One UI 6.1 will roll out to the Galaxy S23 series, S23 FE, Z Fold 5, Z Flip 5, and Tab S9 series at the end of March, bringing several "Galaxy AI" features Samsung unveiled with the Galaxy S24 series!
Here are the features the update will add:
* Chat Assist: Adjust message tone and translate messages in 13 different languages
* Live Translate: Voice and text translations for phone calls (Samsung Phone)
* Interpreter: A split-screen interface that shows text translations for live conversations
* Circle to Search with Google
* Note Assist: Create formats, generate summaries, and translate notes (Samsung Notes)
* Browsing Assist: Generate comprehensive summaries of news articles (Samsung Internet)
* Trannoscript Assist: Transcribe meeting recordings and generate summaries and translations (Samsung Voice Recorder)
* Generative Edit: Resize, reposition, or realign objects in photos (Samsung Gallery)
* Edit Suggestion: Get suggestions to edit photos (Samsung Gallery)
* Instant Slow-mo: Generate additional frames for slow-motion videos (apparently not available on S23 FE)
* AI wallpapers: Generate custom wallpapers using AI
Here are the features the update will add:
* Chat Assist: Adjust message tone and translate messages in 13 different languages
* Live Translate: Voice and text translations for phone calls (Samsung Phone)
* Interpreter: A split-screen interface that shows text translations for live conversations
* Circle to Search with Google
* Note Assist: Create formats, generate summaries, and translate notes (Samsung Notes)
* Browsing Assist: Generate comprehensive summaries of news articles (Samsung Internet)
* Trannoscript Assist: Transcribe meeting recordings and generate summaries and translations (Samsung Voice Recorder)
* Generative Edit: Resize, reposition, or realign objects in photos (Samsung Gallery)
* Edit Suggestion: Get suggestions to edit photos (Samsung Gallery)
* Instant Slow-mo: Generate additional frames for slow-motion videos (apparently not available on S23 FE)
* AI wallpapers: Generate custom wallpapers using AI
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You'll soon be able to launch Google Keep from a lock screen shortcut, making it even easier to quickly jot down notes on your Android tablet.
Here's a first look at the upcoming feature.
Here's a first look at the upcoming feature.
Android Authority
First look: Google Keep will let you jot notes from the lock screen on Android tablets
You'll soon be able to launch Google Keep right from the lock screen on your Android tablet, making it even easier to quickly jot down notes.
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Chrome OS is finally preparing to add support for peer-to-peer Wi-Fi. This will benefit not only Quick Share but also wireless display mirroring.
Read more here.
Read more here.
Android Authority
Quick Share on Chrome OS might finally be as fast as it is on phones
Chrome OS is finally adding support for peer-to-peer Wi-Fi, which will make sharing files via Quick Share faster and more convenient.
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MediaTek has announced that its Dimensity 9300 and 8300 chipsets are now "optimized" for Google's Gemini Nano LLM!
Gemini Nano is Google's mobile-optimized LLM currently available on the Pixel 8 Pro and Samsung Galaxy S24 series. It powers on-device generative AI features like the Pixel Recorder's on-device summarization and Gboard's smart reply.
"This effort includes collaboration with Google using MediaTek’s NeuroPilot toolkit and porting Gemini Nano to MediaTek APU to improve performance."
Gemini Nano is Google's mobile-optimized LLM currently available on the Pixel 8 Pro and Samsung Galaxy S24 series. It powers on-device generative AI features like the Pixel Recorder's on-device summarization and Gboard's smart reply.
"This effort includes collaboration with Google using MediaTek’s NeuroPilot toolkit and porting Gemini Nano to MediaTek APU to improve performance."
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Games like Pokemon Go and Dragonball Legends have reportedly been crashing for many users with Android phones powered by the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3, such as the Galaxy S24 Ultra and OnePlus 12.
According to a Niantic help article, this is due to "our underlying game engine Unity's support for these devices." Pokemon Go version 0.301.0 seems to have included a fix for this issue, per user reports, but other Unity-based games may separately need to receive updates for this issue to be resolved.
If you own a Snapdragon 8 Gen 3-powered device, let me know if you've encountered this issue (and what games have crashed for you)!
According to a Niantic help article, this is due to "our underlying game engine Unity's support for these devices." Pokemon Go version 0.301.0 seems to have included a fix for this issue, per user reports, but other Unity-based games may separately need to receive updates for this issue to be resolved.
If you own a Snapdragon 8 Gen 3-powered device, let me know if you've encountered this issue (and what games have crashed for you)!
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Qualcomm wants to make it easier for developers to deploy AI features on phones powered by the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 and laptops powered by the Snapdragon X Elite, so today they’re announcing the Qualcomm AI Hub.
Qualcomm AI Hub is a central location where developers can access resources and download and deploy AI workloads onto these Snapdragon platforms. It contains a library of over 75 pre-optimized AI models. These models are compressed and optimized to take advantage of available hardware accelerators (NPU, CPU, and GPU) within the Qualcomm AI Engine. This results in “4X faster inferencing times,” reduced memory use, and better power efficiency.
Developers can choose a model from the library (like Whisper, ControlNet, or Stable Diffusion), indicate which framework to use for deployment (TensorFlow Lite, PyTorch, etc.) then choose a target platform (specific chipset or device), and finally deploy it with a few lines of code. The AI model library automatically handles model translation from the source framework to popular runtimes.
Developers can sign up today to the Qualcomm AI Hub to run these models on cloud-hosted devices and get early access to new features and AI models. New models will be added in the future along with support for more platforms and OSes. Qualcomm says these models will also be available on both Hugging Face and GitHub.
Qualcomm AI Hub is a central location where developers can access resources and download and deploy AI workloads onto these Snapdragon platforms. It contains a library of over 75 pre-optimized AI models. These models are compressed and optimized to take advantage of available hardware accelerators (NPU, CPU, and GPU) within the Qualcomm AI Engine. This results in “4X faster inferencing times,” reduced memory use, and better power efficiency.
Developers can choose a model from the library (like Whisper, ControlNet, or Stable Diffusion), indicate which framework to use for deployment (TensorFlow Lite, PyTorch, etc.) then choose a target platform (specific chipset or device), and finally deploy it with a few lines of code. The AI model library automatically handles model translation from the source framework to popular runtimes.
Developers can sign up today to the Qualcomm AI Hub to run these models on cloud-hosted devices and get early access to new features and AI models. New models will be added in the future along with support for more platforms and OSes. Qualcomm says these models will also be available on both Hugging Face and GitHub.
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Qualcomm’s AI Research team is showing off some of the on-device AI capabilities of their latest chips.
First, Qualcomm is showing a demo of Large Language and Vision Assistant (LLaVa), a 7B parameter LMM that accepts multiple types of data inputs, running offline on an Android phone. In the demo, a person asks a chatbot what ingredients are shown in an image of some fruits and vegetables, then asks it to create a recipe with those ingredients and estimate the calorie count of the recipe.
Qualcomm is also showcasing a demo of Low Rank Adaptation (LoRA) on an Android phone. Running Stable Diffusion with a lightweight LoRA adapter enables changing the tone/personality of the model without needing multiple fine-tuned models. LoRA is not only useful for language vision models (LVMs) but also large language models (LLMs) as well to create things like more personalized assistants.
Finally, Qualcomm is also showcasing a 7B parameter LMM that can accept text and audio inputs running offline on a Windows PC. In the demo, a person uploads a sound byte and asks the chatbot to provide a detailed denoscription of the audio, the environment it might’ve been recorded in, what the vibe is like, and what era the music is from. Another demo compares the performance of GIMP with a Stable Diffusion plugin on a Snapdragon X Elite PC versus a PC running an Intel Core Ultra 7 - 155H CPU.
First, Qualcomm is showing a demo of Large Language and Vision Assistant (LLaVa), a 7B parameter LMM that accepts multiple types of data inputs, running offline on an Android phone. In the demo, a person asks a chatbot what ingredients are shown in an image of some fruits and vegetables, then asks it to create a recipe with those ingredients and estimate the calorie count of the recipe.
Qualcomm is also showcasing a demo of Low Rank Adaptation (LoRA) on an Android phone. Running Stable Diffusion with a lightweight LoRA adapter enables changing the tone/personality of the model without needing multiple fine-tuned models. LoRA is not only useful for language vision models (LVMs) but also large language models (LLMs) as well to create things like more personalized assistants.
Finally, Qualcomm is also showcasing a 7B parameter LMM that can accept text and audio inputs running offline on a Windows PC. In the demo, a person uploads a sound byte and asks the chatbot to provide a detailed denoscription of the audio, the environment it might’ve been recorded in, what the vibe is like, and what era the music is from. Another demo compares the performance of GIMP with a Stable Diffusion plugin on a Snapdragon X Elite PC versus a PC running an Intel Core Ultra 7 - 155H CPU.
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Qualcomm just announced the FastConnect 7900, their latest flagship connectivity chip for mobile devices. The most intriguing part about the FastConnect 7900 is that it integrates Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and UWB in a single chip. This will help increase adoption of UWB, which to date is only available on select Android devices.
UWB, if you aren’t aware, stands for ultra-wideband and is a short range wireless communication technology that enables high precision locating. It’s commonly used for pinpointing lost items or to facilitate digital car keys.
The FastConnect 7900 also supports Bluetooth Channel Sounding, which is another high precision locating technology that enables estimating the distance between two Bluetooth LE devices. It’s much more precise than using signal strength measurements between two Bluetooth devices to determine location (RSSI).
Of course, it also supports key Wi-Fi technologies like Wi-Fi 7 and High Band Simultaneous, but it also has some new “AI-enhanced” Wi-Fi features. Qualcomm says the chip uses AI to “understand” the context of how you’re using your Wi-Fi connection without accessing any data or doing any deep package inspections so it can optimize Wi-Fi settings to best serve what you’re doing.
Qualcomm says the FastConnect 7900 will be fabricated on a 6nm process and will launch commercially in H2 2024.
UWB, if you aren’t aware, stands for ultra-wideband and is a short range wireless communication technology that enables high precision locating. It’s commonly used for pinpointing lost items or to facilitate digital car keys.
The FastConnect 7900 also supports Bluetooth Channel Sounding, which is another high precision locating technology that enables estimating the distance between two Bluetooth LE devices. It’s much more precise than using signal strength measurements between two Bluetooth devices to determine location (RSSI).
Of course, it also supports key Wi-Fi technologies like Wi-Fi 7 and High Band Simultaneous, but it also has some new “AI-enhanced” Wi-Fi features. Qualcomm says the chip uses AI to “understand” the context of how you’re using your Wi-Fi connection without accessing any data or doing any deep package inspections so it can optimize Wi-Fi settings to best serve what you’re doing.
Qualcomm says the FastConnect 7900 will be fabricated on a 6nm process and will launch commercially in H2 2024.
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Qualcomm just unveiled the Snapdragon X80, the company’s 7th-gen 5G modem-RF system that’ll ship in commercial devices in H2 2024 (likely in flagships powered by the next-gen Snapdragon 8 Gen 4 chipset).
The Snapdragon X80 is the first 5G modem with fully integrated NB-NTN (narrowband non-terrestrial network) satellite communications support, a 6-antenna architecture for smartphones, and 6X carrier aggregation.
Qualcomm says it has a tensor accelerator to power a few “AI” features, such as AI-based mmWave range extension which extends the range for fixed-wireless access applications. Other improvements include a 30% boost in location accuracy, reduction of 20% for best-cell selection time, 30% faster link acquisition, and 60% faster CPE service acquisition for mmWave connections.
The Snapdragon X80 is the first 5G modem with fully integrated NB-NTN (narrowband non-terrestrial network) satellite communications support, a 6-antenna architecture for smartphones, and 6X carrier aggregation.
Qualcomm says it has a tensor accelerator to power a few “AI” features, such as AI-based mmWave range extension which extends the range for fixed-wireless access applications. Other improvements include a 30% boost in location accuracy, reduction of 20% for best-cell selection time, 30% faster link acquisition, and 60% faster CPE service acquisition for mmWave connections.
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Google’s latest Android Feature Drop for February 2024 is here, bringing you 9 new features to help you stay productive. These include:
1) You can now chat with Gemini right in the Google Messages app on Android! You can ask Gemini to do things like draft messages, come up with a joke, and more. This is available for beta users in English.
2) Android Auto can now use AI to summarize notifications. AI will also suggest relevant replies and actions, so you can just tap a button to send a message, share your ETA, or start a call. (This was announced at Galaxy Unpacked last month but should be rolling out now.)
3) Lookout’s Image Q&A feature is now rolling out globally in English! This feature left closed beta last September and was available in the US, UK, and Canada. Image Q&A uses AI to auto-generate denoscriptions of images.
4) Last October, Google launched Lens in Maps (formerly Search with Live View). This feature uses AI and augmented reality to help you find information about nearby stores. Now, this feature has been upgraded with screen reader support, so you can point your phone’s camera at your surroundings and have TalkBack read the place’s information out loud.
5) You can now add handwritten annotations to documents in Google Docs from your phone or tablet using your finger or stylus. You can choose from a selection of markup tools like different pen colors and highlighters.
6) Spotify Connect devices will finally appear in Android’s media output switcher! Google announced this way back at CES 2023, but it’s finally going to roll out starting this week.
7) The Fitbit app now pulls in your health and fitness data from other apps that support Android’s Health Connect platform. This means you can see your data from services like AllTrails, Oura Ring, and MyFitnessPal, all within the Fitbit app. In the “You” tab, you can see data from connected apps next to your Fitbit data. In the “Today” tab, you can see data like exercise, steps, calories burned, and more from Health Connect-compatible apps.
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1) You can now chat with Gemini right in the Google Messages app on Android! You can ask Gemini to do things like draft messages, come up with a joke, and more. This is available for beta users in English.
2) Android Auto can now use AI to summarize notifications. AI will also suggest relevant replies and actions, so you can just tap a button to send a message, share your ETA, or start a call. (This was announced at Galaxy Unpacked last month but should be rolling out now.)
3) Lookout’s Image Q&A feature is now rolling out globally in English! This feature left closed beta last September and was available in the US, UK, and Canada. Image Q&A uses AI to auto-generate denoscriptions of images.
4) Last October, Google launched Lens in Maps (formerly Search with Live View). This feature uses AI and augmented reality to help you find information about nearby stores. Now, this feature has been upgraded with screen reader support, so you can point your phone’s camera at your surroundings and have TalkBack read the place’s information out loud.
5) You can now add handwritten annotations to documents in Google Docs from your phone or tablet using your finger or stylus. You can choose from a selection of markup tools like different pen colors and highlighters.
6) Spotify Connect devices will finally appear in Android’s media output switcher! Google announced this way back at CES 2023, but it’s finally going to roll out starting this week.
7) The Fitbit app now pulls in your health and fitness data from other apps that support Android’s Health Connect platform. This means you can see your data from services like AllTrails, Oura Ring, and MyFitnessPal, all within the Fitbit app. In the “You” tab, you can see data from connected apps next to your Fitbit data. In the “Today” tab, you can see data like exercise, steps, calories burned, and more from Health Connect-compatible apps.
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