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September 13, 2023 |
In partnership with Kim Komando Today |
Hello to a wonderful Wednesday! Letβs start with trivia. Billionaire Warren Buffett said artificial intelligence (AI) will change everything and likened it to the development of the atomic bomb. Is this following sentence true or false? He lives in the same home he purchased in 1958. Answerβs at the end! Now, I had a blast putting this newsletter together. Warning: Massive tech-know is ahead! β Kim π« First-time reader? Sign up here. (Itβs free!) IN THIS ISSUEπ Fall = Pumpkin spice and new iPhonesπ‘ Huge U.S. lithium discoveryπ© Face scanning at airports |
TODAY'S TOP STORYAppleβs new gear: $800 watch and $1,200 phoneSet a reminder for Monday, Sept. 18. That's when iOS 17 is dropping β and it's the one thing Apple just announced at its big Wonderlust fall release event that wonβt cost you anything. I've been on the beta version for months and wrote up my favorite new features for the Daily Mail. Today, let's take a closer look at the latest hardware dropping this fall. The phonesThe 15 and 15 Plus are essentially the iPhone 14 Pro, with bigger batteries, screens and fun new colors. Yes, I like the pink one. The star of the show is the iPhone Pro Max, with a 6.7-inch display (soon, we won't be able to fit these things in our pockets), titanium case and a processor Apple says can challenge some high-end PCs. Yes, Apple sometimes overstates its performance, but there's no doubt this thing is fast. The watchesThe $799 Apple Watch Ultra 2 has a big screen thatβs bright enough to view in full sunlight, with 72 hours of battery life and a titanium case. Say what you want about Apple, but it has the best smartwatch out there. That model and the $399 Series 9 both get "double tap," a new gesture where you tap together your pointer finger and thumb to do things like answer calls. Pretty sweet. RIP, Apple Lightning connectorAll four new iPhones and the new Apple Watch models will charge with a USB-C cable. Rejoice! Now you can plug in at a friend's house if they have an Android. I'm all for getting every device in my house charging on the same kind of cord. Bummer: No more details on the Vision Pro mixed-reality headset, aside from stating it's on track to launch in 2024. Bottom line if you need a new phoneListen, the iPhone 15 is a slick device. The specs are impressive β especially on the Pro and Pro Max β but there's no good reason to upgrade if you're using a 12 or newer. Get your money's worth. If you're still on an iPhone 8 β¦ it's time to upgrade. Go all out if you can afford it, but the iPhone 13 or 14 are great phones at better prices. Only drop that $1,200 on the iPhone 15 if you're the tech nerd who must have the latest and greatest. Ahem, that would be me. And, by the way, I don't get freebies from Apple. I pay for my gear. |
DEAL OF THE DAY
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WEB WATERCOOLERCEOs, CFOs, CIOs, CMOs: Ciscoβs Talos global threat intelligence team found C-level executives are the big, new target for data extortion β where a hacker or scammer steals personal or confidential info for blackmail. Incidents involving C-suite positions are up 25%. Pro tip: Never access confidential docs from public Wi-Fi. You never know whoβs lurking. Take that, China! Geologists have unearthed the world's largest lithium deposit on the Nevada/Oregon border. The McDermitt Caldera holds a staggering 88 billion pounds of lithium, valued at $1.5 trillion. China currently refines 90% of the world's mined lithium, which powers everything from smartphones to electric vehicles. Pediatricians have little patients: After 17 doctorβs visits and no answers, Courtney put all her young sonβs symptoms and medical test results into ChatGPT. This time, AI was right, calling out βtethered cord syndrome,β which started to explain his headaches, leg weakness and more. Little Alex is now recovering from surgery. Itβs up to us to advocate for those we love. Vend-tastic: A gal named Emily posted a TikTok vid about something Iβve never seen β a vending machine in her Airbnb. No surprise, the video went viral and reactions are mixed. There are two camps: βBest idea everβ and βNo way Iβm paying $5 for cookies.β Me? I think itβs genius. Letβs bust a movie: Disneyβs giving us a special gift for its 100-year anniversary β the chance to shell out $1,500 for 100 special-edition Blu-rays and digital codes to stream them. Or, you know, you could pay for nine years of Disney+ without ads. Speaking of β¦ What did Master Yoda say when he first saw himself on Blu-ray? HDMI. The Black Hornet: Nope, not a new Marvel character. It's the U.S. military's new 4.8-by-6.6-inch drone. It weighs nearly an ounce and streams video for about 25 minutes on a single charge. Coolest part: It's small enough to access areas people or bigger drones can't. But you cannot buy one unless you're "qualified." Keeping up with the times: Gen Z says tracking is totally normal (Fortune, paywall link). They track friends using Appleβs Find My, the Life360 app and other ways. No one their age seems to think itβs an invasion of privacy. I know married couples who wonβt use Find My with each other. πΆ Adopt, donβt shop: Sony is donating its ERS-1000 Aibo robot dogs to medical facilities and nursing homes. Genius to give a little puppy love to those who canβt interact with real animals. Aside from the lack of fur, these robo doggies are so realistic, owners hold real funerals for them when they stop getting software updates. |
ποΈ Your 2-minute tech genius boostWhile you're brushing your teeth, waiting for your toast or sipping your first coffee of the day, I deliver the top tech news story and a digital life hack, all within two minutes. No rambling, no fluff β just straight-to-the-point tech talk. |
TRENDINGFace-scanning tech hitting an airport near youBe on the lookout for face-scanning tech next time you fly. Airports in Los Angeles, Detroit, Miami, Atlanta, Orlando, Boston, Dallas, Las Vegas and a few other cities use facial recognition to speed up the security process. Worth it or invasive? Depends on who you ask. Hurry up and waitThatβs the name of the game when it comes to travel. Wait times are out of control, and the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) says facial-recognition tech will make the process much more efficient. Youβll insert your driverβs license or passport into a card reader. A camera will compare your face to the one on your ID. An agent approves once the screen is done and youβre on your merry way. Many airports in Europe already use this technology. π What happens if that database is breached?Youβd better believe itβs going to be a prime target for hackers, but Iβm all for convenience. (I hate lines, too.) Thatβs why I have the TSA app on my phone. With it, you can check real-time security wait times, get tips on what you can and can't bring on board, check delay info, and even report security issues. Itβs available for Android and Apple. π Nerd joke alert: A photon is going through airport security. The TSA agent asks if he has any luggage. The photon says, βNo, Iβm traveling light.β |
DEVICE ADVICEGet captions on your phone, in any appRemember when everyone complained TV stations were turning up the volume during commercials? In reality, they never did, but it sure seemed like they did. Why? Because the commercialβs audio was mixed to emphasize the voice track so you could hear dialog over the background. When streaming, all of the audio, sound effects, music and voices are squished down into one soundtrack to fit available bandwidth β that is, your internet speed. The result is that you canβt understand a thing. Caption thisThe short fix is to follow Gen Zers, millennials, Gen Xers and boomers: Turn on closed captioning and watch the screen while listening to what's being said. No matter what device youβre using or who makes it, you can turn on captioning in your phoneβs accessibility settings. These features are designed to help people with disabilities use technology more easily (and people like me understand Scottish accents when I watch βOutlanderβ). On your device, look in the Accessibility settings and find Live Captions.Turn it on. Youβll see the text written out in the center of your deviceβs screen whenever speech is detected.π There are a bunch of other great features hiding in that menu. Try these on your iPhone or Android. π More tech smarts: My Tech Hacks email is packed with great tidbits like this. Get it each afternoon to up your game. Itβs free! |
Play my podcast on your next walkEvery week on my national radio show, I talk to interesting folks doing amazing things in tech, everyday people who could use a hand, and I share some of my best tips and tricks. Missed it? All is not lost! Just tune in to my podcast, Kim Komando Today. This week on the podcast, I cover why you need to be careful with QR codes β clever new scams are spreading fast. Also, how much is $1,000 in Apple shares from 1998 worth today? (Hint: Itβs a lot.) Plus, a heartwarming Facebook story, fun ChatGPT-powered tools, video game speed runs and how to upgrade your browser. |
BY THE NUMBERS11 Months it takes to get approved for Global Entry right now. The airport shortcut gets you through international processing faster, but U.S. Customs and Border Protection says thereβs a big delay in application approval. If youβre traveling in the U.S., you can PreCheck within a couple of weeks. 7 Development time, in minutes, AI needed to create software. Researchers put bots powered by ChatGPT 3.5 to work, creating a hypothetical development company. On average, they completed the full software process in under seven minutes for less than a dollar. Talk about efficiency. 58% People who hate listening to their voices. A new study aims to answer, βIs that really what I sound like?β When you hear yourself speak out loud, itβs processed as a deeper, fuller sound. On a recording, your voice is higher pitched. And, yes, thatβs what the rest of us hear. When Iβm staying at a hotel, I always like calling the front desk and asking for fresh towels or something, and the person says, βOf course, Mr. Komando.β I smile. My dad was a great guy! |
WHAT THE TECH?You could say his plan was tree-umphant! |
UNTIL NEXT TIME ...π‘ The answer: Yup. Warren Buffett lives in a five-bedroom, 6,750-square-foot house in Omaha, Nebraska, that he bought in 1958 for $31,500. True story: I sat next to Mr. Buffett at a luncheon when I was voted one of Fortuneβs 100 Most Influential Women in America. He showed me his flip phone, and I said, βThey let you in here with that phone?β He smiled and said, βI still use a fax machine, too. And you know why? No one can hack me!β True, very true. Phew, that was a jam-packed newsletter, eh? Now, do me a solid and tell three folks to get my free newsletter, too. Just share your referral code below on your social media, LinkedIn, Nextdoor β wherever. Remember, Iβm giving a $1,200 Windows or Apple device to the person with the most referrals. Every reader counts! β Kim |
Komando Referral ProgramShare this newsletter β Earn prizes!Step 1: Copy your unique referral link:https://www.komando.com/friends/?referralCode=0rvmdp6&refSource=copy Step 2: Share your link!Post it on social media, send it in a text or paste it into an email to a pal. If they sign up using that link, you get the credit! |
How'd we do?What did you think of today's issue? π Fantasticπ Just OKπ Waste of time |
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Photo credit(s): Apple.com, TSA.gov |
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