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Microsoft employee accidentally announces Notepad is getting tabs in Windows 11

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Microsoft employee accidentally announces Notepad is getting tabs in Windows 11

A Microsoft worker seems to have by chance introduced that Home windows 11’s Notepad app is getting a tabs characteristic. The worker, a senior product supervisor at Microsoft, posted a photograph of a model of Notepad with tabs, enthusiastically saying “Notepad in Home windows 11 now has tabs!” with a loudspeaker emoji.

The tweet was deleted minutes later, however not earlier than Home windows Central and several other Home windows fanatic Twitter accounts had noticed the error. The Notepad screenshot features a Microsoft inside warning: “Confidential Don’t talk about options or take screenshots.” That warning suggests the tabs characteristic continues to be in early inside testing at Microsoft, however that the Notepad tabs characteristic could arrive to Home windows Insiders sooner or later in early 2023.

Notepad with tabs and a confidential Microsoft inside warning.
Picture: Microsoft

The addition of tabs in Notepad might sign a shift in direction of tabs showing in additional built-in Home windows apps. Microsoft could have canceled its Units characteristic for Home windows 10, however that hasn’t stopped Home windows energy customers from utilizing third-party instruments and apps to deliver tabs to life in numerous components of the working system.

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Samsung mocks Apple’s crushing iPad Pro ad with its own ‘UnCrush’ pitch

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Samsung mocks Apple’s crushing iPad Pro ad with its own ‘UnCrush’ pitch

On one side, responses included creatives like Hugh Grant and anyone who spotted a slightly-too-on-the-nose representation of Big Tech’s steamroller approach to art, copyright, and the past, powered by the might of generative AI tools. On the other there were the people ticked off by the knowledge that there was any backlash at all.

In response, the Samsung Mobile account on X posted this video with the hashtag “UnCrush,” which Ad Age reports was created by BBH USA and directed by Zen Pace. It shows a woman stepping over debris and spilled paint reminiscent of the end of Apple’s big hydraulic press incident and taking a seat to hum and play notes on a guitar assisted somehow by notes displayed on her Galaxy Tab S9 and the power of Galaxy AI.

A still from Samsung’s 2017 Galaxy S8 ad mocking the notch on the iPhone X.
Image: Samsung

No matter which side you’re on when it comes to the great iPad ad political divide, it’s a little fun to see Samsung trying to find a weak point in Apple’s armor again. Samsung’s marketing department used to practically specialize in this stuff, which the company’s lawyers’ argued: “drove Apple crazy,” but it seemed to run out of gas after deleting ads about iPhones dropping the in-box charging adapted. More recent attempts, like a browser-based Galaxy test drive for iPhone owners, just haven’t had the same punch as mocking that distinctive notch.

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How to change camera zoom levels on your iPhone

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How to change camera zoom levels on your iPhone

Have you ever gone to take a photo and wished you could capture it with just the right amount of zoom on your iPhone? Well, if you’re the proud owner of an iPhone 15 Pro or Pro Max, you’re in luck because these devices have an amazing camera setup.

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iPhone 15 Pro (Apple) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

iOS17 and later allows you to change camera zoom levels

Let’s talk about the main camera first. It offers a standard 1x zoom, perfect for crisp, clear shots that capture life as it happens. But wait, there’s more. The ultrawide camera brings a whole new perspective with a 0.5x zoom, allowing you to soak in more of the scene in a single frame. Now, here’s where it gets exciting: with iOS 17 and later, you can tweak your zoom levels directly from the menu. That’s right, no more fiddling around.

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MORE: THE HIDDEN CAMERA APP ON YOUR PHONE UNLOCKING AN AMAZING PERK

How to set up default zoom for main camera

Want to jump straight to your preferred zoom level every time you open the camera? It’s a breeze. Just follow these steps:

  • Open your Settings app
  • Tap on Camera
  • Then scroll down to Main Camera and tap it.
How to change camera zoom levels on your iPhone

Steps to set up default zoom for main camera (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

  • Here, you’ll find options to adjust your camera zoom. You can set it to Default to 24 mm – 1x, Default to 28 mm – 1.2x, or Default to 35 mm – 1.5x.
How to change camera zoom levels on your iPhone

Steps to set up default zoom for main camera (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

MORE: HOW TO SNAP PERFECT SHOT TAKING PHOTOS WITH YOUR CAMERA’S BURST MODE

How to adjust the zoom on the camera app for a specific moment

For those times when you need to quickly adjust the zoom for a specific moment, the Camera app makes it a breeze.

  • Open the Camera app
  • Press and hold down the 1x button
  • A wheel will appear, allowing you to dial in the zoom level for that specific moment.
  • Spin it to your desired magnification and snap away with precision from ultrawide to telephoto.
How to change camera zoom levels on your iPhone

Steps to adjust the zoom on the camera app (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

With these simple steps, you’ve just unlocked the secrets to becoming a zoom master on your iPhone 15 or later. So go ahead, give it a spin and capture those perfect shots that’ll make your friends go, “Wow.”

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MORE: THE AI CAMERA STRIPPING AWAY PRIVACY IN BLINK OF AN EYE

Kurt’s key takeaways

So, whether you’re looking to capture sweeping landscapes or get up close with your subject, the zoom features on the iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max make it easy to frame the perfect shot every time.

How has the evolution of smartphone cameras, particularly with the iPhone 15 Pro or Pro Max, changed how you capture and share your life’s moments? Let us know by writing us at Cyberguy.com/Contact.

For more of my tech tips and security alerts, subscribe to my free CyberGuy Report Newsletter by heading to Cyberguy.com/Newsletter.

Ask Kurt a question or let us know what stories you’d like us to cover.

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Microsoft’s AI obsession is jeopardizing its climate ambitions

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Microsoft’s AI obsession is jeopardizing its climate ambitions

Microsoft’s producing a lot more planet-heating pollution now than it did when it made a bold climate pledge back in 2020. Its greenhouse gas emissions were actually around 30 percent higher in fiscal year 2023, showing how hard it could be for the company to meet climate goals as it simultaneously races to be a leader in AI.

“In many ways the moon is five times as far away as it was in 2020”

Back in 2020, Microsoft set a target of becoming carbon negative by the end of the decade. To translate the jargon, it pledged to slash greenhouse gas emissions by more than half and then capture a greater amount of carbon dioxide emissions than it would produce. It was an audacious commitment to make at the time, considering carbon capture technologies were barely coming into existence. The company would also have to spur the deployment of way more renewable energy onto power grids where it operates.

“In 2020, we unveiled what we called our carbon moonshot. That was before the explosion in artificial intelligence,” Microsoft president Brad Smith said in an interview with Bloomberg. “So in many ways the moon is five times as far away as it was in 2020, if you just think of our own forecast for the expansion of AI and its electrical needs.”

Diving into the data in Microsoft’s sustainability report, you can see just how far it’s gone in the wrong direction. It pumped out 15.357 million metric tons of carbon dioxide over the last fiscal year, comparable to the annual carbon pollution of Haiti or Brunei.

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Data centers used to train AI are even more energy-intensive than traditional data centers that already gobble up a lot of electricity to run servers and cooling systems to prevent overheating. And Microsoft has plans to build a whole lot more of those data centers now that it’s all in on AI. The company planned to spend $50 billion over the past fiscal year in order to meet its AI ambitions — a figure it’s expected to surpass in the following year, Bloomberg reports.

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