rod political topic of intense concern to the public,” X’s lawyers wrote in its petition to the Supreme Court.

 


Musk in a post on X called it “disappointing that the Supreme Court declined to hear this matter.” The long-running lawsuit was filed in 2014, long before Musk acquired Twitter in 2022, after former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden leaked information in 2013 about the extent of U.S. spying and surveillance efforts.

 


In response to the public outcry over the revelations from Snowden’s leaks, the U.S. government at the request of tech companies – including Alphabet’s Google, Microsoft , Twitter and Facebook-owner Meta Platforms – agreed to relax restrictions on what they could reveal about data that the government had sought in connection with national security probes.

 


The revised policy, announced in 2014, allowed companies to disclose in broad ranges rather than in exact figures how often they received of national security-related demands for information.

 


Congress in 2015 enacted a law allowing companies to disclose limited information about how often they received so-called national security letters and orders under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act seeking user data. But they could still do so only in broad ranges rather than exact figures.

 


Depending on the type of report they published, companies could disclose government demands for data in increments of as little as 100 or as much as 1,000.

 


Twitter, as X was then known, in its lawsuit said it wanted to go further and disclose the exact number of times in a prior six-month period that the government served it with national-security orders seeking information.

 


It had submitted a draft report for the FBI before suing that would do just that, but the FBI concluded the information in the report was classified and could not be publicly released.

 


A trial judge rejected Twitter’s lawsuit, and a three-judge panel of the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld that ruling in March 2023, saying the “government’s restriction on Twitter’s speech is narrowly tailored in support of a compelling government interest.” 

First Published: Jan 08 2024 | 11:47 PM IST



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Apple's Vision Pro augmented-reality headset will go on sale from Feb 2

Apple's Vision Pro augmented-reality headset will go on sale from Feb 2



Apple said on Monday its Vision Pro device will be available in the United States from Feb. 2, months after it was launched to capture an augmented-reality (AR) headset market dominated by Facebook-parent Meta Platforms.


Vision Pro is Apple’s most expensive bet since the launch of the iPhone more than a decade ago. The AR headset starts at $3,499 and costs more than thrice as much as the priciest headset in Meta’s line of mixed and virtual reality devices.

 


Apple’s Vision Pro can be pre-ordered starting Jan. 19 at 5 am PST, the company said. The device uses a new chip called R1 that will process information from its sensors in less time than the blink of an eye.

 


The headset will test a market crowded with devices that are yet to gain traction among consumers, and put it in direct competition with Meta after years of clashes between the companies over issues like user privacy and control of developer platforms.


The device must be plugged to a power source at all times.

 


Apple said it tried to reduce the headset weight with an external battery, which can run up to 2 hours.

 


Meta’s top-of-the-line Quest Pro mixed reality device, which blends virtual reality with the real world video feed, offers about two hours of battery life directly on the headset, without an external battery pack.

 


Apple launched a new series of iPhones with a titanium shell, a faster chip and improved abilities to play video games, in September, but did not raise prices amid a global smartphone slump.

First Published: Jan 08 2024 | 9:39 PM IST



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iPhone lands in functioning condition after 16,000 ft fall from Alaska Air

iPhone lands in functioning condition after 16,000 ft fall from Alaska Air



By Kate Duffy


Among the harrowing details of the blown-off fuselage panel that triggered a sudden decompression event on Alaska Airlines Flight 1282, one revelation seemed to defy the laws of physics: one of the mobile phones that had been sucked out of the Boeing Co. 737 Max 9 jet’s cabin remained in functioning condition after a 16,000-foot tumble.

 


A new-generation Apple Inc. iPhone landed intact, unlocked and with hours of battery life remaining on a Portland, Oregon roadside, according to a post on X by a user calling himself Seanathan Bates, who said he discovered the device. The screen showed an email from Alaska Airlines about a baggage claim for the flight, based on Bates’ photos.


The phone was in airplane mode, Bates said in a TikTok video. “It was still pretty clean, no scratches on it, sitting under a bush and it didn’t have a screenlock on it,” he said.


The National Transportation Safety Board confirmed at a briefing on Sunday that one phone was found on the side of a road and another in a yard. The people have handed in both of the devices, NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy told reporters.


“We’ll look through those and then return them” to passengers, Homendy said. “It also helps in telling us, ‘Are we looking in the right area?”’ 


Bates couldn’t be reached for comment. The NTSB had no immediate comment. ABC News reported earlier that the NTSB confirmed Bates’s account.


The fuselage panel that blew off the plane was later discovered in the backyard of a Portland-based schoolteacher.


Apple says on its website that iPhone or its battery can be damaged if dropped. In this case, the only part that appeared broken in Bates’ post was the charger cord; even the screen was intact. The end of the cord was still plugged into the phone, but the rest of the cable was detached. 


Flight 1282 was forced to turn back minutes after takeoff, when the panel broke loose from the fuselage. None of the 171 passengers aboard the Max 9 jet was seriously injured. It landed safely back in Portland about 20 minutes after takeoff, having reached more than 16,000 feet (4,900 meters) in altitude before turning around.


The US Federal Aviation Administration temporarily grounded more than 170 Max 9 aircraft to conduct safety checks before they are returned to service.

First Published: Jan 08 2024 | 8:32 PM IST



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Vistara plans to use virtual, augmented reality technologies for training

Vistara plans to use virtual, augmented reality technologies for training


Airlines are embracing artificial intelligence technology as they look to provide more hassle-free services, improve efficiencies and also reduce costs


Vistara plans to use virtual reality and augmented reality technologies for certain training activities for the staff, the airline’s chief Vinod Kannan said on Monday and emphasised that there is always going to be a place for human intelligence as certain situations cannot be handled by bots.


The full service carrier, which will complete nine years of flying on January 9, is already using chatbots to address customer queries.


To a query about the use of artificial intelligence by the airline, its CEO Vinod Kannan said there are certain things that have already been done.


“We have a chatbot. We are trying to improve how we do some of our training. We are also looking at virtual reality, augmented reality. Some pilots (projects) we are doing on that front to see whether they can render some mock ups, especially in the engineering space to see…,” he said at a briefing here.


On whether artificial intelligence applications can help in reducing staff costs, Kannan said the answer is “yes and no”, and added that the carrier is trying to see how much more self-help can be provided to customers with the help of artificial intelligence.


According to him, some of the basic queries from customers such as about flight status and baggage can be answered by bots with the right data and a little bit faster as well. “There is always going to be a place for human intelligence because there are certain situations that cannot be handled by bots,” he noted.


Airlines are embracing artificial intelligence technology as they look to provide more hassle-free services, improve efficiencies and also reduce costs.


Currently, Vistara has a fleet of 67 aircraft and operates around 320 flights daily.


The carrier is a joint venture between Tata group and Singapore Airlines, and is in the process of being merged with Air India.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Jan 08 2024 | 4:55 PM IST



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