Microsoft snatches Sam Altman and former OpenAI colleagues to form its own AI research team

In another twist on the OpenAI saga that raged over the weekend, Microsoft has swooped in and hired Sam Altman and Greg Brockman just after OpenAI confirmed Altman’s firing, CEO Satya Nadella announced in a post on X. The pair, along with colleagues are joining Microsoft “to lead a new advanced AI research team.” Nadella added that Microsoft “remain[s] committed to our partnership with OpenAI,” but the move looks a giant hedge on that bet. It also means the much of OpenAI’s talent may be moving to Microsoft, which may stall the latter’s progress with its widely-used ChatGPT product. 

We remain committed to our partnership with OpenAI and have confidence in our product roadmap, our ability to continue to innovate with everything we announced at Microsoft Ignite, and in continuing to support our customers and partners. We look forward to getting to know Emmett…

— Satya Nadella (@satyanadella) November 20, 2023

The appoint was announced just after it was suggested that Altman may return to OpenAI, following his sudden firing on Friday. That was preceded by an outpouring of support for Altman from OpenAI employees, many of whom shared hearts on social media. 

In a bit of a surprising development, though, talks between the parties broke down and OpenAI subsequently said that Altman (and co-founder Greg Brockman) would not return, according to reports. Instead, Twitch co-founder Emmett Shear was appointed as the new CEO. 

Developing…

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/microsoft-snatches-sam-ultman-and-former-openai-colleagues-to-form-its-own-ai-research-team-082755226.html?src=rss 

Sam Altman will not be returning to OpenAI

Talks over reinstating co-founder and former CEO Sam Altman at OpenAI have apparently broken down. According to The Information and Bloomberg, the board has now hired Altman’s fellow Twitch co-founder Emmett Shear as OpenAI’s new interim CEO. This appointment was apparently announced internally by co-founder and board director Ilya Sutskever.

Altman was originally fired from OpenAI over “a breakdown in communication between Sam and the board,” according to an oddly blunt internal staff memo published by Axios earlier. The news was subsequently followed by resignations from several key members, including co-founder Greg Brockman (who was ousted as the chairman of the board), along with a few senior researchers.

Developing…

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/sam-altman-will-not-be-returning-to-openai-062957892.html?src=rss 

Cruise’s Kyle Vogt resigns as CEO of the robotaxi company

Cruise co-founder and CEO Kyle Vogt has resigned. In his announcement on X, the 38-year-old exec expressed that “the last 10 years have been amazing,” while reminding us that “the startup I launched in my garage has given over 250,000 driverless rides across several cities.” As to what Vogt is doing next, he plans on taking a break first to “explore some new ideas.” Vogt had previously co-founded video platforms Justin.tv, Twitch and Socialcam.

According to TechCrunch, General Motors has since promoted Mo Elshenawy, Executive Vice President of Engineering at Cruise, to President and CTO of its robotaxi subsidiary. No replacement has been named for the vacant CEO spot.

Today I resigned from my position as CEO of Cruise. (1/5)

— Kyle Vogt (@kvogt) November 20, 2023

Vogt’s resignation comes after General Motors installed its very own Executive Vice President of Legal and Policy (and already a Cruise board member), Craig Glidden, as Chief Administrative Officer of the autonomous vehicle firm last week. Cruise’s legal, communications and finance teams now report to Glidden.

General Motors has yet to appoint a permanent Chief Safety Officer, though with the help of an independent engineering consulting firm, it continues to conduct an expanded safety probe on the infamous freak accident. The collision on October 2 involved a female pedestrian being hit by a human driver and landed in the path of a Cruise robotaxi, which ended up running her over and dragging her 20 feet. Both autonomous and manual vehicle operations at Cruise continue to be suspended, affecting a fleet of 950 robotaxis.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/cruises-kyle-vogt-resigns-as-ceo-of-the-robotaxi-company-041949493.html?src=rss 

Sam Altman and Greg Brockman are meeting with OpenAI execs now at HQ in ongoing talks over reinstatement

Newly ousted OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and former president Greg Brockman are meeting with executives at the company’s San Francisco headquarters now as discussions about possibly reinstating their positions continue, The Information reports. Per The Information, interim CEO Mira Murati and others have been leading the push to get Altman reinstated as CEO, and invited the two to HQ on Sunday. Altman and Brockman showed up for talks this afternoon, sources told The Information.

Around the time of the report’s publication, Altman tweeted a photo of himself wearing a guest badge for entry into the building, writing, “first and last time i ever wear one of these (sic).”

first and last time i ever wear one of these pic.twitter.com/u3iKwyWj0a

— Sam Altman (@sama) November 19, 2023

After Altman was fired without warning on Friday, Brockman stepped down in solidarity, along with a slew of senior researchers. Other staff members have reportedly pledged to resign as well and follow the two to other projects, signaling their support on social media, according to The Verge. The state of Altman’s position — and OpenAI’s future leadership — has remained up in the air this weekend as backlash against the board’s initial decision grows. 

On Saturday evening, The Verge broke news that the board was considering reinstating him as CEO, and had “agreed in principle” to resign if so. But, the board reportedly couldn’t make up its collective mind in time, and missed the deadline that had been set for the decision

According to Bloomberg, that’s at least in part because they’ve hit a brick wall in trying to agree on what the board will look and what its role will be if he’s reinstated. Altman reportedly wants the existing board gone if he’s to return, among other “governance changes” — including making former Salesforce CEO Bret Taylor a board member and possibly bringing on a Microsoft executive, Bloomberg reported, though the latter has not yet made a decision.

There has been much speculation over the reason behind Altman’s removal as CEO and from the OpenAI board of directors, which came as a surprise to Altman, staff, and investors. An internal memo sent that morning to staff and seen by Axios said that the decision to unseat Altman came as the result of “a breakdown in communication between Sam and the board.” It “was not made in response to malfeasance or anything related to our financial, business, safety, or security/privacy practices,” the memo from COO Brad Lightcap said.

Altman was reportedly fundraising for a custom AI chip project codenamed “Tigris” prior to his unexpected firing, Bloomberg reported. Per Bloomberg and The New York Times, which previously reported on his plans for other AI ventures, Altman has already pitched the idea of custom Tensor Processing Units (TPUs) that would rival NVIDIA’s to potential investors in the Middle East.

Altman was also reportedly looking for backers to fund his hardware collaboration with former Apple designer, Jony Ive, for which he approached SoftBank founder Masayoshi Son. Sources with knowledge of the discussions told Bloomberg that Altman is trying to raise “tens of billions of dollars” to get these projects off the ground.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/sam-altman-and-greg-brockman-are-meeting-with-openai-execs-now-in-ongoing-talks-over-reinstatement-212124319.html?src=rss 

This Ninja Foodi DualZone air fryer is cheaper than ever in Amazon’s Black Friday sale

If you haven’t yet hopped on the air fryer bandwagon, now is the perfect time to do so thanks to an Amazon Black Friday deal on one of Ninja’s DualZone Foodi air fryers that’s slashed $100 off the normal price. The XL Ninja DZ401 Foodi air fryer, which has two separate cooking compartments, is only $130 right now. The 10-quart beast of an appliance usually costs $230, and this is the best deal on it yet.

The DZ401 Foodi uses Ninja’s DualZone technology, which allows it to cook different types of food simultaneously in its two separate compartments. Each basket has a capacity of 5 quarts. With its Smart Finish setting, it can even coordinate the timing of the different dishes so they’re done at the same time. It’ll take up a fair amount of counter space, but would come in handy for anyone cooking for a large family or guests. In addition to frying, Ninja’s DZ401 Foodi can broil, roast, bake, reheat, and dehydrate food. It’s a versatile appliance, and one of the best air fryers on the market right now.

While it brings the option to cook with both baskets at the same time, you can also just cook using one for smaller or less complex meals. You won’t have to wait for it to preheat thanks to its rapid heaters, or worry about it being overly noisy. The current 43 percent discount on Amazon is far better than even the previous low of $180, so snatch one up now if you’ve been waiting for just the right moment.

Your Black Friday Shopping Guide: See all of Yahoo’s Black Friday coverage, here. Follow Engadget for Black Friday tech deals. Learn about Black Friday trends on In The Know. Hear from Autoblog’s experts on the best Black Friday deals for your car, garage, and home, and find Black Friday sales to shop on AOL, handpicked just for you.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/this-ninja-foodi-dualzone-air-fryer-is-cheaper-than-ever-in-amazons-black-friday-sale-191803817.html?src=rss 

The Apple Watch SE drops to a record low of $189 in an Amazon Black Friday deal

There’s never been a better time to buy the Apple Watch SE, which has dipped to a record low price on Amazon in a Black Friday deal. The 40mm second-generation Apple Watch SE (GPS model), released in 2022, is $60 off from its usual price of $249 — making it just $189 right now. That’s the lowest price we’ve seen it hit yet, even cheaper than the former all time low of $200.

Despite being Apple’s more budget-friendly smartwatch, the Apple Watch SE (2nd gen) is an impressive device that has a lot to offer even when compared to the premium models. We gave it a review score of 89. It doesn’t come with an Always On Display or skin temperature sensor, but it excels in workout tracking, performing just as well as the more expensive Series 8. The only drawback is, you’ll have to lift your wrist with purpose to wake up the screen and check your progress.

It sports the same tried-and-true Apple Watch design with a rounded square face, and, being lighter than some other options at just 26.4 grams, it’s comfortable to wear. Where it does differ significantly from the pricier models is in battery life. The Apple Watch SE will get you through the day with normal activity, but don’t expect to wake up the next morning with anything left over. You’ll more than likely need to pop it onto the charger by the end of each night.

At just $250 normally, though, it’s already the best smartwatch you can get for its price. If you were on the fence before, now is the best time to grab an Apple Watch SE while it’s cheaper than ever.

Your Black Friday Shopping Guide: See all of Yahoo’s Black Friday coverage, here. Follow Engadget for Black Friday tech deals. Learn about Black Friday trends on In The Know. Hear from Autoblog’s experts on the best Black Friday deals for your car, garage, and home, and find Black Friday sales to shop on AOL, handpicked just for you.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/the-apple-watch-se-drops-to-a-record-low-of-189-in-an-amazon-black-friday-deal-164553035.html?src=rss 

Nintendo Black Friday deals include a new Switch OLED bundle and discounted games

Nintendo has formally rolled out its set of Black Friday deals for the year. While there aren’t any straight cash discounts on Switch hardware, the company is offering a new Switch OLED bundle that pairs the $350 console with a digital copy of Super Smash Bros. Ultimate and a three-month individual Nintendo Switch Online subscription for no extra cost. The console’s Joy-Con controllers feature a Smash Bros.-themed design as well. This bundle is available at several retailers, including Walmart, Target, GameStop, Best Buy and Nintendo’s own online store.

Super Smash Bros. Ultimate typically retails in the $50 to $60 range and the Switch Online membership goes for $8, so that’s about what you’re saving here. We’ve seen the console go for less on its own, but if you’ve been meaning to give Smash Bros. a shot, there are much worse options for a free pack-in game. Although Ultimate was released way back in 2018, we still consider it the quintessential fighter for Nintendo’s system, and it currently holds a spot on our list of the best Switch games.

Speaking of, Nintendo has also discounted a handful of its own Switch titles. The digital eShop will begin its “Cyber deals” on November 20, but right now other retailers have the cutesy adventure game Luigi’s Mansion 3 down to $40 and the 2D platformer Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze down to a new low of $30. (Cue the memes.) Both of those are included in our roundup of the best couch co-op games. Elsewhere, the RPG Xenoblade Chronicles 3 is on sale for $40, Kirby’s Return to Dream Land Deluxe and Mario Strikers: Battle League are each available for a low of $30, while the hack-and-slasher Fire Emblem Warriors: Three Hopes is down to a low of $15. A few of these deals aren’t the best we’ve ever seen — and it’s hard to call games like Battle League, Kirby or Three Hopes essential — but each is at least a little cheaper than usual.

Nintendo is advertising Super Mario Odyssey and The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild for $40 each as well, though Walmart says it’ll have both of those games available for $30 on November 22, so it’s worth waiting if you’ve yet to play either of them. Among Switch games that aren’t published by Nintendo (in America), the turn-based strategy game Mario + Rabbids Sparks of Hope is on sale for $15, the recently released Metal Gear Solid: Master Collection Vol. 1 is $20 off at $40 and the hardcore RPG Shin Megami Tensei V is back at an all-time low of $20.

Unfortunately (and perhaps predictably), many of Nintendo’s newest hits aren’t part of the sale, so we don’t expect to see official discounts on 2023 games like The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom, Pikmin 4 or Super Mario Bros. Wonder. Staples is technically listing Zelda and Wonder for $40 each, but it doesn’t have either game in stock as of this writing.

There’s also a bundle that pairs a red and blue set of Joy-Cons with a digital copy of Super Mario Party for $100. Since the controllers usually go for $80, the deal effectively brings the game down to $20. That’s roughly $30 less than it typically costs on its own. It’s worth noting that this isn’t the latest Mario Party game, though — that would be Mario Party Superstars, which came out two years ago. Still, if you want a few new boards to play and need a set of Joy-Cons anyway, it might be worthwhile.

If you’d rather not pay up for the Switch OLED, Nintendo is still selling holiday bundles for the standard Switch and Switch Lite as well. The systems themselves aren’t any cheaper at $300 and $200, respectively, but the Switch is available with Mario Kart 8 Deluxe and that same Switch Online membership at various retailers, while the Switch Lite now comes with Animal Crossing: New Horizons at Walmart and Target

These bundles have been available for a few weeks, and the included games are again on the older side — Mario Kart arrived way back in 2017, while Animal Crossing hit in 2020. The Mario Kart bundle in particular is one that Nintendo rolls out just about every holiday season, so it’s not an amazing deal. Still, both titles tend to retail between $40 and $50 on their own, and both are included in our Switch games buying guide. If you’re late to the Switch train, they’re strong starting points. 

The big caveat to all of this is that we may be nearing the end of the Switch’s life cycle. The original console arrived nearly seven years ago, and various reports have suggested that we’re likely to see some sort of follow-up in 2024. A recent Eurogamer report, for instance, said that Nintendo demoed a possible “Switch 2” for developers in August. If you aren’t dying to catch up on Switch games you missed, it might be wise to wait. 

That said, the Switch’s library is still excellent. If you (or your kid) have been looking to finally hop on the bandwagon, these deals provide at least a little extra value — even if we’d have preferred to see more substantial discounts by this point.

Your Black Friday Shopping Guide: See all of Yahoo’s Black Friday coverage, here. Follow Engadget for Black Friday tech deals. Learn about Black Friday trends on In The Know. Hear from Autoblog’s experts on the best Black Friday deals for your car, garage, and home, and find Black Friday sales to shop on AOL, handpicked just for you.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/nintendo-black-friday-deals-include-a-new-switch-oled-bundle-and-discounted-games-150043995.html?src=rss 

A four-pack of Apple AirTags is down to $80 in an Amazon Black Friday deal

You can get a four-pack of Apple AirTags at nearly their lowest price ever right now in a Black Friday deal on Amazon. Thanks to a 19 percent discount, the multipack is just $80. That’s like getting four AirTags — normally $30 individually — for $20 apiece. A four-pack usually costs $100, so you don’t want to wait on this one. Amazon is also running a deal on single AirTags, which are currently priced at just $24.

Apple’s AirTags have become wildly popular due to the convenience they offer for keeping track of your belongings. Just pair one of the discs with your iPhone, give it a name, and attach it to whatever item you want to keep tabs on. Slip it in a purse, backpack or wallet, or add it to your keyring. For the latter, though, you’ll need to pick up a case that has a key loop.

AirTags work with Apple’s Find My app, which will guide you directly to the lost item if it’s within your vicinity. Or, if it was last spotted somewhere farther away, it’ll appear at that location on the Find My map. AirTags have a built-in speaker, too, so you can ping the device and let its sound guide you toward the lost object. The trackers are water resistant, which Apple says should withstand spills or even quick drops in a puddle, and the replaceable battery should last around a year.

Apple has sold tens of millions of AirTags since the product’s 2021 debut, and they remain a consistently popular product. If you’ve been eyeing the item trackers, now’s the time to pick them up at one of the best prices yet.

Your Black Friday Shopping Guide: See all of Yahoo’s Black Friday coverage, here. Follow Engadget for Black Friday tech deals. Learn about Black Friday trends on In The Know. Hear from Autoblog’s experts on the best Black Friday deals for your car, garage, and home, and find Black Friday sales to shop on AOL, handpicked just for you.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/a-four-pack-of-apple-airtags-is-down-to-80-in-an-amazon-black-friday-deal-151323188.html?src=rss 

Stadium card stunts and the art of programming a crowd

With college bowl season just around the corner, football fans across the nation will be dazzled, not just by the on-field action, but also by the intricate “card stunts” performed by members of the stadium’s audience. The highly-coordinated crowd work is capable of producing detailed images that resemble the pixelated images on computer screens — and which are coded in much the same manner.  

Michael Littman’s new book, Code to Joy: Why Everyone Should Learn a Little Programming, is filled with similar examples of how the machines around us operate and how we need not distrust an automaton-filled future so long as we learn to speak their language (at least until they finish learning ours). From sequencing commands to storing variables, Code to Joy provides an accessible and entertaining guide to the very basics of programming for fledgling coders of all ages.  

MIT Press

Excerpted from Code to Joy: Why Everyone Should Learn a Little Programming by Michael L Littman. Published by MIT Press. Copyright © 2023 by Michael L Littman. All rights reserved.

“GIMME A BLUE!”

Card stunts, in which a stadium audience holds up colored signs to make a giant, temporary billboard, are like flash mobs where the participants don’t need any special skills and don’t even have to practice ahead of time. All they have to do is show up and follow instructions in the form of a short command sequence. The instructions guide a stadium audience to hold aloft the right poster-sized colored cards at the right time as announced by a stunt leader. A typical set of card-stunt instructions begins with instructions for following the instructions: 

listen to instructions carefully 

hold top of card at eye level (not over your head) 

hold indicated color toward field (not facing you) 

pass cards to aisle on completion of stunts (do not rip up the cards)

These instructions may sound obvious, but not stating them surely leads to disaster. Even so, you know there’s gotta be a smart alec who asks afterward, “Sorry, what was that first one again?” It’s definitely what I’d do. 

Then comes the main event, which, for one specific person in the crowd, could be the command sequence: 

Blue 

Blue 

Blue 

Breathtaking, no? Well, maybe you have to see the bigger picture. The whole idea of card stunts leverages the fact that the members of a stadium crowd sit in seats arranged in a grid. By holding up colored rectangular sign boards, they transform themselves into something like a big computer display screen. Each participant acts as a single picture element— person pixels! Shifts in which cards are being held up change the image or maybe even cause it to morph like a larger-than-life animated gif. 

Card stunts began as a crowd-participation activity at college sports in the 1920s. They became much less popular in the 1970s when it was generally agreed that everyone should do their own thing, man. In the 1950s, though, there was a real hunger to create ever more elaborate displays. Cheer squads would design the stunts by hand, then prepare individual instructions for each of a thousand seats. You’ve got to really love your team to dedicate that kind of energy. A few schools in the 1960s thought that those newfangled computer things might be helpful for taking some of the drudgery out of instruction preparation and they designed programs to turn sequences of hand-drawn images into individualized instructions for each of the participants. With the help of computers, people could produce much richer individualized sequences for each person pixel that said when to lift a card, what color to lift, and when to put it down or change to another card. So, whereas the questionnaire example from the previous section was about people making command sequences for the computer to follow, this example is about the computer making command sequences for people to follow. And computer support for automating the process of creating command sequences makes it possible to create more elaborate stunts. That resulted in a participant’s sequence of commands looking like:

up on 001 white 

003 blue 

005 white 

006 red 

008 white 

013 blue 

015 white 

021 down 

up on 022 white 

035 down 

up on 036 white 

043 blue 

044 down 

up on 045 white 

057 metallic red 

070 down

Okay, it’s still not as fun to read the instructions as to see the final product—in this actual example, it’s part of an animated Stanford “S.” To execute these commands in synchronized fashion, an announcer in the stadium calls out the step number (“Forty-one!”) and each participant can tell from his or her instructions what to do (“I’m still holding up the white card I lifted on 36, but I’m getting ready to swap it for a blue card when the count hits 43”). 

As I said, it’s not that complicated for people to be part of a card stunt, but it’s a pretty cool example of creating and following command sequences where the computer tells us what to do instead of the other way around. And, as easy as it might be, sometimes things still go wrong. At the 2016 Democratic National Convention, Hillary Clinton’s supporters planned an arena-wide card stunt. Although it was intended to be a patriotic display of unity, some attendees didn’t want to participate. The result was an unreadable mess that, depressingly, was supposed to spell out “Stronger Together.” 

These days, computers make it a simple matter to turn a photograph into instructions about which colors to hold up where. Essentially, any digitized image is already a set of instructions for what mixture of red, blue, and green to display at each picture position. One interesting challenge in translating an image into card-stunt instructions is that typical images consist of millions of colored dots (megapixels), whereas a card stunt section of a stadium has maybe a thousand seats. Instead of asking each person to hold up a thousand tiny cards, it makes more sense to compute an average of the colors in that part of the image. Then, from the collection of available colors (say, the classic sixty-four Crayola options), the computer just picks the closest one to the average. 

If you think about it, it’s not obvious how a computer can average colors. You could mix green and yellow and decide that the result looks like the spring green crayon, but how do you teach a machine to do that? Let’s look at this question a little more deeply. It’ll help you get a sense of how computers can help us instruct them better. Plus, it will be our entry into the exciting world of machine learning. 

There are actually many, many ways to average colors. A simple one is to take advantage of the fact that each dot of color in an image file is stored as the amount of red, green, and blue color in it. Each component color is represented as a whole number between 0 and 255, where 255 was chosen because it’s the largest value you can make with eight binary digits, or bits. Using quantities of red-blue-green works well because the color receptors in the human eye translate real-world colors into this same representation. That is, even though purple corresponds to a specific wavelength of light, our eyes see it as a particular blend of green, blue, and red. Show someone that same blend, and they’ll see purple. So, to summarize a big group of pixels, just average the amount of blue in those pixels, the amount of red in those pixels, and the amount of green in those pixels. That basically works. Now, it turns out, for a combination of physical, perceptual, and engineering reasons, you get better results by squaring the values before averaging, and square rooting the values after averaging. But that’s not important right now. The important thing is that there is a mechanical way to average a bunch of colored dots to get a single dot whose color summarizes the group. 

Once that average color is produced, the computer needs a way of finding the closest color to the cards we have available. Is that more of a burnt sienna or a red-orange? A typical (if imperfect) way to approximate how similar two colors are using their red-blue-green values is what’s known as the Euclidean distance formula. Here’s what that looks like as a command sequence:

take the difference between the amount of red in the two colors square it 

take the difference between the amount of blue in the two colors square it 

take the difference between the amount of green in the two colors square it add the three squares together 

take the square root

So to figure out what card should be held up to best capture the average of the colors in the corresponding part of the image, just figure out which of the available colors (blue, yellow green, apricot, timberwolf, mahogany, periwinkle, etc.) has the smallest distance to that average color at that location. That’s the color of the card that should be given to the pixel person sitting in that spot in the grid. 

The similarity between this distance calculation and the color averaging operation is, I’m pretty sure, just a coincidence. Sometimes a square root is just a square root. 

Stepping back, we can use these operations — color averaging and finding the closest color to the average — to get a computer to help us construct the command sequence for a card stunt. The computer takes as input a target image, a seating chart, and a set of available color cards, and then creates a map of which card should be held up in each seat to best reproduce the image. In this example, the computer mostly handles bookkeeping and doesn’t have much to do in terms of decision-making beyond the selection of the closest color. But the upshot here is that the computer is taking over some of the effort of writing command sequences. We’ve gone from having to select every command for every person pixel at every moment in the card stunt to selecting images and having the computer generate the necessary commands. 

This shift in perspective opens up the possibility of turning over more control of the command-sequence generation process to the machine. In terms of our 2 × 2 grid from chapter 1, we can move from telling (providing explicit instructions) to explaining (providing explicit incentives). For example, there is a variation of this color selection problem that is a lot harder and gives the computer more interesting work to do. Imagine that we could print up cards of any color we needed but our print shop insists that we order the cards in bulk. They can only provide us with eight different card colors, but we can choose any colors we want to make up that eight. (Eight is the number of different values we can make with 3 bits — bits come up a lot in computing.) So we could choose blue, green, blue-green, blue-violet, cerulean, indigo, cadet blue, and sky blue, and render a beautiful ocean wave in eight shades of blue. Great! 

But then there would be no red or yellow to make other pictures. Limiting the color palette to eight may sound like a bizarre constraint, but it turns out that early computer monitors worked exactly like that. They could display any of millions of colors, but only eight distinct ones on the screen at any one time. 

With this constraint in mind, rendering an image in colored cards becomes a lot trickier. Not only do you have to decide which color from our set of color options to make each card, just as before, but you have to pick which eight colors will constitute that set of color options. If we’re making a face, a variety of skin tones will be much more useful than distinctions among shades of green or blue. How do we go from a list of the colors we wish we could use because they are in the target image to the much shorter list of colors that will make up our set of color options? 

Machine learning, and specifically an approach known as clustering or unsupervised learning, can solve this color-choice problem for us. I will tell you how. But first let’s delve into a related problem that comes from turning a face into a jigsaw puzzle. As in the card-stunt example, we’re going to have the computer design a sequence of commands for rendering a picture. But there’s a twist—the puzzle pieces available for constructing the picture are fixed in advance. Similar to the dance-step example, it will use the same set of commands and consider which sequence produces the desired image.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/hitting-the-books-code-to-joy-michael-l-littman-mit-press-153036241.html?src=rss 

Ooni Black Friday deals include up to 30 percent off pizza ovens and accessories

Ooni is holding a Black Friday sale, offering all-time-low deals on its highly-rated outdoor pizza makers. The company’s Fyra 12 wood pellet pizza oven is 30 percent off, dropping it to $244 from its standard $349. If that’s out of your holiday budget, Ooni also has the Pizza Steel 13, a flat surface that upgrades your indoor-baked pizzas, on sale for $70.

The Ooni Frya 12 wood pellet pizza oven is one of Engadget’s top picks for the best pizza ovens. It uses “sustainably sourced hardwood pellets” to reach 950 degrees Fahrenheit in 15 minutes and can cook stone-baked pizzas in as little as 60 seconds. It uses a gravity-fed hopper that replenishes the pellet tray automatically, allowing you to focus less on the oven’s needs and more on your pie’s.

The outdoor oven fits 12-inch personal pizzas inside, allowing everyone at your gathering to customize their pies. It weighs only 22 lbs and has a relatively small footprint, ideal for easy transportation and tabletop pie-baking. It could be a popular supply for outdoor parties, tailgating, camping and other open-air activities that would benefit from more pizza.

Ooni

Meanwhile, the deceptively simple-looking Pizza Steel 13 accessory slides into your conventional oven to enhance your homemade pies. The stainless steel surface heats quickly and retains the warmth, helping your indoor pizzas come out more like those made in dedicated pizza stoves. The Pizza Steel 13 is on sale for $70 (typically $100).

Ooni’s Black Friday sale runs from now through November 28.

Your Black Friday Shopping Guide: See all of Yahoo’s Black Friday coverage, here. Follow Engadget for Black Friday tech deals. Learn about Black Friday trends on In The Know. Hear from Autoblog’s experts on the best Black Friday deals for your car, garage, and home, and find Black Friday sales to shop on AOL, handpicked just for you.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ooni-black-friday-deals-include-up-to-30-percent-off-pizza-ovens-and-accessories-140019161.html?src=rss 

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