Samsung is bringing unlimited battery repairs to Samsung Care+, its premium after-sales service plans. However, the Samsung Care+ and Samsung Care+ with Theft and Loss plans are getting pricier by $2 per month in the USA with this change. This change is happening from May 2024.
Samsung Care+ is getting unlimited battery repairs but also gets pricier
Samsung Care+ is Samsung’s premium after-sales service plan that offers free or discounted repairs for accidental damage. It was launched a few years ago and has two tiers. Both of them are getting unlimited battery repairs. However, there are a few conditions to note. The battery will only be replaced with a new one if the older battery’s health has reduced to 79% or lower. The battery health will be identified by Samsung’s diagnostic test.
Moreover, the battery will be repaired for free only if the device hasn’t received accidental damage. The battery repair option will only be available through walk-in or mail-in modes. All current Samsung Care+ subscribers have been sent notifications for these changes.
Samsung Care+ and Samsung Care+ with Theft and Loss plans don’t come cheap. The prices of these plans also vary by the device. These plans currently cost anywhere from $8 to $18 per month, depending on the device. However, starting May 2024, the prices will go up to $10-$20 per month.
What is Samsung Care+?
Samsung Care+ is the company’s premium after-sales service plan that offers unlimited repairs, drops and spills repairs, and repairs for mechanical breakdowns (after the one-year standard warranty ends). It also offers screen repairs for just $29. Samsung also offers 24×7 expert support for device-related issues.
It also offers users peace of mind, as all repairs are done by Samsung-certified service centers or technicians. Under this plan, only genuine parts are used for repairs.
Samsung Care+ is available for laptops, smartphones, smartwatches, tablets, and wireless earbuds. Samsung Care+ with Theft and Loss plans are available for only smartphones, smartwatches, and tablets. It costs more than the Samsung Care+ plan, though.
The first iPhone was launched in 2007, while the first Galaxy smartphone was unveiled in 2009. Ever since their launch, Android and iOS have copied features from each other, but Android has always been better at UI customization. While Apple has made several improvements in the past few years, it still lacks a basic feature that has been present on Galaxy (and other Android phones) for 14 years.
iOS 18 could bring blank space support to the iPhone’s home screen
MacRumors is reporting that iOS 18 will bring more home screen customization support to iPhones. While app icons on the home screen will still be locked to an invisible grid structure, iPhone users could have black spaces, columns, and rows between app icons. The information about a more customizable UI was first reported by Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman.
It is already possible to create custom icons for apps on iOS, it requires a lot of effort and using the Shortcuts app. In comparison, Galaxy users can easily do so by installing a third-party app launcher and an icon pack. One UI lets users customize the colors of app icons using the Color Palette feature. One UI also lets users change the app icon grid size for the home screen, app drawer, and folders. They can also change the colors of the folders.
Other features expected with iOS 18 include support for RCS (for better messaging between Android and iOS), Generative AI support for Siri, and AI features for many stock apps.
Apple is in discussions with Google to integrate its Gemini AI engine into the iPhone as part of iOS 18, according to Bloomberg‘s Mark Gurman.
In a report citing people familiar with the situation, Gurman claims the two companies are in “active negotiations” to let Apple license Google’s generative large-language models in order to power some new features coming in iOS 18.
“The two parties haven’t decided the terms or branding of an AI agreement or finalized how it would be implemented,” according to the report’s sources.
With the release of iOS 18 later this year, Apple is rumored to be bringing major new AI capabilities to its iPhone operating system. According to Gurman, however, Apple is focusing on features that operate on-device and do not require an internet connection.
To power additional cloud-based generative AI features, such as the ability to create images and write essays based on single prompts, Apple is seeking a partner that has the necessary large-scale hardware infrastructure and compute capabilities already in place.
Apple has been internally testing an “Apple GPT” rival that could compete with OpenAI’s ChatGPT. Apple is said to be spending millions of dollars a day on conversational AI research as training language models requires a lot of hardware.
According to previous reporting by Gurman, work on AI is a priority for Apple, and the company has been designing an “Ajax” framework for large language models. However, the technology is still not as advanced as tools from Google and other rivals, making a partnership look like the better option, according to the latest report.
If the negotiations come to nothing, Apple could seek another generative AI provider such as OpenAI or turn to multiple partners. But if the talks bring about a deal, it could be a lucrative addition to the two companies’ existing search partnership.
Google has paid Apple billions of dollars for several years to keep its search engine the default option in Safari browser on Apple devices. However, the existing deal is facing regulatory scrutiny from the U.S. Department of Justice and the European Commission over concerns that it helps Google maintain a search monopoly.
Both The Information and analyst Jeff Pu claim that Apple will have some kind of generative AI feature available on the iPhone and iPad around late 2024, which is when iOS 18 will be coming out. However, Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo said in August that there is “no sign” of generative AI technology coming in 2024, and he claimed that Apple’s work on generative AI is “significantly behind its competitors.”
Soundcore Sleep A20 earbuds with improved noise-masking, longer battery life and soft ear tips are coming to help you sleep through all the racket, parent company Anker said Friday — aka World Sleep Day.
You can sign up now for Super Early Bird pricing at $60 off in the Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign for the Sleep A20 earbuds, which launches April 16.
Soundcore Sleep A20 earbuds
Soundcore launched its Sleep A10 earbuds in 2022 and now plans a Kickstarter funding campaign for its updgraded version, Soundcore Sleep A20.
The second-generation sleep earbuds feature advanced noise-masking (with Twin-Seal eartips), ultra-comfortable ergonomic design and longer battery life.
Here’s some of Soundcore’s description, which calls out the Sleep A20’s comfort level, even more people who sleep on their sides:
Highlighting the need for healthy, restful sleep during World Sleep Day 2024, the Sleep A20 will offer users 3x better noise rejection using their Twin-Seal ear tips versus single layer ear tips. By utilizing this design, the Sleep A20 can help to block out more noise, including a partner “sawing wood, chopping logs or grinding gravel” on the other side of the bed.
Additionally, thanks to their compact design, the Sleep A20 are ideal for side-sleepers. The ergonomic curved shape helps to conform to a user’s ears, offering a pressure free wearing experience by allowing a user to lay their head on a pillow without the earbud protruding from their ears, while causing discomfort like more traditional earbud models can.
In addition to silicone ear tips, the buds’ entire surface that comes in contact with the user is covered with an ultra-soft silicone material, Soundcore said.
One new features lets you use a little sound alert to find them if they fall out. Photo: Soundcore
Other Soundcore Sleep A20 earbuds features:
14 hours of playtime in Sleep mode, 80 hours with the charging case; up to 10 hours of playtime with 55 hours in the charging case when used while connected to Bluetooth (at 50% volume).
Play various sounds from an included sound library, such as white noise.
Repeatable alarm ensures users can wake up to a personal alarm using a library of customizable sounds, while not waking a sleeping partner or nearby family members.
Automatic sleep monitoring with sleep position tracking.
Access via the Soundcore app (Android and iOS).
Lets users find lost earbuds using an audible alert through the Soundcore app.
Availability and pricing
Starting April 16, you can preorder Soundcore Sleep A20 on Kickstarter in the United States and several other countries. Early backers can get discounts up to 40% off.
However, starting today, you can visit Soundcore.com at the link below for additional early bird specials and perks. Sleep A20 earbuds should be available for purchase on Amazon.com and Soundcore for $149.99 in mid to late May.
Innovation in PhD education has not reached how doctoral degrees are assessed.Credit: Dan Dunkley/Science Photo Library
Research and teaching in today’s universities are unrecognizable compared with what they were in the early nineteenth century, when Germany and later France gave the world the modern research doctorate. And yet significant aspects of the process of acquiring and assessing a doctorate have remained remarkably constant. A minimum of three years of independent study mentored by a single individual culminates in the production of the doctoral thesis — often a magisterial, book-length piece of work that is assessed in an oral examination by a few senior academic researchers. In an age in which there is much research-informed innovation in teaching and learning, the assessment of the doctoral thesis represents a curious throwback that is seemingly impervious to meaningful reform.
But reform is needed. Some doctoral candidates perceive the current assessment system to lack transparency, and examiners report concerns of falling standards (G. Houston A Study of the PhD Examination: Process, Attributes and Outcomes. PhD thesis, Oxford Univ.; 2018). Making the qualification more structured would help — and, equally importantly, would bring the assessment of PhD education in line with education across the board. PhD candidates with experience of modern assessment methods will become better researchers, wherever they work. Indeed, most will not be working in universities: the majority of PhD holders find employment outside academia.
Collection: Career resources for PhD students
It’s not that PhD training is completely stuck in the nineteenth century. Today’s doctoral candidates can choose from a range of pathways. Professional doctorates, often used in engineering, are jointly supervised by an employer and an academic, and are aimed at solving industry-based problems. Another innovation is PhD by publication, in which, instead of a final thesis on one or more research questions, the criterion for an award is a minimum number of papers published or accepted for publication. In some countries, doctoral students are increasingly being trained in cohorts, with the aim of providing a less isolating experience than that offered by the conventional supervisor–student relationship. PhD candidates are also encouraged to acquire transferable skills — for example, in data analysis, public engagement, project management or business, economics and finance. The value of such training would be even greater if these skills were to be formally assessed alongside a dissertation rather than seen as optional.
And yet, most PhDs are still assessed after the production of a final dissertation, according to a format that, at its core, has not changed for at least half a century, as speakers and delegates noted at an event in London last month on PhD assessment, organized by the Society for Research in Higher Education. Innovations in assessment that are common at other levels of education are struggling to find their way into the conventional doctoral programme.
Take the concept of learning objectives. Intended to aid consistency, fairness and transparency, learning objectives are a summary of what a student is expected to know and how they will be assessed, and are given at the start of a course of study. Part of the ambition is also to help tutors to keep track of their students’ learning and take remedial action before it is too late.
PhD training is no longer fit for purpose — it needs reform now
Formative assessment is another practice that has yet to find its way into PhD assessment consistently. Here, a tutor evaluates a student’s progress at the mid-point of a course and gives feedback or guidance on what students need to do to improve ahead of their final, or summative, assessment. It is not that these methods are absent from modern PhDs; a conscientious supervisor will not leave candidates to sink or swim until the last day. But at many institutions, such approaches are not required of PhD supervisors.
Part of the difficulty is that PhD training is carried out in research departments by people who do not need to have teaching qualifications or awareness of innovations based on education research. Supervisors shouldn’t just be experts in their field, they should also know how best to convey that subject knowledge — along with knowledge of research methods — to their students.
It is probably not possible for universities to require all doctoral supervisors to have teaching qualifications. But there are smaller changes that can be made. At a minimum, doctoral supervisors should take the time to engage with the research that exists in the field of PhD education, and how it can apply to their interactions with students.
There can be no one-size-fits-all solution to improving how a PhD is assessed, because different subjects often have bespoke needs and practices (P. Denicolo Qual. Assur. Educ.11, 84–91; 2003). But supervisors and representatives of individual subject communities must continue to discuss what is most appropriate for their disciplines.
All things considered, there is benefit to adopting a more structured approach to PhD assessment. It is high time that PhD education caught up with changes that are now mainstream at most other levels of education. That must start with a closer partnership between education researchers, PhD supervisors and organizers of doctoral-training programmes in universities. This partnership will benefit everyone — PhD supervisors and doctoral students coming into the research workforce, whether in universities or elsewhere.
Education and training in research has entered many secondary schools, along with undergraduate teaching, which is a good thing. In the spirit of mutual learning, research doctoral supervisors, too, will benefit by going back to school.
Conversation Boost in current AirPods Pro acts like a hearing aid but Apple reportedly wants to go farther. Graphic: Apple
AirPods Pro might be able to act more like a hearing aid with the release of iOS 18, according to an Apple tipster.
The additional audio function would benefit those with slight hearing loss who aren’t ready for more serious hearing assistance.
Skip the hearing aid with AirPods Pro in iOS 18
Many people wear AirPods for hours every day so they can (1) listen to music but also (2) close off the world. But soon these truly wireless earbuds could help wearers better communicate with the people around them.
The release of iOS 18 in the autumn will add new hearing aid capabilities to AirPods Pro, according to Bloomberg‘s Mark Gurman. No additional details on what exactly that means came from the tipster.
Better than Live Listen and Conversation Boost?
Specifics on the upcoming hearing aid feature for AirPods Pro are lacking, but it will obviously have to improve on Conversation Boost, a feature that’s been in AirPods Pro since 2022. It uses software to amplify the voice of the person the wearer is speaking with.
And several Apple headphones models also support Live Listen, which turns an iPhone or iPad into a microphone that sends sound to any of several AirPods models. This is useful than sitting in a noisy environment like a restaurant.
A 2022 FDA full change allows companies to sell hearing aids over the counter and online, without a doctor’s intervention. Ever since, there have been expectations that Apple would make AirPods act as a hearing aid for those who need extra help. These have been helped along by leaks indicating the audio feature is on the way.
iOS 18 is expected to be announced at WWDC24 in June. New artificial intelligence-driven features are expected to be a highlight, and being able to pick out speech from ambient noise and amplify just it might be one of those AI additions.
BMW has announced that it will be bringing hands-free driving to the UK next year with its Level 3 highly autonomous driving, the feature is set to launch in Germany next spring and then in the UK later in the year.
This new feature will be available on the BMW 7 series model as an optional extra in the form of the BMW Personal Pilot L3, this optional feature will cost buys of the BMW 7 series an extra €6,000.
The introduction of Level 3 functionality in BMW 7 Series models will make the BMW Group the first carmaker to offer both an advanced Level 2 driving function in its product portfolio where the hands can be taken off the steering wheel and positioned comfortably and a Level 3 system. The BMW Highway Assistant already offers a highly innovative SAE Level 2 partially automated driving function in all new BMW 5 Series models. The package also includes a unique feature in the form of the Active Lane Change Assistant with eye confirmation. This function is primarily designed for use over long-distance journeys in the new BMW 5 Series, allowing the driver to adopt an extremely relaxed posture behind the steering wheel. When travelling at up to 130 km/h (81 mph), this additional function of the Steering and Lane Control Assistant can take control over the car’s speed, the distance to the vehicle in front and the car’s steering.
You can find out more details about the new BMW hands free driving over at the BMW website at the link below, we expect BMW to make this available for more vehicles in the future as well.
Source BMW
Filed Under: Auto News, Technology News
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