El director ganador del Oscar, Robert Zemeckis, dijo que Disney probablemente no tenga planes de hacer una secuela de su clásico de 1988. ¿Quién engañó a Roger Rabbit?. La película fue producida por Steven Spielberg. Una innovadora mezcla de acción en vivo y animación.y fue un gran éxito tanto de crítica como de público.Si bien Disney produjo una serie de cortos de dibujos animados de Roger Rabbit, nunca se produjo ninguna secuela, a pesar de los rumores que duraron décadas.
En apariencia en feliz triste confundido Podcast para promocionar su nueva película aquí, Se le preguntó a Zemeckis sobre la secuela que se rumoreaba desde hacía mucho tiempo. recibido conejo, Reconoció la existencia deBuen texto“sentado en Disney. Sin embargo, afirmó que el régimen actual no haría una película de Roger Rabbit, principalmente debido a la inclusión de la sexy Jessica Rabbit (con la voz de Kathleen Turner). Citó el cambio en el personaje de Roger Rabbit. Paseo Car Toon Spin en Disney Resort Land, donde cubrieron su animación con un impermeable. Esto es lo que Zemeckis dijo:
Hay buenos guiones en Disney, pero esa es la cuestión. Esto es lo que necesita saber. El Disney actual no haría Roger Rabbit hoy. No pueden hacer una película con Jessica en ella. Entonces hay un [Peter] Marinero y [Jeffrey] Precio de la secuela del escenario. ¿Verá alguna vez la luz del día, tan bueno como es? Quiero decir, mira lo que le hicieron a Jessica en el parque, la ataron con una gabardina.
¿Qué significa la declaración de Zemeckis para la secuela?
No obtendrás la misma calificación
Basada en la novela de 1981, ¿Quién monitoreó a Roger Rabbit? Escrito por Gary K. lobo, ¿Quién engañó a Roger Rabbit? Es una película de misterio inspirada en el cine negro ambientada en el Hollywood de 1947 donde conviven humanos y personajes de dibujos animados. La película sigue a Eddie Valiant (Bob Hoskins), un investigador privado que guarda rencor contra los Toons, que debe ayudar a exonerar a Roger Rabbit (Charles Fleischer), una caricatura incriminada por asesinato. La película fue un gran éxito, Recibió elogios casi universales de la crítica, ganando 351,5 millones de dólares con un presupuesto de 50,6 millones de dólares. El éxito de la película ayudó a que recibiera una clasificación PG, que probablemente no tendría hoy.
Relacionado con
Jessica Rabbit ha sido reinventada en 9 estilos de anime diferentes en este juego cruzado que presenta el arte de Roger Rabbit.
El clásico personaje de Quién engañó a Roger Rabbit, Jessica Rabbit, se reinventa en 9 estilos de animación en arte transversal con múltiples programas de animación.
trama ¿Quién engañó a Roger Rabbit? Se inspira en gran medida en el clásico de 1974 de Roman Polanski. barrio chino, Aunque esto puede haber pasado por la cabeza de los niños asistentes, ver en pantalla a personajes de dibujos animados como Mickey Mouse y Bugs Bunny les habría encantado. A pesar del uso de muchos personajes de dibujos animados aptos para niños, ¿Quién engañó a Roger Rabbit? Él es Abiertamente sexual y algo oscuro a veces.Lo más notable es la escena en la que Toon es torturado y asesinado por el juez Doom (Christopher Lloyd). La secuela de hoy tendría que bajar el tono significativamente para obtener una clasificación PG.
Esto no significa que Disney, como empresa, se oponga al entretenimiento centrado en adultos. Su adquisición de 20th Century Fox abrió todo el catálogo de películas de Fox, y Disney demostró el verano pasado que estaba dispuesto a incursionar en contenido con clasificación R. Lobezno Deadpool Es la película con clasificación R más alta jamás realizada, recaudando más de 1.300 millones de dólares. Está claro que A roger conejo La secuela no tendrá clasificación R, pero si quieren mantener el mismo tono que la original, Probablemente tendrá una clasificación PG-13..
Nuestra visión de la secuela de Roger Rabbit
Será una película muy centrada en Disney.
Si Disney decide seguir adelante con una secuela, probablemente lo harán. Extraño a las estrellas del anime de otros estudios.. Spielberg convenció a estudios como Warner Bros. Paramount Pictures y Universal Pictures prestaron a sus personajes, como Bugs Bunny, Betty Boop y Droopy Dog, para que aparecieran en la película, que era y sigue siendo inaudita. Las posibilidades de que un estudio permita que sus personajes aparezcan en una película de Disney hoy en día son muy escasas. A roger conejo En cambio, probablemente se deshará de la propiedad intelectual propiedad de Disney, como Pixar, Marvel y Star Wars, debido a su visibilidad.
Fuente: Feliz, Triste, Confundido
¿Quién engañó a Roger Rabbit? combina acción en vivo y animación para crear un mundo donde los humanos y los personajes de dibujos animados coexisten. Ambientada en el Hollywood de los años 40, la película sigue a un investigador privado que es contratado para trabajar en el caso de una caricatura incriminada por asesinato, a pesar de su odio por las caricaturas. Bob Hoskins, Charles Fleischer, Christopher Lloyd y Kathleen Turner son estrellas.
“todos [Rabbit] Las respuestas R1 enviadas se pueden descargar en absoluto, De acuerdo a Para un grupo de investigación R1 llamado Rabbitude.
Rabbit y su IA R1 ya estaban allí se hundió por ser nada más de aplicación de Android Envuelto en una herramienta de hardware, pero hay algo más preocupante en marcha.
El informe (trans el borde) dijo que Rabbitude obtuvo acceso al código base y descubrió que las claves API se habían integrado en su código. Esto significa que cualquier persona con estas claves puede “leer cada respuesta realizada por cada R1, incluidas aquellas que contienen información personal, bloquear todos los R1 y cambiar las respuestas de todos los R1”. [and] Reemplace el sonido de cada r1”. La investigación descubrió que estas claves API son las que brindan acceso a ElevenLabs y Azure para generar texto a voz, Yelp para reseñas y Google Maps para datos de ubicación.
Velocidad de la luz triturable
Lo peor es que Rabbitude dijo que identificó la falla de seguridad el 16 de mayo y que Rabbitude estaba al tanto del problema. Pero las “claves API todavía son válidas en el momento de escribir este artículo” el 25 de junio. El acceso continuo a las claves API significa que los delincuentes pueden acceder a datos confidenciales, bloquear todo el sistema RabbitOS y agregar scripts personalizados.
Al día siguiente (26 de junio), Rabbit emitió un comunicado en su servidor Discord diciendo que las cuatro claves API identificadas por Rabbitude habían sido revocadas. La compañía dijo: “Hasta el momento, no tenemos conocimiento de que se haya filtrado ningún dato de clientes ni de que se haya pirateado nuestros sistemas”.
Pero la trama se complica. conejo También se encontraron La quinta clave API se instaló en el código, pero no se reveló públicamente durante la investigación. Esta opción se llama sendgrid y proporciona acceso a todos los correos electrónicos del subdominio r1.rabbit.tech. En el momento en que Rabbitude publicó su informe de seguimiento, la clave API de sendgrid todavía estaba activa. El acceso a esta clave API significa que Rabbitude puede acceder a información adicional del usuario dentro de la funcionalidad de hoja de cálculo R1 e incluso enviar correos electrónicos desde direcciones de correo electrónico de Rabbit.tech.
Si ya es escéptico sobre las capacidades inmaduras del R1, que la editora de Mashable Tech, Kimberly Gideon, atribuyó en su revisión a “innovación apresurada, desilusión e imprudencia”, esto podría ser una señal de que Rabbit, en el mejor de los casos, no vale la pena. y En el peor de los casos, no poder mantener la privacidad de sus datos.
While I hesitate to call the Rabbit R1 AI companion device useless, I would not describe it as useful. This is a cute, orange gadget that has spent much of its brief time in my pocket. I have little to reason to pull it out. And why would I? It does nothing better than my iPhone 15 Pro Max and the dozens of apps I have on it. It’s not even a better AI device than a smartphone with Gemini, Copilot, or ChatGPT.
Even the design, which gets points for solid construction and cute, retro looks, fails to inspire. The touch-screen, physical scroll wheel navigation is one of the worst system interaction strategies I’ve ever encountered. RabbitOS’s incredibly linear navigation only exacerbates the problem. I can’t remember the last mobile piece of consumer electronics that didn’t know to return to a home screen if you weren’t using it. I’d argue the developers took the “rabbit hole” metaphor a little too seriously and designed an operating system that is nothing but rabbit holes and the only way you get out of them is by carefully backing up.
Rabbit R1 was supposed to be different. it was supposed to be special. It’s not a smartphone and was never intended to be one or even compete with one. Instead, Rabbit tossed traditional smartphone and app tropes out the window and developed something new: a way of connecting your intentions to action without the need for apps. A new AI or Large Action Model (LAM), would connect spoken requests to app logins and then handle all the interactions and execution for you.
Specs
What’s in the box: Rabbit R1 Weight: 115g Dimensions: 3in. x 3in. x 0.5in. Battery: 1000mAh RAM: 4GB Storage: 128GB Display: 2.88in. TFT Connectivity: WiFi (2.4GHz and 5GHz), Bluetooth 5, SIM card-support Location: GPS Camera: 8MP CPU: MediaTek MT 6765
In practice, this means that you’re logging into your Uber, Door Dash, Spotify, and Midjourney accounts through the Rabbit Hole desktop interface and then using the Rabbit R1 hardware, its push-to-talk system, and on-board AI to request rides, food, music, and generative images.
Would it shock you to hear that most of that didn’t work for me? It’s not all Rabbit’s fault. Spotify won’t accept third-party music requests unless you have a paid account. Doordash couldn’t complete the sign-in. Midjourney works but the image generation is happening in Discord and not inside the Rabbit.
LAM turns out to be unimpressive and somewhat jerry-rigged. The built-in large language model that works with Rabbit Vision is somewhat better but why would I buy another $199 piece of hardware to duplicate something I can do with a cheap phone, much less the best phone currently available? I wouldn’t, and neither should you.
Rabbit R1: Pricing & availability
The Rabbit announced the Rabbit R1 AI companion at CES 2024 in January. It shipped in April, lists for $199 (about £160/AU$290), and is currently available in the US, Canada, United Kingdom, Denmark, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, South Korea, Japan, and Australia. The first run is done and new orders are shipping in June 2024.
Rabbit R1: Design & features
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(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
You have to give Rabbit and design firm Teenage Engineering credit: the Rabbit R1 looks nothing like a traditional smartphone and that difference helps broadcast its intentions, which are ultimately nothing like your phone’s.
Rabbit R1 is a 3x3in by a half-inch thick orange paint-covered and fairly sturdy slab. It has a tiny 2.88-inch color touch screen, an enclosed, rotatable 8MP camera, and below that a large, slick scroll wheel. If you look on the side adjacent to that wheel, you’ll see a small gray push-to-talk (to the device) button that goes right through it. On the opposite side is a USB-C charge port (the device does not ship with a cable or charge adapter). Below that is a SIM slot that you can open with a fingernail, a nice change from all the phones that require a special pin.
There’s a pair of microphones along one edge and on the back is a large speaker grill (one inch by about 0.5 in).
(Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)
Inside is 4GB of RAM, which doesn’t sound like much but considering how little Rabbit R1 does on board it’s probably enough. There’s a surprising 128GB of storage that will mostly go unused. The MediaTek MT 6765 is a middling CPU but it’s unclear how much of an impact since the Rabbit R1 is usually talking to the cloud. AI image generation through Midjourney, for example, is not performed in-device. Instead, it sends prompts to the cloud where Midjourney on Discord handles them, generates images, and then sends them back to the Rabbit R1 to be displayed on the tiny, albeit sharp, screen.
Considering how important that cloud connection is to Rabbit R1’s operation you’d think it would do a better job of maintaining it, but often when I picked up the Rabbit R1, it would say “establishing connection” while I waited. If I had it connected to my smartphone, the connection would often drop out. You can, by the way, buy and install a SIM card to deliver a constant, dedicated connection to your mobile network. Still, without the ability to make calls or even send and receive texts, what’s the point of that?
Design & features score: 3/5
Rabbit R1: Performance & Battery Life
Setup is mostly pain-free, though to use Rabbit R1, I had to get it on a network, which required typing in a WiFi password into a really tiny virtual touch screen. The Rabbit R1 wouldn’t work, though, until I plugged it in and accepted the first of what would become a series of regular updates.
There isn’t much about Rabbit R1’s operation that I’d call familiar. If you pick it up, you’ll notice the screen is dark until you press the talk button. The default screen is a graphical rabbit (Rabbit’s logo) with battery life and time. There’s nothing else on the display. Touching or tapping the screen does nothing. It’s important that you get used to talking to Rabbit R1, as it’s the only way to access its limited feature set. At least Rabbit R1’s microphones are powerful enough to pick up my requests even when I whisper them.
(Image credit: Future)
Rabbit R1 doesn’t do much of anything on its own. There’s the cloud-based large-language model (LLM) that does a decent job of answering questions about the weather, history, and other general-interest topics. It’s also quite good at reading labels. I noticed that when I pointed it at a rocket model, it accurately identified it and then walked me through the bullet list of details on the box. The built-in camera is not for taking pretty pictures (what do you expect from an 8MP sensor?) and is instead used with Rabbit Vision.
The camera is usually hidden but when I double-click the Talk button, the camera swivels to face out from the back of the Rabbit R1 – you use the scroll wheel to flip the camera from front to back and vice versa. I can hold the button down to ask Rabbit R1 to, for instance, describe what it’s seeing. After a few seconds, it usually responds accurately and in surprising detail.
(Image credit: Future)
It did well identifying a banana, a camera, and me as a late middle-aged man. But when I asked it to to help me plan a meal based on what it could see in my refrigerator, it only described what it saw in the fridge and told me there were many options. However, it did not describe a single dish and when I followed up and asked it to suggest a meal based on what’s in my fridge, it said it could not order food.
(Image credit: Future)
I don’t speak any other languages, so I tested Rabbit R1’s real-time translation abilities by letting it listen to some Japanese language videos on YouTube. I told it to translate Japanese to English and, when I held the talk button to let it listen and then released it, the Rabbit R1 quickly displayed on screen and repeated the conversation in English. That was pretty impressive, though, the lack of on-screen guidance on how to make this work was frustrating. Most people not comfortable with technology might just give up.
I can relive all these interactions with Vision through the online “Rabbit Hole,” which keeps the text and images from each interaction in calendar order. There’s no search function but each entry includes a trashcan icon so you can delete it.
Rabbit R1 doesn’t include communication, email, messaging, social media, games, or anything that might prompt me to engage with it more regularly. It’s just an AI wrapped inside a device.
(Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)
There are some settings and controls for things like volume control. To access them you have to press the Talk button and then, I kid you not, shake Rabbit R1. To navigate the menu, you’ll need to use the large orange scroll wheel. This wheel is one of Rabbit’s worst decisions. I found it slippery and hard to turn. I hate it.
Navigating the Settings menu required a series of turns and presses. You navigate down to a menu item and then reverse those steps to get back home. It’s almost as if the designers never used a smartphone. If I weren’t testing the Rabbit R1, I might’ve pitched it out a window.
Rabbit R1 gets points for cute graphics. This is what I saw when I recharged the handset. (Image credit: Future)
Initial battery life on the Rabbit R1 was not good and I watched as it lost a quarter of it’s battery life in the space of an hour. Subsequent updates seemed to help that a bit but I still think battery life drains far too fast (even when you’re not using it). The average smartphone is more efficient and lasts far longer.
Performance and Battery Life Score: 2.5/5
Rabbit R1: Final verdict
If all it took to achieve success in consumer electronics is to deliver an adorable design at a relatively affordable price, Rabbit R1 might be a success. But that’s not the real world.
Rabbit R1 doesn’t do enough to replace your smartphone or even operate as a decent companion. It’s limited, and poorly thought out and much of the magic it promises happens – slowly – in the cloud and then is delivered back to this underpowered orange product.
If Rabbit hopes to lead the AI gadget charge, it better go back to the drawing board for Rabbit R2.
When I first saw the Rabbit R1, it was more appealing than the Humane AI Pin. The R1 had an actual screen, not a dim projector, and it had a twee scrolling wheel, all wrapped up in a glossy, fiery orange-red shell.
Alas, as our review explains, it doesn’t work as well as promised. It doesn’t do much and is, at launch, riddled with bugs and issues. Devindra Hardawar, who reviewed it, even took issue with the scrolling wheel. Nooooo.
Engadget
The main takeaway might be: If your phone can do all these tasks just as well (or better, in most cases), what’s the point, Rabbit?
The truth might be I just wasn’t into the Rabbit R1. Even if I am into pretty much anything Teenage Engineering designs.
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There’s a gap between plans and what’s needed.
New research conducted by the University of East Anglia (UEA) suggests current carbon removal plans will not be enough to comply with Paris treaty goals to limit global warming to 1.5C. There’s a gap of up to 3.2 billion tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) between current global plans to remove carbon from the atmosphere and what’s needed to avoid the worst impacts of global warming. The study says a rapid reduction in emissions is far more important than where to stuff the CO2 already around.
Google has updated its Inappropriate Content Policy to expressly prohibit advertisers from promoting websites and services that generate deepfake pornography. There are already restrictions in place for ads that feature some types of sexual content, but this aims squarely at “synthetic content that has been altered or generated to be sexually explicit or contain nudityThe company will start implementing the rule on May 30, giving advertisers the chance to remove any ad in violation of the new policy.
Nintendo sent a Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) notice for over 8,000 GitHub repositories hosting code from the Yuzu Switch emulator. You might recall the games maker said Yuzu was enabling “piracy at a colossal scale.” Redacted entities representing Nintendo assert the Yuzu source code “illegally circumvents Nintendo’s technological protection measures and runs illegal copies of Switch games.” This is all happening as game emulators enjoy a resurgence. Last month, Apple loosened its restrictions on retro game players in the App Store. However, the more earnest reasons for emulation (archiving a history of gaming that could otherwise be lost; playing games no longer in circulation) evaporate when you’re doing it for a free copy of Tears of the Kingdom.
Happy Star Wars Day to those who celebrate! But even on these most nerdy of holidays, the tech world moves so fast it’s like it’s jumped to Hyperspace.
If you’ve lost track of the top stories this week we’re here with our trusty lightsaber to cut through the noise so you can get caught up on the most important tech news of the past seven days from Netflix, Rabbit R1, DJI, and Apple.
Speaking of, be sure to head back here on Tuesday, May 7, to read about all the latest hardware announcements from the Apple event. And return next Saturday for another ICYMI news round-up.
In social media posts, Apple has described its upcoming showcase as “a different kind of Apple event,” which has got us thinking about how this iPad-centric reveal might differ from previous Apple events we’ve tuned into.
There are some obvious but boring conclusions to draw here, like the fact that this ‘Let Loose’ event is being held slightly earlier than other Apple events – proceedings are due to kick off at 7am PT / 10am ET / 3pm BST, which is May 8 at 12am AEST in Australia – but we’re hoping Apple justifies its own hype with a more exciting revelation (perhaps we’ll get a sneak peak at the company’s long-awaited generative AI software?).
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Other countries, including the US, aren’t affected yet. But, with a global rollout likely to happen, we suggest you work through your watchlist of the best Netflix shows, best Netflix movies, and best Netflix documentaries ASAP. Otherwise, you might have to start paying extra or be subjected to ads when you’re automatically switched over from the Basic tier to the Standard with Ads one, if you want to watch them on the world’s best streaming service.
5. The Rabbit R1 disappointed us
(Image credit: Rabbit)
Welcome to the very disappointing age of personal AI devices. First there was Humane AI, a wearable AI Pin that was slammed by most major tech critics. Following fast on its heels was Rabbit R1, a far more adorable pocket-sized AI companion that at least has a screen.
Sadly, that’s the kindest thing we can say about it at the moment. This is a bright orange device that is supposed to bridge the gap between intention and action without the need to navigate various apps. In reality, it’s an odd little box with an awful analog scroll wheel, inconsistent performance, and an average LLM. As far as we can tell, it does nothing your iPhone with the Microsoft Copilot app installed on it can’t do, and the marquee item – accessing app features without using apps – often doesn’t work. To make matters worse, there are now claims that the Rabbit OS is little more than an Android app. That may be so, but it’s definitely not the handset’s biggest problem, At least it only costs $199.
4. The DJI Mini 4K landed on Amazon
(Image credit: DJI)
A potential DJI ban in the US aside, life just got harder for DJI rivals that make beginner-level drones after the launch of the Mini 4K.
It’s DJI’s cheapest-ever drone to shoot 4K video and it costs less than $300 / £270 which is an absolute bargain. With much the same hardware as the Mini 2 SE, the Mini 4K is ideal for beginners with easy flight moves, tutorials in the Fly App, a foldable sub-250g design, 31-minute flight time, downward object sensing, and Level-5 wind resistance.
Where it improves on the 2.7K video-equipped Mini 2 SE is higher resolution video, higher bit rates, and a 2x digital zoom. DJI’s cheapest drone just got more powerful and we expect it to be very popular.
3. The Arc browser came for Chrome’s lunch
(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)
The Arc browser finally came to Windows 11 after originally launching on macOS and iOS, and we’re already loving it more than than Google Chrome and especially Microsoft Edge. It’s speedy, uses far less memory than Chrome, and lacks Edge’s annoying ads and all its other clutter.
Obviously, things aren’t perfect in every way. As it is a Chromium browser, the looming privacy threat of Manifest V3 is very real, and there’s the issue that the browser can still track users with ad block installed.
Though Arc has a lot of great things to offer, and The Browser Company team developing it has promised big feature updates are incoming, including Windows 10 support.
If you’re interested in trying out Arc out for yourself, you can download it for free here.
2. New VR games abandoned the Quest 2
(Image credit: Shutterstock / Boumen Japet)
The Oculus Quest 2 might have recently seen its price drop to just $199.99 / £199.99 / AU$359.99, which is ridiculously cheap – but we highly recommend you ignore it and pick up a Meta Quest 3 instead, even if it’s $499.99 / £479.99 / AU$799.99.
That’s because the first Meta Quest 3 exclusive games were revealed recently, with Batman: Arkham Shadow being announced only a few days ago. So finally, after years of dominance, it’s officially time to put down your Quest 2 – as stupendous as it was – and pick up a different standalone headset as you can no longer enjoy the latest and greatest VR software on the aging Meta device.
So long Quest 2, we’ll miss you.
1. ChatGPT became a little more human
(Image credit: Shutterstock)
Artificial intelligence became a little more human this week for all ChatGPT Plus users after OpenAI rolled out its Memory feature.
Exactly what the name suggests, memory allows the AI chatbot to recall key details from your previous conversations. Say you mention your birthday is next week, or that you just got a new cat, the bot will remember this and should use the information to inform its responses to your prompts in the future.
This should make it feel more like you’re continuing a conversation with the same person rather than a complete stranger every time, but if the idea terrifies you then you can turn the feature off, delete the bot’s whole memory, or delete only certain details.
When I first tried the iPhone 17 years ago, I described it as a “think-do” device. It was a beautiful yet complex piece of technology so intuitive that it required no manual or real guidance from anyone. Somehow, in the development of the Rabbit r1 pocketable AI assistant, Rabbit missed this lesson and delivered a beautiful mess.
There is something compelling about the 3-in x 3-in x 0.5-in, 115g, pocket-friendly gadget. It looks like half a phone or a device that might be at home in the Fallout TV show’s pre-apocalyptic world.
The bold, orange paint job signals Rabbit’s intention to deliver a simple, yet quirky experience. But all I get are the quirks.
Rabbit did not set out to make an iPhone and Android replacement. This is a very different device, one that eschews apps and uses AI to bridge the gap between intention and services. Instead of installing apps on Rabbit r1, you make connections between your device and services like Spotify, Uber, DoorDash, and Midjourney through Rabbit’s web interface. It’s kind of a crafty way of keeping your credentials off-device. Rabbit OS and the Large Action Model (LAM) handle the rest. All you need to do is ask Rabbit r1 for what you want and it tries to deliver.
That’s the vision. The reality is an oddball product that doesn’t do enough and is too slow to be more useful than an iPhone or your laptop.
Getting started
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(Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)
(Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)
(Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)
(Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)
(Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)
(Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)
Things start off smoothly enough. Rabbit r1’s packaging is sparse; there isn’t even a USB-C cable in the box. It’s not a big deal since the r1 arrives 95% charged but it also instantly requests via its 2.88-inch TFT screen an update and tells you to plug in the r1 before updating it.
The setup also guided me to join a WiFi network, through which I encountered the comically small virtual keyboard, something I hope to never see or use again.
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The update went slowly and it wasn’t the only one during my first day of use. After a few hours, the Rabbit r1 stopped responding and asked me to plug it in again for another update. This one, though, fixed my clock so it used the built-in GPS to figure out I’m not on the West Coast of the US and may help with the rapid battery drain.
It starts with an update or two. (Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)
It does it Rabbit’s way
If you know how to use a smartphone, you probably won’t understand how to use Rabbit r1. It’s voice-enabled, but only if you push the gray push-to-talk / select button on the side. You can navigate hidden menus but only if you use the large scroll wheel.
There’s a camera, but you can only access it if you double-press the side button. Instead of front and rear cameras, there’s just one that rotates front to back when you use the scroll wheel. Rabbit smartly covered the 360-degree camera housing with plastic to protect the workings from dust and grit.
The 360 camera and scroll wheel are unusual choices. (Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)
That scroll wheel, by the way, is shiny and smooth like the rest of the r1. It looks great, but it’s also awful to use. Remember the original Blackberry? That phone had a nice, knurled wheel that was easy to flick and spin. My digits keep slipping on r1’s beefy wheel. It’s also counterintuitive. When I scroll down, the page scrolls up.
If the touch screen were designed to be a true navigatable display, this wouldn’t matter, but it’s not.
If you end up in Settings, for instance, you must use a combination of the scroll wheel and button to move and select various functions and to exit out of Settings. Oh, did I mention how you access Settings? By pressing the side button (to wake up Rabbit R1) and shaking the device.
What kind of insanity is this? Such idiosyncratic features are guaranteed to turn off everyone except the most intrepid technologist.
Smart AI
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You access this menu by shaking the device.(Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)
The “hold”is so you know to press the button to adjust the settings.(Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)
Hold the button and scroll the wheel to raise and lower the volume.(Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)
Rabbit r1’s platform and AI are the highlights of the gadget. Its Vision System, which you access by double-pressing the select button, does a decent job of identifying most images.
To use it, I pressed the button twice, used the scroll wheel to point the camera front or back, and then, while holding down the button, asked r1 to identify what it saw. (It’s worth noting that r1’s excellent dual microphones picked up my voice even when I was close to whispering.)
After a few seconds, Rabbit r1’s voice (which comes from the speaker on the back) described in detail a coffee cup. It even read the text on it.
It did equally well identifying me as a man in glasses.
This AI image was created on Midjourney’s cloud servers (Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)
I connected Rabbit r1 to my Midjourney generative image creator account on Discord and then asked Rabbit r1 to make an image of a dog skydiving.
Much of what Rabbit 11 does happens in the cloud. In the case of Midjourney requests, they’re sent back to the Midjourney servers through Discord and, if you happen to have that open on the desktop, you can see the results there before they’re delivered to the Rabbit r1’s screen.
It’s already a slow process on Discord and slightly slower on Rabbit r1 where you have to wait for delivery.
Even though I connected my Spotify account to Rabbit r1, I couldn’t get it to play music.
Battery life ticks down even when I’m not using it. The device also repeatedly lost its WiFi connection and as a result often sat on my desk like a useless orange puck.
Not good for much
There are so many things Rabbit R1 can’t do, like “open a calculator,” or “take a picture” that I’m constantly reaching for my phone, a device that has multiple built-in cameras, a working phone, a calculator, and Microsoft CoPilot and OpenAIChatGPT on it, two generative AI platforms that are faster than Rabbit’s LAM and more effective.
Even at the relatively affordable price point of $199, I simply don’t get the point of Rabbit r1. It’s not replacing or augmenting my phone. It’s not intuitive enough that I find comfort and satisfaction in using it. I don’t see how the market can or will support a product that is so far from being ready for the mass consumer.
Rabbit R1’s chief appeal, namely its cute appearance, is not enough to make me want to carry it everywhere when I can simply pull out my phone and get a thousand times more utility. Which is a shame.
With the rise of ChatGPT and large language models (LLMs), AI-dedicated devices have started coming out. The Humane AI pin was widely lambasted earlier this month when it launched, and now the Rabbit r1 AI assistant is out. With rumors that Apple is delving into AI in a big way, we thought we’d check out the Rabbit r1 to see what it can do and how it measures up to an iPhone.
Priced at $200, the Rabbit is a square-shaped pocket assistant that can answer questions, look up information, interface with food delivery and ride sharing services, play music, translate languages, and more. It’s a cute little device that looks right at home with the Playdate from Panic, but most of what it can do can already be done with an iPhone.
Unlike the Humane AI Pin, the Rabbit r1 has a screen that you can interact with, which makes it much more functional. It comes with an old school scroll wheel for navigating the UI, and there’s a built-in camera for recognizing objects. It is Wi-Fi only by default, but you can add a SIM card, which is an added cost.
As a first-generation device, the r1 isn’t perfect. The setup process is bare bones without tips on how to use the device or what it’s able to do. You’ll almost certainly need to visit the website to figure out how to use it if you pick one of these up, so it could do with some on-device instruction to make using it smoother. There are, for example, hidden controls like shaking the device to get to the settings, and the settings are the only way to activate the terminal for typing.
The idea with the Rabbit r1 is to be less reliant on a smartphone, so there’s no app for it. That’s kind of a hassle if you want to get to the photos and other information that you’ve stored on it, because it’s only accessible through the Rabbit Hole website.
You can hook up services like Spotify, but it’s not super smart about suggesting songs. Asking it to play liked songs, for example, resulted in random song selections. The option to translate works well, but it can be slow, and it’s tough to get to.
In some tests, ordering food was successful, but not without hiccups. We didn’t test placing an order ourselves, but YouTuber Quinn Nelson did and the AI placed the order but didn’t ask for guidance on a tip and ended up being overly generous and tipping the highest suggested amount.
The Rabbit r1 can summarize documents, a task that it’s decent at, but that’s not really something that a smartphone can’t do. It is good at recognizing what’s around through the camera, but some things, like a classic Mac, did trip it up.
We need to spend more time testing the Rabbit r1, but so far, it seems like a neat device but also an unnecessary one that isn’t quite ready to replace a smartphone. Have an opinion on the r1? Let us know in the comments below.
Back in January, startup Rabbit revealed its first device at CES 2024. The R1 is an adorable, vibrant orange AI machine with a camera, scroll wheel, and ambitious demos. Now, the device is being sent out to early adopters (and tech reviewers), and we’ve got some proper hands-on experience to tide you over until we’ve wrapped up a full review.
It’s definitely cute, designed by Teenage Engineering, which has put its design talents to use on the Playdate as well as Nothing’s most recent phones as well as music gadgets. Like all those things, it combines a retro-futuristic aesthetic with solid build quality, shiny surfaces, glass and metal accents.
Engadget
Then again, the Humane AI Pin was a beautiful piece of tech too, but it was also… rubbish. The Rabbit R1 is a different device. First, it costs $199 — less than a third of the AI Pin’s $700. Humane also requires a monthly $24 subscription fee to use the thing — you don’t need a sub for the R1 at all. Immediately, that’s much better.
The category of AI assistant-centric devices is very new, however. Rabbit’s device is different to Humane’s in both hardware and features, but we know the R1 isn’t launching with all its features just yet. There are a few curiously simple tools missing, like alarms and calendar support.
Make sure you check out our first impressions here. Review incoming!
— Mat Smith
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The company has called the law ‘unconstitutional.’
That thing that’s been happening since Saturday is still happening. But, well, TikTok still isn’t banned. In a statement, the company said it would challenge the law in court, which could delay an eventual sale or ban.
Mark Zuckerberg has speculated it could be Meta’s next billion-user app.
Threads is still growing. During the company’s first-quarter earnings call, Mark Zuckerberg shared the latest user numbers of Meta’s latest spin-off social network, saying the app “continues to be on the trajectory that I hope to see.”
Notably — but perhaps not surprisingly — Threads seems to outperform X (formerly Twitter), with analytics firm Apptopia indicating Threads has more daily users than X in the United States.
App promotions in the startup menu are enabled by default.
Microsoft
The latest update to Windows 11 comes out this week and includes ads for apps in the recommended section of the Start Menu. “The Recommended section of the Start menu will show some Microsoft Store apps,” says the release notes. Apps are apparently from a “small set of curated developers.” Thankfully, you can restore your previously ad-free Windows experience by going into Settings and selecting Personalization > Start and toggling off Show recommendations for tips, app promotions and more.
According to Rabbit, the first batch of US pre-orders will ship on March 31. But stay patient, as it’ll take a few weeks for the devices to get to their destinations. The company estimates the first R1 orders will be in customers’ hands “around April 24.”
The Rabbit R1 generated equal amounts of hype and questions regarding next-gen AI hardware and whether it can deliver on the heady demos and press releases. I will say, though, the R1, co-designed by Teenage Engineering, is a pretty piece of tech.
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The odds are fairly low that you’ll have to worry about it.
University security researchers found a chip-level exploit in Apple Silicon-powered Macs. The group says the flaw can bypass the computer’s encryption and access its security keys. However, hackers would need to circumvent Apple’s Gatekeeper protections, install a malicious app and let the software run for 10 hours — in addition to other complex conditions. As long as you have Apple’s Gatekeeper turned on (the default), you won’t be able to install such malicious apps anyway.
Lawmakers have participated in classified briefings about the app.
As the Senate considers a bill that would force the sale or ban of TikTok, lawmakers have heard directly from intelligence officials about the app’s alleged national security threat. Now, two senators are asking the office of the Director of National Intelligence to declassify and make public what the agency has shared.
Instead of a suggestive tease, spam bots in the Instagram universe are now more likely to post a single, inoffensive, completely irrelevant-to-the-subject word, sometimes accompanied by an emoji or two. That’s partially because Instagram’s word filters won’t catch them, but it’s simply a numbers game. Cheyenne MacDonald takes a closer look.
The Rabbit R1 wowed the tech world at CES 2024 earlier this year, and it’s now been confirmed that the first 10,000 of these little AI-powered gadgets are going to be heading to the first people who preordered them in the US and Canada from Sunday, March 31.
As per a Rabbit post on social media (via Engadget), the first batch of devices will start leaving the factory on that date, though they may take three weeks or so to get into the hands of customers, due to various international and US customs processes.
If you were one of the first 10,000 people in the US to get your name down for a Rabbit R1, you can expect it around April 24th, Rabbit says. Of course there’s always the chance of further delays, but that’s the current estimate.
According to the FAQ on the Rabbit website, the second batch of orders will be shipping in April and May, with the third batch heading to customers during May and June, for US and Canada addresses. If you’re in the UK or EU, shipping is expected to start by late April.
The next smartphone?
We’d like to share that we’re on track for the first U.S. batch to start leaving the factory on Easter, March 31st, as promised. We estimate shipping to take a little over three weeks as orders will have to pass through both international and U.S. customs, with the first orders… pic.twitter.com/sh3H5yCcpmMarch 23, 2024
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If you’re completely new to the Rabbit R1, it functions a little like a smartphone, only there’s an AI assistant doing all the jobs that apps normally do – queueing up music, taking photos, booking hotels, and so on and so on.
In fact, the Rabbit software is clever enough to interact with your mobile apps, once you’ve shown it what to do. It’s an interesting new take on the pocket computer, and it’s attracted a lot of early buzz in the industry.
We know the Rabbit R1 is going to be powered, at least in part, by the Perplexity AI engine: this means you’ll be able to chat with the device in the same way as you would with ChatGPT or with Copilot from Microsoft.
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You can still order the Rabbit R1 from Rabbit for $199 (about £160 / AU$305), though it might be a while before you get it. Rabbit CEO Jesse Lyu recently shared a demo of the device in action, if you want to get a feel of how it works.