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WhatsApp now available on Wear OS for beta testers

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WhatsApp now available on Wear OS for beta testers

WhatsApp has launched an official app for Put on OS, 9to5Google reviews, giving beta testers of its Android app the power to ship textual content and voice messages from their wrist. The performance was added with model 2.23.10.10 of the beta Android app, which additionally reportedly comprises hints that the service would possibly quickly let Android customers edit beforehand despatched messages. The Put on OS app reportedly helps smartwatches together with the Pixel Watch and Galaxy Watch 5, 9to5Google notes.

Android Police notes that the Meta-owned messaging service beforehand supplied a smartwatch app for Android Put on previous to its Put on OS rebrand, however says that it was ultimately discontinued as a result of an absence of adoption. Since then, Put on OS customers have solely been in a position to reply to WhatsApp messages by way of their smartwatch notifications — they haven’t been capable of ship messages at any time when they please.

A neat possibility for sending messages in a rush

That modifications with the Put on OS app, which lets customers browse latest chats, scroll by message histories, and reply utilizing textual content or voice.  There are a few tiles accessible together with one to entry contacts and one for voice messages, and a complication displaying the variety of unread messages sitting in your WhatsApp inbox. Android Police notes that though you’ll be able to ship messages to any present conversations, there’s at present no possibility to start out a brand new chat from the Put on OS app in case you’ve by no means despatched a WhatsApp contact a message earlier than.

Establishing the Put on OS app includes getting into an eight-digit code from the watch into WhatsApp in your cellphone, and WABetaInfo notes that WhatsApp’s multi-device help implies that messages accessed by way of a smartwatch ought to nonetheless be protected with end-to-end encryption.

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I can’t think about many individuals can be utilizing Put on OS as their major technique of sending WhatsApp messages, but it surely’s a fantastic choice to have for these moments the place you must fireplace off a fast message out of your wrist. If you wish to be part of the Android beta, you are able to do so by way of this hyperlink.

This model of the Android app additionally presents hints that WhatsApp would possibly quickly let customers edit despatched messages, permitting them to clear up any typos or different errors that will have slipped by. WABetaInfo notes that related hints have already appeared within the iOS app, and that the characteristic is already accessible to a restricted variety of beta testers of the online app. If the online app is something to go by, messages can be editable for round quarter-hour after you ship them.

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Replacing the OLED iPad Pro’s battery is easier than ever

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Replacing the OLED iPad Pro’s battery is easier than ever

Apple’s newest iPad Pro is remarkably rigid for how thin it is, and apparently also a step forward when it comes to repairability. iFixit shows during its teardown of the tablet that the iPad Pro’s 38.99Wh battery, which will inevitably wear down and need replacement, is actually easy to get to. It’s a change iFixit’s Shahram Mokhtari says during the video “could save hours in repair time” compared to past iPad Pro models.

Getting to it still requires removing the glued-in tandem OLED screen, which iFixit notes in the video and its accompanying blog isn’t two panels smashed together, but a single OLED board with more electroluminescence layers per OLED diode. With the screen out of the way, iFixit was essentially able to pull the battery almost immediately (after removing the camera assembly and dealing with an aluminum lip beneath that, which made some of the tabs hard to get to). For previous models, he notes, you have to pull out “every major component.”

The battery is surprisingly accessible in the 13-inch OLED iPad Pro.
Screenshot: iFixit

After that, though, the thinness proves to be an issue for iFixit, as many of the parts are glued in, including the tablet’s logic board. In the blog, the site goes into more detail here, mentioning that the glue means removing the speakers destroys them, and the tablet’s daughter board is very easy to accidentally bend.

The site also found that the 256GB model uses only one NAND storage chip, meaning it’s technically slower than dual-chip storage. As some Verge readers may recall, that’s also the case for M2 MacBook Air’s entry-level storage tier. But as we noted then (and as iFixit says in its blog), that’s not something people who aren’t pushing the device will notice, and those who are may want more storage, regardless.

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This used to be an Apple Pencil Pro.
Screenshot: iFixit

But you can’t say the same for Apple’s new $129 Apple Pencil Pro, which shouldn’t shock anyone. Mokhtari was forced to cut into the pencil using an ultrasonic cutter, a moment he presented as “the world’s worst ASMR video.” (That happens just after the five-minute mark, in case you want to mute the video right there to avoid the ear-piercing squeal of the tool.) Unlike the iPad Pro itself, the Pencil Pro’s battery was the last thing he could get to.

By the time Mokhtari is done, the pencil is utterly destroyed, of course. He says the site will have a full chip ID soon that will include images of the MEMS sensor that drives the pencil’s barrel roll feature that lets you twist the pencil to adjust the rotation of on-screen art tools.

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Blue Origin’s first crewed launch since 2022: Where to watch

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Blue Origin’s first crewed launch since 2022: Where to watch

It’s been over a year and a half since Blue Origin’s New Shepard rocket failed mid-flight, and more than two since its last crewed flight. Now, the company is go to launch six human beings into space. The company’s launch window begins at 6:30AM PT / 9:30AM ET, but will start streaming 40 minutes ahead of time on its website.

Blue Origin also normally streams its launches live on its YouTube channel, so it’s a pretty safe bet it will do so for its NS-25 mission tomorrow. Assuming the launch goes as planned, it will carry six passengers aboard, including the 90-year-old Ed Dwight, who was America’s first Black astronaut candidate but has never been to space. The other passengers are Mason Angel, Sylvain Chiron, Kenneth L. Hess, Carol Schaller, and Gopi Thotakura.

The Federal Aviation Administration closed its investigation of the mishap in September last year, requiring Blue Origin to carry out 21 corrective actions that included redesigning the engine and nozzle components to prevent future failures. In December, Blue Origin launched 33 science payloads from NASA and other institutions into space. The capsule and booster were successfully recovered afterwards.

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Fox News AI Newsletter: How artificial intelligence is reshaping modern warfare

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Fox News AI Newsletter: How artificial intelligence is reshaping modern warfare

Welcome to Fox News’ Artificial Intelligence newsletter with the latest AI technology advancements.

IN TODAY’S NEWSLETTER:

– How artificial intelligence is reshaping modern warfare
– Sebastian Maniscalco admits AI makes a guy who writes like ‘Rocky Balboa’ sound like he ‘went to Yale’
– Researchers create AI-powered sarcasm detector

NEXT-GEN BATTLE: Modern warfare is changing rapidly, and harnessing artificial intelligence is key to staying ahead of America’s adversaries.

Pentagon illustration

Modern warfare is rapidly changing — and artificial intelligence may only speed up that process. (istock)

TECHNICALLY SPEAKING: Comedian Sebastian Maniscalco isn’t sure what to make of artificial intelligence in the industry. 

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FUNNY BOT: A team of university researchers in the Netherlands says they’ve developed an artificial intelligence (AI) platform that can recognize sarcasm, according to a new report.

AI letters

AI (artificial intelligence) letters are placed on a computer motherboard in this illustration taken on June 23, 2023.  (REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration)

‘OUTCOMPETE CHINA’: A bipartisan group of U.S. senators on Wednesday joined in a call to boost American funding of artificial intelligence research.

‘MACHINE LEARNING’: The widespread use of artificial intelligence tools has many workers concerned that the rapidly-evolving technology will eventually result in them losing their job, and one expert says that is a real concern — but not in the way some might expect.

Ukraine Drone training

A recruit of the 1st Separate Mechanized Battalion ‘Da Vinci Wolves’ named after Dmytro Kotsiubailo trains and learns to work with FPV strike drones while undergoing five-day training at a military outdoor firing range on March 12, 2024, in central Ukraine. After training, recruits can join the Armed Forces of Ukraine to defend Ukraine in the war started in 2014 and escalated during the full-scale Russian invasion in 2022.  (Valentyna Polishchuk/Global Images Ukraine via Getty Images)

AI AT WAR: The world may end up breaking into tech alliances as a guiding political issue in the years to come, according to a retired American serviceman-turned-novelist as detailed in his new book. 

Subscribe now to get the Fox News Artificial Intelligence Newsletter in your inbox.

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