Microsoft has started a limited US rollout of a preview version off Copilot Vision, that tool they have touted as being able to read things on your screen, and then respond to questions you might have when looking at a website on your screen using Edge. Techcrunch.com reports that in order to use the preview version, you have to have a $20 a month subscription to Microsoft’s Copilot Pro plan. Besides answering questions, the AI can summarize and translate text, and spot discounted products on a site. Microsoft stresses that the system deletes data after every session. In addition, processed audio, images, or text aren’t stored or used to train models.
A really useful feature Apple has had for a while was expanded into what is essentially a stand-alone app in the latest iterations of software…iOS 18 and MacOs 15 Sequoia. Passwords saves all your passwords (with your permission) to the app, and then it auto-fills on websites, using your biometrics…either FaceID or TouchID to verify that it’s you. I find this terrifically handy, but so far, it has only worked on Safari, Apple’s own browser. According to arstechnica.com, that has now changed. Apple is now officially supporting the Passwords extension in Firefox if you are running macOS. As of this moment, the extension only supports macOS Sonoma and Sequoia, not older versions. It also doesn’t work on Windows or Linux yet. Apple has had a Chrome extension since 2023, and has also worked with Edge but it hasn’t used the Passwords extension…both those have relied on the cloud…so your passwords are possibly at risk more. It does appear that Apple will be extending official Windows support down the line, too.
If you are a habitual list maker…and I have done a bit if that in my life…and you have a Pixel 9, you may really like this. Androidpolice.com says a feature on the phone may be getting a cool expansion. The 9 already has a Call Notes feature that automatically generates call summaries. Well now, Google is apparently working on something added…the software will extract actionable items from the call summaries and turn them into to-do lists. The lists will include titles and allow users to copy, edit, and share them directly from the Phone app. Call Notes and the list feature are entirely on-device using Gemini Nano, so they don’t rely on the cloud. No official word on when the to-do feature will be live, but it looks like it will be soon.
Meta is expanding its so-called ‘strike removal’ feature to all Facebook users and to Instagram. Engadget.com reports that what this is… is a ‘short educational program’ that helps users avoid a ‘strike’ on their account or Facebook jail. Think of it as going to driving school to get a point taken off your license if you got a speeding ticket. It will only be available once in a 12 month period for most first-time offenses. Sounds like a nice step, but it won’t eliminate their sometimes confused algorithm from taking action in the first place on a post that really doesn’t violate their community standards…it just may be language that the algorithm doesn’t understand.
I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.
