Top-Tier iPad Pros Might Get More RAM Than Other Models

When Apple announced their new iPad Pros, it was revealed that they would be powered by a variant of the A12 Bionic in the form of the A12X Bionic. It would also feature its own custom GPU that Apple says gives it Xbox One X-like performance, except in tablet form. However one hardware feature Apple deigned to mention was how much RAM the new tablets would have.

Apple has never really shared information about RAM in the past, and this is usually discovered in code, benchmarks, or teardowns. However according to developer Steve Troughton-Smith, he might have found out that the new iPads could be packing as much as 6GB of RAM. However he also pointed out that based on what multiple people have told him since, this could be limited to the top-tier iPad Pro, which is basically the 1TB model.

What this means is that if it is true, then the other iPad Pro models will continue packing 4GB of RAM, which we suppose has proven that it is enough, although we’re sure that many wouldn’t mind if it had more RAM for future-proofing purposes. After all unlike smartphones, consumers don’t typically buy new tablet models every year, so for a tablet to last 3-4 years or longer is very much desired.

However we’re not sure how many people can justify buying the 1TB iPad Pros. The 11-inch model will cost $1,549 for the 1TB model, while the 12.9-inch model will retail for $1,749. At those prices you might actually be better off buying a laptop instead, like the newly announced MacBook Airs, or maybe even the base models of the MacBook Pro.

Top-Tier iPad Pros Might Get More RAM Than Other Models , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

The FL Democratic Nominee For Governor Stopped Short Of Calling Trump A ‘Racist’

“I believe that his cover has led to much of the degradation in our political discourse,” the Tallahassee mayor said.

Sonos delays Google Assistant integration until 2019, private beta to launch in 2018

Sonos today announced that Google Assistant will not be available on its products until at least 2019. The service was supposed to launch in 2018 but the company said in a blog posting it needs a bit more time. Additional information about timing will be released in early 2019, Sonos says.

Eager customers can sign-up for a private beta as long as they agree to use the service extensively and respond to surveys within a few days.

Sonos products already have access to Amazon Alexa. Given Sonos’s long-standing notion of supporting all platforms, it makes sense that the company would want customers to have access to both Alexa and Google Assistant. That’s what makes Sonos compelling: They provide the hardware, and owners use whatever software platform they want.

This is clearly critical for Sonos. For a long time, Sonos provided the best-sounding smart speaker system on the market but Amazon, Google and traditional speaker brands are quickly introducing speakers that provide similar sound quality. To keep up and justify the higher price of its hardware, Sonos needs to offer owners the best sound and the best software, and offering Google Assistant on its products is a key part of that goal.

Fortnite patch notes detail new Balloons item

Fortnite‘s weekly patch is arriving a little later than we’re used to, but that doesn’t make it any less exciting (or strange, as the case may be). This time around, the patch notes are little light, but they make up for that by introducing one of the weirdest items yet: Balloons. Yes, beginning today, you’ll find Balloons scattered around Fortnite‘s … Continue reading

Twitter Testing Easier Way For Users To Toggle Timelines

When it comes seeing posts on social media, which do you value more? A timeline based on chronological order or one based on relevancy? There are arguments to be made for either, but Twitter has announced that they are now testing a new way for users to easily toggle between different timeline modes.

During the early days of Twitter, the company would display tweets based on chronological order, with the latest tweets being at the top. However in recent years, they adopted a relevancy timeline which displayed tweets they thought you might be interested in, and tweets that were trending. However it was just last month that the company announced that they would be bringing back the chronological timeline as an option.

However accessing the option wasn’t so obvious, but Twitter’s latest announcement is hoping to change that as they are testing ways for users to switch between the different timelines more easily. This means that in the event you want to see the latest tweets first, you can do so, but if you wanted to swap to a timeline that displays the hottest/most relevant tweets, you can do so at a flick of a switch.

Unfortunately Twitter says that this is in the testing phase at the moment and only available to a small number of iOS users, so if this was something you were interested in, you might have to wait before the option is made available to you.

Twitter Testing Easier Way For Users To Toggle Timelines , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Toyota Tundra PIE Pro Has Pizza-Making Robots On Board

If you like your pizza hot, fresh, and delivered by robots, look no further. Toyota and Pizza Hut have got you covered. The two brand giants recently collaborated to make a high tech pickup truck that has all the gear on board to make pizza on the go, so it can be made to order on its way to its recipient.

The build team at Toyota’s Motorsports Technical Center at the company’s US headquarters in Plano, Texas started out with a full-size Tundra pickup truck, then got to kitting it out with all kinds of goodies. For starters, the Tundra PIE Pro truck runs not on fossil fuels, but on hydrogen power, which it uses to generate electricity for its motor and its robotic pizza cookery.

While that might make treehuggers geek out, it’s the robots that get me all hot and bothered. The truck is equipped with two Nachi industrial robot arms, similar to the ones that Toyota uses on its assembly lines – only smaller. Each robot is responsible for part of the pizza making process – one doing prep, and the other handling packaging and delivery.

The first robot uses its arm to open up one of the truck’s built-in pizza refrigerators, and reaches inside to grab an uncooked pizza. It then carefully maneuvers the pizza into a high-speed professional pizza oven, where it rolls through as it bakes. It takes about seven minutes to cook, and when it pops out the other side of the oven, robot number two takes over.

It’s the second robot’s job to grab the freshly-cooked pizza, and place it onto a special, rotating cutting board, at which point a mechanical pizza wheel raises and lowers itself as the robot turns the pizza, resulting in perfectly triangular slices. Once the pizza is sliced, robot number two fetches it, transfers it to a pizza box, closes the lid, then hands it over to the customer. When it’s all done, it rings a little bell as an added flourish.

I watched the whole thing work like a seamless industrial ballet when Toyota revealed the truck at this year’s SEMA show in Las Vegas, filling the air around the booth with the aroma of fresh-baked pizza, and making mouths of hungry journalists water.

There’s a nifty making of video below from Toyota’s Motorsports Technical Center showing off the design and build process behind the Tundra PIE Pro. Be sure to check it out.

It’s a very impressive build, though sadly, there are no immediate plans for robotic pizza delivery trucks to start hitting the streets. So for now, we’ll just have to rely on those pesky humans.

Watch this little robot transform to get the job done

Robots just want to get things done, but it’s frustrating when their rigid bodies simply don’t allow them to do so. Solution: bodies that can be reconfigured on the fly! Sure, it’s probably bad news for humanity in the long run, but in the meantime it makes for fascinating research.

A team of graduate students from Cornell University and the University of Pennsylvania made this idea their focus and produced both the modular, self-reconfiguring robot itself and the logic that drives it.

Think about how you navigate the world: If you need to walk somewhere, you sort of initiate your “walk” function. But if you need to crawl through a smaller space, you need to switch functions and shapes. Similarly, if you need to pick something up off a table, you can just use your “grab” function, but if you need to reach around or over an obstacle you need to modify the shape of your arm and how it moves. Naturally you have a nearly limitless “library” of these functions that you switch between at will.

That’s really not the case for robots, which are much more rigidly designed both in hardware and software. This research, however, aims to create a similar — if considerably smaller — library of actions and configurations that a robot can use on the fly to achieve its goals.

In their paper published today in Science Robotics, the team documents the groundwork they undertook, and although it’s still extremely limited, it hints at how this type of versatility will be achieved in the future.

The robot itself, called SMORES-EP, might be better described as a collection of robots: small cubes (it’s a popular form factor) equipped with wheels and magnets that can connect to each other and cooperate when one or all of them won’t do the job. The brains of the operation lie in a central unit equipped with a camera and depth sensor it uses to survey the surroundings and decide what to do.

If it sounds a little familiar, that’s because the same team demonstrated a different aspect of this system earlier this year, namely the ability to identify spaces it can’t navigate and deploy items to remedy that. The current paper is focused on the underlying system that the robot uses to perceive its surroundings and interact with it.

Let’s put this in more concrete terms. Say a robot like this one is given the goal of collecting the shoes from around your apartment and putting them back in your closet. It gets around your apartment fine but ultimately identifies a target shoe that’s underneath your bed. It knows that it’s too big to fit under there because it can perceive dimensions and understands its own shape and size. But it also knows that it has functions for accessing enclosed areas, and it can tell that by arranging its parts in such and such a way it should be able to reach the shoe and bring it back out.

The flexibility of this approach and the ability to make these decisions autonomously are where the paper identifies advances. This isn’t a narrow “shoe-under-bed-getter” function, it’s a general tool for accessing areas the robot itself can’t fit into, whether that means pushing a recessed button, lifting a cup sitting on its side, or reaching between condiments to grab one in the back.

A visualization of how the robot perceives its environment.

As with just about everything in robotics, this is harder than it sounds, and it doesn’t even sound easy. The “brain” needs to be able to recognize objects, accurately measure distances, and fundamentally understand physical relationships between objects. In the shoe grabbing situation above, what’s stopping a robot from trying to lift the bed and leave it in place floating above the ground while it drives underneath? Artificial intelligences have no inherent understanding of any basic concept and so many must be hard-coded or algorithms created that reliably make the right choice.

Don’t worry, the robots aren’t quite at the “collect shoes” or “collect remaining humans” stage yet. The tests to which the team subjected their little robot were more like “get around these cardboard boxes and move any pink-labeled objects to the designated drop-off area.” Even this type of carefully delineated task is remarkably difficult, but the bot did just fine — though rather slowly, as lab-based bots tend to be.

The authors of the paper have since finished their grad work and moved on to new (though surely related) things. Tarik Tosun, one of the authors with whom I talked for this article, explained that he’s now working on advancing the theoretical side of things as opposed to, say, building cube-modules with better torque. To that end he helped author VSPARC, a simulator environment for modular robots. Although it is tangential to the topic immediately at hand, the importance of this aspect of robotics research can’t be overestimated.

You can find a pre-published version of the paper here in case you don’t have access to Science Robotics.

Twitter Testing Easier Way For Users To Toggle Timelines

When it comes seeing posts on social media, which do you value more? A timeline based on chronological order or one based on relevancy? There are arguments to be made for either, but Twitter has announced that they are now testing a new way for users to easily toggle between different timeline modes.

During the early days of Twitter, the company would display tweets based on chronological order, with the latest tweets being at the top. However in recent years, they adopted a relevancy timeline which displayed tweets they thought you might be interested in, and tweets that were trending. However it was just last month that the company announced that they would be bringing back the chronological timeline as an option.

However accessing the option wasn’t so obvious, but Twitter’s latest announcement is hoping to change that as they are testing ways for users to switch between the different timelines more easily. This means that in the event you want to see the latest tweets first, you can do so, but if you wanted to swap to a timeline that displays the hottest/most relevant tweets, you can do so at a flick of a switch.

Unfortunately Twitter says that this is in the testing phase at the moment and only available to a small number of iOS users, so if this was something you were interested in, you might have to wait before the option is made available to you.

Twitter Testing Easier Way For Users To Toggle Timelines , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

GOP Is Scapegoating People With Disabilities To Keep Black Voters From The Polls

If it looks like voter suppression and it sounds like voter suppression, then it probably is voter suppression.

Toyota Tundra PIE Pro Has Pizza-Making Robots On Board

If you like your pizza hot, fresh, and delivered by robots, look no further. Toyota and Pizza Hut have got you covered. The two brand giants recently collaborated to make a high tech pickup truck that has all the gear on board to make pizza on the go, so it can be made to order on its way to its recipient.

The build team at Toyota’s Motorsports Technical Center at the company’s US headquarters in Plano, Texas started out with a full-size Tundra pickup truck, then got to kitting it out with all kinds of goodies. For starters, the Tundra PIE Pro truck runs not on fossil fuels, but on hydrogen power, which it uses to generate electricity for its motor and its robotic pizza cookery.

While that might make treehuggers geek out, it’s the robots that get me all hot and bothered. The truck is equipped with two Nachi industrial robot arms, similar to the ones that Toyota uses on its assembly lines – only smaller. Each robot is responsible for part of the pizza making process – one doing prep, and the other handling packaging and delivery.

The first robot uses its arm to open up one of the truck’s built-in pizza refrigerators, and reaches inside to grab an uncooked pizza. It then carefully maneuvers the pizza into a high-speed professional pizza oven, where it rolls through as it bakes. It takes about seven minutes to cook, and when it pops out the other side of the oven, robot number two takes over.

It’s the second robot’s job to grab the freshly-cooked pizza, and place it onto a special, rotating cutting board, at which point a mechanical pizza wheel raises and lowers itself as the robot turns the pizza, resulting in perfectly triangular slices. Once the pizza is sliced, robot number two fetches it, transfers it to a pizza box, closes the lid, then hands it over to the customer. When it’s all done, it rings a little bell as an added flourish.

I watched the whole thing work like a seamless industrial ballet when Toyota revealed the truck at this year’s SEMA show in Las Vegas, filling the air around the booth with the aroma of fresh-baked pizza, and making mouths of hungry journalists water.

There’s a nifty making of video below from Toyota’s Motorsports Technical Center showing off the design and build process behind the Tundra PIE Pro. Be sure to check it out.

It’s a very impressive build, though sadly, there are no immediate plans for robotic pizza delivery trucks to start hitting the streets. So for now, we’ll just have to rely on those pesky humans.