With the release of iOS 18, Apple CarPlay has undergone significant updates, introducing a range of new features and enhancements designed to elevate the user experience. These changes encompass various aspects of the CarPlay interface, from visual design to functionality, accessibility, and safety features. The updates aim to provide a more intuitive, personalized, and comfortable […]
The latest update to the Journal app on iPhone, released with iOS 18, brings a suite of innovative features designed to enhance your journaling experience. The most notable addition is the introduction of a robust search functionality, which allows you to quickly and easily locate specific entries within your journal. This feature, combined with the app’s […]
Apple’s latest operating system, iOS 18, brings a wealth of hidden features and improvements that are set to transform the way you interact with your iPhone. From customizable Siri activation to enhanced app functionalities, iOS 18 offers a treasure trove of secrets waiting to be discovered. Get ready to unlock the full potential of your […]
iOS 18 offers a wide array of features and settings that can significantly improve your device’s battery life, app performance, and overall security. By taking the time to adjust these settings, you can ensure that your iPhone or iPad runs smoothly and efficiently while protecting your personal data. The video below will walk you through […]
The Apple Watch Series 10 is a powerful and versatile wearable device that offers a wide range of features and functionalities designed to enhance your daily life. The video below from Simple Alpaca provides a detailed overview of the watch’s physical aspects, navigation techniques, and customization options, helping you get started with your new device […]
Unlock the full potential of your new iPhone 16 or iPhone 16 Pro with this comprehensive guide. By optimizing settings, personalizing features, and enhancing your user experience, you can ensure your device’s longevity and get the most out of its innovative capabilities. The video below from Brandon Butch will walk you through 23 essential tips […]
The pioneer of the ‘flat-pack’ bottle designed to be carried in laptop bags, handbags, and pockets is celebrating a decade of its iconic presence with new limited-edition metallic memobottles, in addition to their Original Tritan plastic and stainless steel ranges. The 10th-anniversary collection features the iconic memobottles made from titanium, copper, and satin steel. As always, the space-saving bottles are sized keeping international paper sizes and notebook proportions in mind, across A5, A6, A7, and Slim form factors.
Designers: Jesse Leeworthy and James Butler
Click Here to Buy Now: $47$55 ($8 off, delivered before Christmas 2024). Hurry, only few left! Raised over $91,000.
Dubbed the Elements collection, this edition turns bottles rightfully into EDC. Staying hydrated is usually a chore, but these memobottles make being hydrated feel exceptionally cool. The Titanium Ultralight, Copper PVD, and Satin Steel memobottles have a gorgeous microtextured finish reminiscent of high-end tech gear. Leading the collection is the Titanium Ultralight Memobottle, a standout thanks to its use of aerospace and medical-grade TA1 titanium. Known for its exceptional strength and lightweight properties, titanium makes this 600ml Slim bottle both durable and highly portable. The ultralight design allows for easy carrying without adding unnecessary bulk, ideal for those who are constantly on the move. Its slender, flat profile ensures it can slip into bags without taking up much space, making it the perfect choice for minimalists and travelers alike.
Crafted from 304 stainless steel and sand-blasted down to a smooth satin finish.
With a striking warm-toned rosy glow from its PVD Copper exterior, this bottle is bound to make a statement everywhere you go.
Crafted from TA1 – aerospace and medical grade – pure Titanium. At only 0.42 lb, 189g, it’s 48% lighter than its stainless steel counterpart, without compromising on durability.
The Copper PVD memobottle offers a warmer, more luxurious take on everyday hydration. Made from stainless steel with a Copper PVD coating, this A6 model holds 500ml and stands out with its rich, metallic finish. Copper has a natural antibacterial quality, adding a functional edge to the bottle’s already impressive aesthetic. It’s a great option for those who appreciate both style and utility in their daily accessories. The flat design, characteristic of all Memobottles, ensures this one fits neatly into slim bags or alongside laptops, making it a practical yet eye-catching companion for work, commuting, or leisure.
If you want to explore memobottle’s various sizes, the Satin Steel version comes in all four sizes (unlike the Titanium and Copper models that are limited to just a single size). From the compact A7 (250ml) to the larger A5 (1050ml), these bottles are made from 304-grade stainless steel, ensuring they’re as durable as they are stylish. The metallic finish gives them a modern minimalist edge, putting them miles ahead of plastic bottles but also outshining most boring cylindrical thermos designs. Whether you’re carrying the ultra-compact A7 for quick hydration or the larger A5 for all-day use, the Satin Steel bottles and their iconic flat profiles are designed to optimize space in bags while maintaining a strong visual appeal.
Beyond aesthetics, Memobottle even hopes to share a message of sustainability with its broader audience. Aside from just being the most gorgeous set of multi-use bottles that allow you to ditch dependence on use-and-throw bottles of mineral water, the company has also donated over 34 million days of safe water access to communities in need through their partnership with Water.org. As far as the Elements series goes, the use of recyclable materials like stainless steel and titanium reflects the company’s commitment to offering long-lasting alternatives to single-use plastic bottles that can last for years with maintenance. Each bottle is built to endure heavy use over the years, and you can even grab cleaning tablets with your memobottle that you can pop into the bottle when you want an extra deep clean. When the bottles do reach the end of their lifespan, they are fully recyclable too. You can grab your own memobottle Elements-edition, with the Satin Steel and Copper PVD variants shipping before Christmas, and the Titanium Ultralight shipping next year. To make sure your bottles reach you with a minimal carbon footprint, Memobottle has even optimized its shipping routes, using sea freight wherever possible.
Click Here to Buy Now: $47$55 ($8 off, delivered before Christmas 2024). Hurry, only few left! Raised over $91,000.
ROG Harpe Ace Extreme is an ultralight gaming mouse designed for precision, featuring a carbon fiber build and advanced technology for optimal control.
The biggest reveal at Meta’s Connect event was its long-promised AR glasses, Orion. As expected, the prototype, each of which reportedly costs around $10,000, won’t be ready for the public any time soon.
In the meantime, Meta offered a glimpse of its new holographic avatars, which will allow people to talk with lifelike holograms in augmented reality. The holograms are Meta’s Codec Avatars, a technology it’s been working on for several years. Mark Zuckerberg teased a version of this last year when he participated in a podcast interview “in the metaverse.”
That technology may now be closer than we think. Following the keynote at Connect, I sat down with Mark Rabkin, a VP at Meta leading Horizon OS and Quest, who shared more about Meta’s codec avatars and how they will one day come to the company’s VR headsets as well.
“Generally, pretty much everything you can do on Orion you can do on Quest,” Rabkin said. The Codec Avatars in particular have also gotten much easier to create. While they once required advanced camera scans, most of the internal avatars are now created with phone scans, Rabkin explains.
“It’s an almost identical process in many ways in generating the stylized avatars [for VR], but with a different training set and a different amount of computation required,” Rabkin explained. “For the stylized avatars, the model has to be trained on a lot of stylized avatars and how they look and how they move. [It has to] get a lot of training data on what people perceive to look like their picture, and what they perceive to move nicely.”
“For the Codec avatars ... it's the same process. You gather a tremendous amount of data. You gather data from very high-quality, fancy camera scans. You gather data from phone scans, because that's how people will be really creating, and you just build a model until it improves. And one of the challenges with both problems is to make it fast enough and computationally cheap enough so that millions and millions can use it.”
Rabkin said that he eventually expects these avatars to be able to play in virtual reality on the company’s headsets. Right now, the Quest 3 and 3S don’t have the necessary sensors, including eye tracking, necessary for the photorealistic avatars. But that could change for the next-generation VR headset, he said: “I think probably, if we do really well, it should be possible in the next generation [of headset].”
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ar-vr/metas-orion-holographic-avatars-will-eventually-be-in-vr-too-235206805.html?src=rss
The biggest reveal at Meta’s Connect event was its long-promised AR glasses, Orion. As expected, the prototype, each of which reportedly costs around $10,000, won’t be ready for the public any time soon.
In the meantime, Meta offered a glimpse of its new holographic avatars, which will allow people to talk with lifelike holograms in augmented reality. The holograms are Meta’s Codec Avatars, a technology it’s been working on for several years. Mark Zuckerberg teased a version of this last year when he participated in a podcast interview “in the metaverse.”
That technology may now be closer than we think. Following the keynote at Connect, I sat down with Mark Rabkin, a VP at Meta leading Horizon OS and Quest, who shared more about Meta’s codec avatars and how they will one day come to the company’s VR headsets as well.
“Generally, pretty much everything you can do on Orion you can do on Quest,” Rabkin said. The Codec Avatars in particular have also gotten much easier to create. While they once required advanced camera scans, most of the internal avatars are now created with phone scans, Rabkin explains.
“It’s an almost identical process in many ways in generating the stylized avatars [for VR], but with a different training set and a different amount of computation required,” Rabkin explained. “For the stylized avatars, the model has to be trained on a lot of stylized avatars and how they look and how they move. [It has to] get a lot of training data on what people perceive to look like their picture, and what they perceive to move nicely.”
“For the Codec avatars ... it's the same process. You gather a tremendous amount of data. You gather data from very high-quality, fancy camera scans. You gather data from phone scans, because that's how people will be really creating, and you just build a model until it improves. And one of the challenges with both problems is to make it fast enough and computationally cheap enough so that millions and millions can use it.”
Rabkin said that he eventually expects these avatars to be able to play in virtual reality on the company’s headsets. Right now, the Quest 3 and 3S don’t have the necessary sensors, including eye tracking, necessary for the photorealistic avatars. But that could change for the next-generation VR headset, he said: “I think probably, if we do really well, it should be possible in the next generation [of headset].”
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ar-vr/metas-orion-holographic-avatars-will-eventually-be-in-vr-too-235206805.html?src=rss