Love watching YouTube’s excellent content of free tutorials, unboxing videos, and old intros to cartoons you loved in the 90s on the big screen – i.e. your TV? You’re not alone, although watching YouTube videos on your TV does come with its own obstacles.
The most notable of these is that your TV almost certainly doesn’t have a touchscreen (and YouTube’s TV app wasn’t set up to take advantage of one), so you have to rely on your TV remote to find the part of a clip you really wanted to see, where navigating using a finger on your device is often a lot quicker.
YouTube gets it. The video-sharing and social media platform (owned by Google) has been making several changes to its TV app, the latest of which is intended to make it simpler for viewers to cut through lengthy intros to get to the best parts of the video they’re watching.
Not to be confused with the AI-powered recommendation system being tested for YouTube Premium, the YouTube app for TVs will now auto-generate key moments in videos, which viewers can then access without having to guesstimate on that progress bar at the bottom.
CEO at YouTube, Neal Mohan, announced the update in a Tweet on X (formerly Twitter) below.
We know viewers love to watch YouTube in the living room, and we’re continuing to innovate to make the experience on TV even better. Now you can easily access auto generated key moments from any video. Check it out the next time you watch YouTube on your TV… pic.twitter.com/qRTHw695aXApril 2, 2024
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As noted by Android Authority, when watching videos on YouTube on your TV, pulling up the video progress bar should now reveal some white markers across it – I tried this with a few videos and couldn’t see them, but it could still be rolling out in the UK where I’m based.
Said white markers are the new auto-generated key moments in your video! You also should be able to quickly cycle through them, using your remote. YouTube on TV will reportedly also give you a thumbnail of the key moment, along with a caption, so you’ll be clued up on whether it’s the segment you’re after.
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It’s worth noting that content creators have been able to manually create ‘chapters’ to help viewers cut to crucial parts of their videos since early 2020, but this feature helps bridge the gap if an uploader didn’t do that – or for older videos and clips that were uploaded before that particular content curation perk arrived.
Today, Samsung has released the One UI 6.1 update to the Galaxy S23 FE.
Galaxy S23 FE gets dozens of AI features with One UI 6.1 update in India
The Galaxy S23 FE has finally started getting the One UI 6.1 update in India. It comes with firmware version S711BXXU2CXCF and has a download size of around 2.8GB. It brings several Galaxy AI features to the Galaxy S23 FE, and you can download it by opening the Settings app, navigating to Software update, and tapping Download and install.
The update still includes the March 2024 security patch and not the April 2024 patch that’s available for the Galaxy S24 series.
What’s new with One UI 6.1 update on Galaxy S23 FE?
Some of the most important new features that One UI 6.1 brings are real-time language translation in messages and voice calls, Interpreter Mode for face-to-face language translation, voice transcribing and automatic person tagging in Voice Recorder, and Generative AI-based wallpaper generation.
The update also brings AI-powered image editing, letting you remove unwanted objects, move or resize subjects, correct images with slanted angles, and the ability to move subjects from one image to another. It can also turn normal videos into slow-motion videos with the help of Generative AI.
Samsung Keyboard now offers AI-powered grammar correction and language styling suggestions. Circle to Search with Google is another great feature that lets you search for anything on the web that matches the content on the screen. One UI 6.1 also lets you summarize webpages and Samsung Notes. Notes can also get formatting templates.
Other features include more lock screen clock font options, improved search within the Gallery app, improved video playback speed controls, and compact widgets for the lock screen. Samsung Wallet gets support for passkeys, while Samsung Health brings options to compete with your own records.
Samsung added several new features and optimizations with the One UI 6.0 update. However, it removed one crucial feature for phones and tablets with OLED screens: screen burn-in protection. It promised to bring that feature with a software update, and the company seems to delivered on that front with the One UI 6.1 update.
One UI 6.1 brings back OLED screen burn-in protection to older Galaxy phones
The folks at Toranji have tested One UI 6.1, and the screen burn-in protection feature works as intended. As you can see in the GIF image above, the UI elements in the status bar and the navigation bar on the Galaxy S23 Ultra move slightly every few minutes.
While this feature has been tested only on the Galaxy S23 series as of now, it isn’t clear if it is also present on the Galaxy Z Flip 5, Galaxy Z Fold 5, and Galaxy Tab S9 series. However, we don’t have a reason to doubt that Samsung would have included this feature in the Galaxy S23 but not other devices.
Watch our in-depth videos below to see all the new features that One UI 6.1 brings to older Galaxy devices.
For Galaxy S23, Galaxy S23 FE, Galaxy Z Fold 5, Galaxy Z Flip 5, and Galaxy Tab S9 owners, the One UI 6.1 brings the entire Galaxy AI experience over from the Galaxy S24 lineup.
The list of AI features you’re getting with One UI 6.1, if you have the right device, is long. Some of those features are designed to help increase your productivity, some help you communicate with people who may not speak your language by providing real-time translations, and a few of them serve to add a dash of fun to your day-to-day user experience.
To help you get started with Galaxy AI, it’s the fun part of the equation we’re going to focus on. Here are three AI features we think you should try out once you have the One UI 6.1 update installed on your device.
Generative wallpapers
It’s always good to start with the simpler things, and that’s where generative wallpapers come in. With Galaxy AI, Samsung provides you wallpaper customization unlike anything you have seen before on your Galaxy phone or tablet.
As the name suggests, you can use AI to generate custom wallpapers. You start by picking one of nine available themes and categories (Imaginary, Night, Painting, Terrain, Mineral, Luminous, Soft-focus, Translucent, and Bloom), each of which is associated with a certain pre-defined keyphrase with a few keywords that you can change.
Those keywords let you choose which objects, sceneries, or materials the wallpaper should be about and the overall color and tone of the wallpaper. Once you have made your selections, you hit the generate button and get a bunch of different wallpapers based on those keywords.
Don’t like the results? That’s fine, because you can simply hit generate again to get new variations of wallpapers based on the same keywords. While the possiblities here aren’t truly endless, they aren’t far off, either, and you may just end up spending hours of your time on getting the most out of the feature.
Check out the video below and our guide on generative wallpapers for more details on how they work and what you can expect from them.
Manipulate photos by moving, rotating, or removing objects and people in them!
The Gallery app on Samsung phones and tablets has offered features like object removal for many years, but Galaxy AI takes it to a whole new level. You can now remove objects (or even people) from the image, move them around, rotate them, and resize them, and AI can generate new data and pixels to fix the void left behind by the moved or erased object to make it seem like nothing has really changed.
This feature, called Generative Edit, doesn’t always produce perfect results, but when it works, it works wonders. It also provides some semblance of safety against misuse of manipulated photos by putting a Galaxy AI watermark on all modified images.
To get started with Generative Edit, simply open an image in the Gallery, hit the pencil icon to open the photo editor, and tap the Generative Edit icon.
View normal videos in slow motion
Samsung has always offered an option to shoot slow motion videos using a phone’s camera or slow down an existing video using One UI’s built-in video editor, but what if you want to watch an existing video that wasn’t shot in slow motion without having to edit it?
Instant Slo-mo is the answer. With Galaxy AI, you can slow down videos in the Gallery app by simply touching and holding the screen when the video is playing. This works with videos you captured using the camera and any videos you may have downloaded.
You can watch Instant Slo-mo in action in the video below.
Ever since Tamagotchi Uni became globally available last summer, it’s felt like a product with a lot of unrealized potential.
Bear in mind, I say this as someone who loves this device and has run it daily since launch. But on top of all the basic activities one would expect at this point from the digital pet toy, the Wi-Fi capable Tamagotchi Uni promised users the “Tamaverse” — a virtual playground that would broaden the Tamagotchi experience like never before. So far, it hasn’t, really.
Sure, players could send their characters there to “meet” others, go on little vacations and buy outfits, but those small activities don’t really add much substance. The “travel” experience involved watching short animation, and occasionally getting a special food dish, item or achievement badge. Even the aspect of mingling was sorely limited, allowing players to send just one Heart (a “like” to acknowledge another player’s Tamagotchi) per day.
The Tamaverse has been slow to live up to the expectations Bandai set, despite it being the Uni’s biggest selling point. That seems to be changing in a big way.
With an update that rolled out on March 19 — version 1.6.0 — Bandai opened the Tama Portal, an area of the Tamaverse that’s been cordoned off all this time. A few days after, it dropped the first two DLC packs for Tamagotchi Uni in the form of “Tamaverse Tickets,” which allow users to travel to new locations through that portal. In a bonus, non-Tamaverse related move, the update also answers players’ desperate pleas for more item storage by adding “My Box,” where surplus items can be stowed so you no longer need to delete older goodies to make room for new ones.
Bandai
The first two Tamaverse Tickets, as the DLCs are being called, are available now. One, which takes you to Very Berry Land, is free, while the other, for the LoveMelo Concert, costs $6. Each new area comes with a slew of additional characters you can raise (including some that are brand new for the franchise), an on-theme mini-game and a shop with new food, items, accessories and furniture you can buy with Gotchi Points.
This is the kind of depth the virtual space always seemed to imply. Now it feels like we’re finally seeing what the Tamaverse can really be. Hopefully, it’s just the start.
There will undoubtedly be some who balk at having to pay for DLC beyond the one freebie, and while I can’t say I’d blame them for that, it doesn’t bother me for what we’re getting. Purchasing a ticket gives you access to a download code that can be used three times. Once the code is registered to a device, you can visit that location as much as you want, and switch freely between the different locations you’ve downloaded. That means I was able to use the same codes to download Very Berry Land and LoveMelo Concert on both of my Tamagotchi Uni devices, and still have one use left for each ticket in case I ever have to do a reset.
As was the case with the Tamagotchi Smart’s DLC, the physical TamaSma cards, only one Tamaverse Ticket can be active at a time, so switching will wipe out any location-specific items or food in your inventory, but you won’t need to reenter the code in order to switch back. All of a person’s downloaded locations can be found in a new list called DL Area when you visit the Tama Portal.
Bandai
It’s not just one or two characters that come with each location, either — you get six. Some people buy whole new devices for that kind of expansion (definitely not me… haha…). And the free Very Berry Land brings back the fan-favorite adorable strawberry, Ichigotchi, which feels like a win for everyone.
The DLC also reintroduces the method of obtaining specific characters by feeding your fledgling Tamagotchis certain meals or playing with a particular item three times before they reach adulthood. I was excited to try and get the new character, Tanghulutchi, that comes with Very Berry Land, and fed my teen Tama an abundance of Fruit Candy snacks in hopes that it would make her appear. It worked! (I’m now also fiending for the real candied fruit treat of its namesake, Tanghulu. Thanks Bandai).
Once I’m strong enough to part with Memetchi on my other device, which is running LoveMelo Concert, I’ll probably try to get Drumcrubitchi, a new character that’s literally a drum kit with a face.
Photo by Cheyenne MacDonald / Engadget
All of the things you can purchase in the Tama Portal locations are as of now much cheaper than the usual Tama Mall offerings, with furniture and accessories falling between 200 and 500 Gotchi Points. It’s really nice to have some new mini-games to freshen up the daily routine, since there aren’t many built into the device when it’s offline, and the ones they’ve added to the first Tamaverse locations are great.
In Very Berry Land, you can play Cake Factory, where you have to move your character around to place strawberries on top of cake slices as they come down the conveyor belt. It’s a game style we’ve seen before, but is slightly more exciting than other similar versions because the pace really picks up in the second half of the round.
LoveMelo Concert brings back the popular Guitar-Hero-style rhythm game format we saw (twice) in the Tama Arena’s Nyanoe Dance, but the new Happy Happy Harmony features a different song for you to try and keep up with. It’s actually pretty challenging, and is the type of game I’ll have to obsessively revisit until I’ve perfected it. Nyanoe Dance was clearly well received, and I’m sure a lot of fans will be happy that a version of it has found a permanent home in the Uni one way or another.
Photo by Cheyenne MacDonald / Engadget
One of the best things about previous versions of the modern Tamagotchi, like the Tamagotchi On, was the joy of discovery when you unlocked a new location. The new Tama Portal destinations garner that same feeling, and I can only hope Bandai will keep it going even beyond the additional expansions it teased with update 1.6.0.
The announcement materials indicated that there are at least three more DL Areas on the way, including the Tamamori Fashion Show that’s set to drop at the end of May. That world introduces some more absolutely unhinged Tamagotchi character designs — like a pair of anthropomorphic work boots named, I kid you not, Bootsbrothers — and I truly cannot wait. The other areas haven’t yet been revealed.
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Samsung is rolling out One UI 6.1 to the Galaxy Tab S9 series. The Galaxy Tab S9, Galaxy Tab S9+, and Tab S9 Ultra are the only tablets included in the initial rollout, with no word from Samsung on when other tablets will get the update.
They are also the only tablets that the company says will receive the Galaxy AI features through the One UI 6.1 update. Samsung is reviewing the possibility of bringing Galaxy AI to older flagships, but right now, only flagship phones and tablets launched in 2023 are on the eligibility list.
Europe is the first region to get the Galaxy Tab S9 update. Only the 5G variants are being updated at this time, and it could be a few days before the Wi-Fi variants join the party. However, in some regions, the Wi-Fi variants may receive the update before the 5G variants.
Once the One UI 6.1 update reaches your country/region, you will be able to download it by tapping the Download and install option in the tablet’s Settings » Software updatemenu. There’s also the option to upgrade your tablet using firmware available in the SamMobile firmware archive, though you will need a Windows PC for this.
One UI 6.1 is already coming later than we had hoped, but depending on your region, you can expect to wait a few more days for it to arrive on your Tab S9, S9+, or S9 Ultra as these updates are rolled out in phases and gradually expand to all regions.
While we haven’t tested One UI 6.1 on a Galaxy Tab S9 at the time of publication, our video showing One UI 6.1 running on a Galaxy Z Fold 5 should give you a good idea of what to expect. You can also read the full One UI 6.1 changelog here to learn about all of its features and improvements.
One UI 6.1 is finally hitting the air for Galaxy devices launched before 2024. Starting today, One UI 6.1 is coming to the Galaxy S23 series, the Galaxy S23 FE, the Galaxy Z Flip 5, the Galaxy Z Fold 5, and the Galaxy Tab S9 series, with the update already live in some markets.
One UI 6.1 is an exciting update, and if you own one of the devices mentioned above, you will probably spend the rest of the day spamming the Download and install option in your phone or tablet’s Settings » Software update menu until the update actually shows up.
However, you may find that your device notifies you of a network or server error when you try checking for the update. Don’t worry, it’s not just you: One UI 6.1 started rolling out just a few hours back, and Samsung’s servers, as large as they are, may end up being overloaded by the high number of requests from users.
The servers may also be struggling because the One UI 6.1 update is a whopping 3GB download, matching the size of Android 14 and One UI 6.0 combined, which means each download will take longer to finish.
Just a few hours after the Galaxy S23 One UI 6.1 update went live in the USA, Samsung has started rolling it out in Europe. Galaxy S23, S23+, and S23 Ultra owners should be able to download the update in most countries in the region by the end of the day.
The Galaxy S23 FE doesn’t seem to be getting One UI 6.1 yet, but that could change in a few hours as Samsung confirmed that all four Galaxy S23 models will get One UI 6.1 from March 28.
To check if One UI 6.1 is available for your S23 series phone, navigate to its Settings » Software updatemenu and hit the Download and install button. Thanks to the Galaxy AI features that are included with One UI 6.1, the update is a 3GB download, so you may want to use a Wi-Fi connection or make sure your data plan has sufficient bandwidth.
At least some Apple software engineers continue to believe that iOS 18 will be the “biggest” update in the iPhone’s history, according to Bloomberg‘s Mark Gurman. Below, we recap rumored features and changes for the iPhone.
“The iOS 18 update is expected to be the most ambitious overhaul of the iPhone’s software in its history, according to people working on the upgrade,” wrote Gurman, in a report focused on WWDC 2024. Apple recently said that its annual developers conference will run from June 10 through June 14, and iOS 18 will be a key announcement.
iOS 18 is rumored to include new generative AI features for Siri and many apps, and Apple plans to add RCS support to the Messages app for an improved texting experience between iPhones and Android devices. The update is also expected to introduce a more customizable Home Screen and other user interface design changes, new features in apps like Apple Maps and Freeform, additional accessibility features, and more.
Smarter Siri and Generative AI
iOS 18 is rumored to have new generative AI features for Siri, Spotlight, Shortcuts, Apple Music, Messages, Health, Numbers, Pages, Keynote, and more, according to sources such as Gurman and The Information‘s Wayne Ma.
Apple CEO Tim Cook has repeatedly teased that the company is working on generative AI, and plans to share details “later this year,” and Apple’s marketing chief Greg Joswiak also hinted at AI this week in a social media post about WWDC 2024.
Generative AI surged in popularity in late 2022, when OpenAI released ChatGPT, a chatbot that can respond to questions and other text prompts. The company has also expanded into generative AI tools for images and videos. Other companies like Google and Microsoft have also pushed into the generative AI space, and the technology is quickly evolving.
MacRumors exclusively reported that iOS 18 will finally allow users to place app icons anywhere on the Home Screen grid. This means that users will be able to create blank spaces, columns, and rows between app icons. This basic feature has long been available on Android smartphones, and now Apple is bringing it to the iPhone.
iPhone users can already customize the Home Screen with apps such as Shortcuts and Widgetsmith, which can be used to create “blank” app icons and widgets, but Apple’s official solution will be much more convenient.
We expect iOS 18 to include additional customization options beyond icon arrangement, as part of the biggest Home Screen revamp in years.
New Apple Maps Features
MacRumors recently revealed two potential new Apple Maps features coming with iOS 18: custom routes and topographic maps.
With the custom routes feature, Apple Maps users would be able to choose specific roads to travel on while navigating, for reasons such as familiarity or scenic views. This feature is expected to be available in the U.S. only at launch. Google Maps already allows users to create custom routes on the web, and then view them on an iPhone.
Topographic maps first debuted on the Apple Watch last year with watchOS 10, and code suggests that the feature will be expanded to the iPhone, Mac, and Vision Pro with iOS 18, macOS 15, and visionOS 2. These maps include details such as trails, contour lines, elevation, and points of interest for hiking and other outdoor uses.
RCS Support in Messages App
In November, Apple announced that it would support the cross-platform messaging standard RCS in the Messages app on the iPhone starting “later” in 2024, so it will likely be an iOS 18 feature based on that timeframe.
RCS support should result in the following improvements to the default messaging experience between iPhones and Android devices:
Higher-resolution photos and videos
Audio messages
Typing indicators
Read receipts
Wi-Fi messaging between iPhones and Android devices
Improved group chats, including the ability for iPhone users to leave a conversation that includes Android users
These modern features are already available for iPhone-to-iPhone conversations with blue bubbles, via iMessage, and many of the features are also available in third-party messaging apps, such as WhatsApp and Telegram. RCS support on the iPhone will extend the features to green bubbles in the Messages app.
Apple retail stores are now receiving information about the company’s new system for wirelessly updating iPhone software prior to sale, iGen reports.
Last week, Bloomberg‘s Mark Gurmanreported that the new proprietary system, called “Presto,” will begin operation across the U.S. in April. Gurman first reported on the wireless system in October, describing it as a “proprietary pad-like device” upon which retail store staff can place a sealed iPhone box. The system wirelessly turns on the iPhone inside, updates its software to the latest available version, and then powers it off.
Presto features small lockers that can accommodate six iPhone boxes simultaneously. There are markings to ensure that boxes are correctly positioned for NFC depending on their size. Once correctly positioned, the iPhone will update within 15 to 30 minutes. iGen has now shared a still from a video showing two of the machines stacked one on top of the other:
Presto was developed by Apple’s Backstage Operations team, which designs tools for technicians and retail store employees. The company developed “Presto” as a way to avoid selling iPhones in retail stores with outdated software. For example, the iPhone 15 series shipped with iOS 17, but Apple subsequently released iOS 17.0.1 before the devices launched. The update was required to fix an issue that prevented the transfer of data directly from another iPhone during the initial setup process.
Apple apparently intends to have the technology in all U.S. retail stores by early summer. Retail locations outside the U.S. are also now receiving information about how Presto works.
iOS 18 will give iPhone users greater control over Home Screen app icon arrangement, according to sources familiar with the matter. While app icons will likely remain locked to an invisible grid system on the Home Screen, to ensure there is some uniformity, our sources say that users will be able to arrange icons more freely on iOS 18. For example, we expect that the update will introduce…
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The next-generation iPad Pro will feature a landscape-oriented front-facing camera for the first time, according to the Apple leaker known as “Instant Digital.” Instant Digital reiterated the design change earlier today on Weibo with a simple accompanying 2D image. The post reveals that the entire TrueDepth camera array will move to the right side of the device, while the microphone will…
iOS 18 will allow iPhone users to place app icons anywhere on the Home Screen grid, according to sources familiar with development of the software update. This basic feature has long been available on Android smartphones. While app icons will likely remain locked to an invisible grid system on the Home Screen, our sources said that users will be able to arrange icons more freely on iOS 18….
Apple today added a “Why Upgrade” section to its website, which is aimed at encouraging customers with older iPhones to upgrade to a newer model. The website allows customers to compare the iPhone 11, 11 Pro, 11 Pro Max, 12, 12 mini, 12 Pro, and 12 Pro Max to the iPhone 15, iPhone 15 Plus, iPhone 15 Pro, or iPhone 15 Pro Max. Each comparison shows what new features someone with an older…
Apple has previously announced three new iOS features that it said are coming to the iPhone later this year, as outlined below. The new features include the ability to install iPhone apps on the web in the EU, RCS support in the Messages app, and next-generation CarPlay. Web Distribution Apple recently announced that eligible developers will soon be able to distribute their iOS apps to …