We have all been through it…a big hassle, sometimes taking hours, to cancel a subscription after a free trial. As a friend of mine always says, ‘That’s how they getcha!’ Now, the Federal Trade Commission has finalized a rule aimed at stopping businesses from making you jump through endless hoops to cancel a subscription after the free trial. Under the rule, any subscription that can be signed up for online must be able to be canceled online. And cancellation paths for in-person sign-ups must be just as easy, offered either by phone or online. The new rule tells businesses to keep ‘three guardrails in mind.’ First, customers cannot be required to talk to a live agent or chatbot to cancel if that wasn’t required for sign-up. Next, any phone cancellation methods cannot include charges and must be offered during normal business hours. And finally, canceling services in person must always be optional. Now, let’s hope they actually enforce this rule!
Google has been on a tear, trying to get people to see their ads…whether on search results or YouTube…across all their platforms. Now, it’s Chrome’s turn. According to mashable.com, Google has turned off popular ad blocker extensions uBlock Origin, MDN Search, and Neat URL. This all comes as Chrome moves from Manifest V2 to Manifest V3. There are options for Manifest V3 if you use AdBlock, AdBlock Plus, AdGuard, and uBlock Origin. If you would rather not hassle with trying to configure to keep the ads blocked or at least volume down, switch to Firefox, and select Duck Duck Go as your search engine. You can also try Microsoft Edge….but the former is really cleaner if you want to go the most ad free possible.
While Elon Musk was trotting out robots that are nearly fully human operated and not autonomous at all, Boston Dynamics…which makes real robots…has teamed up with Toyota Research Institute to bring AI-based robotic intelligence to the electric Atlas humanoid robot. Techcrunch.com notes that the partnership will leverage work that TRI has done around large behavior models…which are not terribly unlike Large Language Models like that of ChatGPT. The lab has been able to get robots to 90% accuracy when performing household tasks like flipping pancakes through overnight training. Hell, I could try all night, and mess up flipping a pancake! TRI says that while machine learning takes millions of training cases, they have been able to reduce physical training of a robot down to only dozens of training cases…sometimes even less than that. Boston Dynamics just unveiled its design for the electric Atlas in April. The electric designation differentiates the robot from its larger, hydraulic namesake, Trust me, you wouldn’t want one of those robots possibly leaking caustic hydraulic fluid in your house! Toyota Research and Boston Dynamics have a goal of making a true general purpose machine. Rosie from The Jetsons…you’re up!
Regular followers of this report are well aware of my opinion of the preposterously priced but great Apple Vision Pro headsets. Now, Surgeons at UC San Diego have found them very helpful for minimally invasive surgery. Macrumors.com reports that while the headsets are pricy for you and I, they are pretty cheap compared to most gear hospitals buy in trying to keep or make us healthy. Surgeons have now done over 20 minimally invasive operations wearing the headsets. They are saying the headsets are ‘more transformative’ than robotic devices used to assist. Think about it… laparoscopic surgeries, where the docs send a camera through a small incision, and have to guide it and do the procedure while craining their necks to watch on a video screen. That can’t be helpful. Unlike previous headsets, the Apple ones have such accurate displays, that the surgeons can do the procedure while keeping their heads in a more normal position. That has to help with accuracy! They normally also have to look away to refer to CT scans, and to monitor vitals. Now, all of those things can appear on the panoramic display of the Vision Pro. This application is really a game changer…and one that will make a difference in the outcomes for patients…to say nothing of saving doctors from a literal pain in the neck that could cause mistakes!
I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.