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Paramount’s new Star Trek NFTs utterly miss the point of Star Trek

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Paramount is launching its NFT market / metaverse / annoying advertising and marketing stunt that fans are already angry about with Star Trek non-fungible tokens (or NFTs.) The corporate partnered with Recur to create a platform known as Paramount.xyz, which it says will “deliver Paramount’s beloved leisure entities, manufacturers and characters to the metaverse.”

Paramount is aping what’s labored for giant NFT tasks up to now; the Star Trek NFTs will depict “algorithmically-generated starships” and may be bought on the low, low worth of $250 per pack. Packs, by the way in which, include a single ship — which solely has round an 11 % likelihood of trying just like the Enterprise. You may (however completely mustn’t) assure that you just’ll get a cool ship by shopping for the “Admiral pack” as an alternative of the “Captain pack,” however you may solely get these for those who’ve shelled out for a Recur go — one other NFT that prices no less than $290.

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Pictured: undoubtedly not predatory playing techniques.
Picture: Paramount

The ships are saved in what Paramount is asking “Star Trek Continuum,” which is what the corporate describes as “an experiential hub that may home this primary and all future seasons of Star Trek NFTs.” These “future seasons” will contain accumulating crewmates and doing obscure, unspecified missions in line with Paramount’s roadmap.

By way of what that “metaverse” or these experiences will really appear to be, Paramount’s press launch has loads of phrases that principally add as much as a hand wave: “Recur and Paramount are constructing a roadmap of in-real-life utility over the course of this multi-year partnership and Continuum holders will get entry to unique perks, occasions and content material increasing on the utility of the NFTs digitally and in-real-life.”

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This isn’t the primary time we’ve seen Star Trek NFTs. The model has been placed on the blockchain within the type of digital Funko Pops and licensed choices on different platforms. And, as my colleagues, Chaim Gartenberg and Adi Robertson identified, every time it occurs it looks like a little bit of a slap within the face to every little thing that Star Trek is really about. (I’m positive it’s only a coincidence that each video essayist describing post-scarcity “luxurious automated area communism” makes use of Star Trek imagery to explain it.)

This time round, although, Paramount goes all in. It’s pitching Star Trek Continuum as only the start of Paramount.xyz, and it threatens… er, guarantees that it’ll add franchises from Nickelodeon and Paramount Footage subsequent. Sure, that does imply that we may see SpongeBob NFTs subsequent. And sure, I suppose that does imply I’ve gotten to the purpose in maturity the place I get to see my childhood pillaged.

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Apple could announce a Google Gemini deal this fall

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Apple could announce a Google Gemini deal this fall

If you’re disappointed that the only AI model that will integrate with Apple devices so far will be ChatGPT, it sounds like you won’t have to wait long for that to change. Apple will announce “at least” one other deal — to add Google Gemini, too — this fall, according to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman in his Power On newsletter today.

Beyond chatbot integration lies Apple Intelligence, which is only supposed to emerge, initially, in beta form this fall. Apple reportedly wants to make AI an avenue for direct profits, not just as a set of features aimed at moving hardware products. As part of that, Gurman suggests that the company “could eventually” roll out subscription-only Apple Intelligence features.

But it seems like that won’t happen for a while, and although Apple Intelligence is only available for the iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max for now, who knows if the version of it that comes first will be enough to drive a big iPhone upgrade cycle. We don’t even know if the features will be good, after all. In the meantime, he points out that Apple will still get at least some AI money when it gets its in-app purchases cut of sign-ups to its AI partners’ chatbot subscriptions.

Third-party AI services might serve as a nice stopgap for the Cupertino company while it slowly rolls out its own generative AI system. For the rest of us, that will mean more choice, even if having the choice, in a lot of ways, just means variations on the theme of algorithmic reconstruction of compressed data (or at least the possibility of entertainingly wrong cooking suggestions).

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Autonomous trash-gobbling robot boat wages war on waterway waste

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Autonomous trash-gobbling robot boat wages war on waterway waste

Have you ever looked out at a lake, river or harbor and been taken aback by the amount of floating trash and debris? A start-up company called Clear Robotics is tackling this environmental issue in an innovative way: with autonomous robot boats.

Clear Robotics was founded by two university graduates who wanted to automate the labor-intensive task of cleaning up floating waste from waterways. Their solution is the Clearbot, a robotic vessel that cruises through harbors, lakes and canals using its open bow to collect floating debris into onboard storage bins.

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Clearbot (Clear Robotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

Clear Robotics is expanding its fleet

Clear Robotics is now expanding its fleet with a new Class 3 autonomous marine vessel. This larger robot boat boasts five times the increased onboard storage capacity of 1.5 tons for collected trash and debris. It can also tow an additional barge, allowing for extended cleanup operations without needing to return to port as frequently.

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Beyond just collecting floating waste, the new Class 3 vessel has been engineered to tackle another aquatic nuisance: invasive weeds. Its enhanced capabilities make it an even more powerful tool in the fight to keep local waters clean and healthy. In addition, it can be used in surveillance as it relates to water quality and even oil and foam collection.

Autonomous trash-gobbling robot boat wages war on waterway waste

Clearbot (Clear Robotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

THIS AI ROBOT GARBAGE PICKER CAN SORT OVER 500 TYPES OF TRASH IN SECONDS

The new vessel’s increased capacity

The new vessel has been designed to gather up to 441 pounds of floating garbage per hour and has an onboard storage capacity of 1,100 pounds. Because it can be equipped with a towing barge, it can extend its per-trip payload, as mentioned above, to 1.5 tons.

Its electric drive can manage an average speed of 3.5 mph, while the 3-kWh battery pack is good for up to eight hours of per-charge operation. Clear Robotics has installed solar panels up top that can add extra hours in ideal conditions. The company also reports that it has rolled out a self-docking mechanism across its entire fleet so that its vessels can autonomously return to docking stations with a solar charging unit for a top-up.

Autonomous trash-gobbling robot boat wages war on waterway waste

Clearbot (Clear Robotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

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Cutting-edge tech for cleaning and plant removal

The 13.25-by-7.5-by-5.5-foot Class 3 Clearbot features a 1080p camera and lidar and can be optioned with anti-collision smarts for fully autonomous operation. It features a conveyor in front to gather floating debris but is also equipped with a specialized cutter to extract invasive plants and weeds like hyacinths and duckweed.

If on trash duty, the vessel is reported to be capable of covering up to 107,600 square feet per day, though that’s reduced when snipping and removing weeds.

Autonomous trash-gobbling robot boat wages war on waterway waste

Clearbot (Clear Robotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

IS THIS TECHNOLOGY THE ANSWER TO CLEANING UP OUR OCEAN’S PLASTIC PROBLEM?

Key autonomous features of the Class 3 Clearbot

Key features of Clear Robotics’ new Class 3 autonomous marine vessel Clearbot include:

Autonomous waypoint mission path: With Clearbot, you can provide a set of GPS waypoints (i.e., a set of latitude/longitude pairs) and have the robot autonomously navigate from its current location to each of the defined waypoints to collect trash.

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Fail-safe return to home: Clearbot comes back to the Home Point if it happens to lose signal when connected to a remote controller or through Wi-Fi. With the RTH function, you can ensure safe marine operations even in larger water bodies.

Anti-collision software: Anti-collision detection helps you stop your Clearbot from moving and reverse its movement slightly when it detects something within a 45-foot radius around the boat when cleaning up trash and oil from marine environments.

AI-powered dashboard: Dashboards help Clearbot’s users monitor data-revealed emerging trends, track their operations and make informed decisions based on rigorous analysis.

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Autonomous trash-gobbling robot boat wages war on waterway waste

Clearbot (Clear Robotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

Clearbot’s new trash-cleaning partnership

Clearbot entered a partnership with Kingspan Group, which is a global leader in high-performance insulation and building envelope solutions, to begin sustainable cleaning of the Nonbah River in Nongstoin City in India. This demonstrates the real-world application and adoption of their autonomous trash collection technology.

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Autonomous trash-gobbling robot boat wages war on waterway waste

Clearbot (Clear Robotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

Kurt’s key takeaways

The rise of autonomous robotic solutions like Clearbot represents a major step forward in tackling the enormous problem of marine pollution and waterway contamination. By leveraging cutting-edge technologies like AI, machine vision and self-driving capabilities, these systems can operate continuously with minimal human intervention to clear vast areas of floating debris, oil slicks and invasive vegetation. As the technology matures and costs come down, we could potentially see fleets of these trash goblins patrolling rivers, harbors and coastlines around the world, making a significant dent in the millions of tons of waste that ends up in our waterways each year.

Have you witnessed the impact of plastic pollution and floating debris in your local waterways? What innovative solutions would you like to see implemented to tackle this environmental issue? 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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The Vision Pro will get Apple Intelligence and “Go Deeper” in-store demos

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The Vision Pro will get Apple Intelligence and “Go Deeper” in-store demos

For all its impressive technical chops, Apple’s all-singing, all-dancing Vision Pro hasn’t set the world on fire. But it’s early yet, and the company continues to throw some weight behind the headset, and reportedly has plans to add AI features to visionOS and is readying an updated approach to in-store demos.

The company is adding a new “Go Deeper” option to its in-store demos, Gurman writes. That reportedly includes testing office features and watching videos, as well as defaulting to the Dual Loop band that sends straps over the top and around the back of wearers’ heads instead of the single-strap Solo Loop band, which some find uncomfortable.

Apple will also reportedly let people view their own videos and photos, including panoramas, in the headset. Adding the sentimental touch to the demos could work out, especially once visionOS 2 comes out this fall, with its “spatialize” option to turn 2D photos into 3D ones — a feature that’s more impressive than it has the right to be (though still a little quirky with hair and glasses, like Apple’s Portrait Mode feature).

But I can imagine it going the other way if people end up looking at the wrong images. You know how looking at your iPhone photos on your computer monitor suddenly exposes all their flaws? Try looking at them when they’re the size of a wall.

But it really feels like all of this is just triage until the company releases a cheaper headset, which its expected to do at the end of next year. It’s not clear what that will look like, though, given conflicting rumors at the moment — like that it’s going with lower-res displays for a follow-up or that it actually aims to keep the high-res displays but has stopped working on the Vision Pro 2 (or not).

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The common thread running through all of those stories, though, is that Apple is finding it very hard to make the headset it wants to make without it costing a hojillion dollars. It’s too early to declare the Vision Pro a dead end, but I can’t shake the feeling that without that cheaper headset, Apple doesn’t have a path forward unless it’s okay with letting the Vision Pro serve a niche market while it chases that lightweight AR glasses dream.

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