Anker made a solar beach umbrella, because of course

Anker’s empire is vast, spanning everything from cheap batteries to 3D printers, but more importantly, it’s varied. Case in point, the company is introducing the Anker Solix Solar Beach Umbrella at CES 2025, a flexible, freestanding shade structure that can also charge your phone or power the company’s EverFrost 2 cooler.

Like a normal umbrella, the Solix Solar Beach Umbrella is portable, collapsible, and designed to protect you from rain (Anker’s umbrella is specifically IP67 rated). What makes this solar beach umbrella unique from what you might have laying around in your garage are the flexible solar panels it has attached on top.

Anker

Anker says it’s using perovskite solar cells in its panels, which are supposed to offer “30 percent better performance” than traditional crystalline silicon cells, and translates to a solar rated power of up to 80W. The company has offered few details about how the Solix Solar Beach Umbrella works beyond that, including how much it will actually cost when it launches, but it’s not a completely unexpected extension of what Anker was already doing with solar.

The company launched its Solix line of home energy products in 2023, introducing Tesla Powerwall-esque home backup batteries, and retroactively branding portable solar panels and large capacity batteries in the process. The Solix Solar Beach Umbrella is expected to join the Solix lineup in either spring or summer 2025, according to Anker.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/home/smart-home/anker-made-a-solar-beach-umbrella-because-of-course-030040245.html?src=rss 

Anker’s ‘AI party speaker’ can automatically remove vocals for karaoke nights

At CES 2025, Anker has a pair of new speakers under its Soundcore brand. The first, the Soundcore Rave 3S, is a $349 party speaker with AI-powered karaoke tricks and built-in light shows. Joining it is the SoundCore Boom 2 Pro, a more powerful follow-up to its non-Pro namesake, which adds boomier bass and better protection from water and dust.

The appropriately named Rave 3S is described as an “AI party speaker” with 200W output and 108dB volume. Anker says it can fill spaces of up to 1,076 square feet. Like some other Soundcore models, its RGB LEDs can create a light show that syncs with the beat of your music.

Red-shirt dude has perfected the art of couch-dancing.

Anker

The Rave 3S includes a pair of wireless microphones for karaoke nights. That’s where the AI comes in: The speaker has a vocal removal feature that can “turn any song into a karaoke track with just one click.” If it works as advertised (we haven’t tested it yet), it could save you the trouble of scouring YouTube or paying for a service like KaraFun to get de-voiced versions of your go-to jams.

It also includes a vocal enhancement feature, which adds clarity to your voice, and a reverb effect so you can sound like Phil Collins on your air-drum-inducing cover of “In the Air Tonight.”

The Rave 3S has an estimated 12 hours of playtime, a bass-boost feature, IPX4 water resistance and a Spatial Audio mode. The party in a box will be available on March 10 for $349.

Anker

Also coming soon is the Soundcore Boom 2 Pro — the follow-up to last year’s Boom 2 and Boom 2 Plus. The new model has four drivers and a 140W output, making it better than its predecessor for outdoor spaces. Its bass can reach as low as 40Hz. The speaker has IP68 dust and water resistance (the Boom 2 and Plus variant were only rated IPX7), and Anker says it can float on water for pool parties.

Like the party speaker, the Boom 2 Pro can produce an RGB light show, and it ships with a portable strap for slinging it over your shoulder. Anker says it has a 20-hour playtime. The Boom 2 Pro will launch in April (no exact date yet) for $249.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/audio/speakers/ankers-ai-party-speaker-can-automatically-remove-vocals-for-karaoke-nights-030057069.html?src=rss 

NVIDIA’s RTX 5090 graphics card costs $2,000

On the same day NVIDIA briefly became the most valuable company in the world, CEO Jensen Huang took to the CES 2025 stage to announce the company’s new, long-awaited Blackwell family of graphic cards. The first salvo of RTX 50 series GPU will arrive in January, with pricing starting at $549 for the RTX 5070 and topping out at an eye-watering $1,999 for the flagship RTX 5090. In between those are the $749 RTX 5070 Ti and $999 RTX 5080. Laptop variants of the desktop GPUs will follow in March, with pricing there starting at $1,299 for 5070-equipped PCs. 

As for specs, the RTX 5090 Founders Edition will feature 32GB of GDDR7 RAM and 21,760 CUDA cores. Depending on the game, NVIDIA says the 5090 will deliver as much as twice the relative performance, with RT-intensive titles like Alan Wake 2 and Cyberpunk 2077 being the biggest beneficiaries.    

NVIDIA kicked off the Blackwell portion of its CES presentation with a demo of a next-generation Assassin’s Creed game featuring the most realistic ray-traced graphics the series has ever featured. “All of this, with AI, is the house that GeForce built,” said Huang, wearing a new snakeskin-like jacket instead of his signature leather jacket. “Now, AI is coming home to GeForce.” 

Developing…

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/nvidias-rtx-5090-graphics-card-costs-2000-031133416.html?src=rss 

The Last of Us season 2 arrives in April, and a Horizon Zero Dawn film is in the works

Sony’s CES 2025 press conference was huge on the entertainment front if you’re a PlayStation fan. In a series of rapid-fire announcements, the company announced it was making an anime based on Ghost of Tsushima Legends, the cooperative multiplayer mode from the acclaimed game. It then followed that up with news that Columbia Pictures was in the early stages of developing a movie based on the post-apocalyptic PlayStation game Horizon Zero Dawn. Finally, Neil Druckmann from Naughty Dog popped out to announce that season two of The Last of Us would hit HBO in April.

We already know a fair bit about The Last of Us season two — its based on 2020’s The Last of Us Part 2, but it won’t take us through all of the events of the second game. It’ll take at least two seasons to retell the story of that terrific but complex misery simulator. This season, Kaitlyn Dever, Isabela Merced, Catherine O’Hara and Jeffery Wright join season one veterans Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey. 

The other projects remain a mystery for now. A bit over two years ago, we heard that Horizon Zero Dawn was being adapted as a series for Netflix, but the project eventually fell apart. I’m definitely curious to see how they’ll streamline the game’s sprawling storyline into a tight narrative for a two-hour movie (or even a three-hour one), but hopefully a strong creative team is behind this one.

As for Ghost of Tsushima, it’s another of the most well-regarded and popular PlayStation Studios titles, with a sequel on the way, so this is just another example of Sony using some of its best gaming titles to expand into the broader entertainment space — making these stories more accessible to people who are less likely to play a 20-to-40-hour game.

On a personal note, The Last of Us and Horizon Zero Dawn are two of my favorite games of all time, so this 10-minute blast of good news was most welcome in the middle of a very long day at CES! 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/tv-movies/the-last-of-us-season-2-arrives-in-april-and-a-horizon-zero-dawn-film-is-in-the-works-020950940.html?src=rss 

Sony opens Afeela 1 EV reservations at CES 2025

Sony has been discussing its EV ambitions for five years, but now the company is ready to sell you a car. Through Sony Honda Mobility, you can reserve an vehicle now with a $200 fee. The car that was once the Vision-S and Vision-S 02 will actually be a thing you can buy. Now known as Afeela 1, the EV has a host of convenience updates, including an in-vehicle assistant and updated interior design. 

There are two models, the Afeela 1 Origin and the Afeela 1 Signature, priced at $89,900 and $109,900 respectively. Initially, reservations will only be available for customers in California, but the first vehicles won’t be delivered until mid 2026. Those will be the pricier Signature version, with the Origin trim following in 2027. Both versions will come with a three-year subscription to the requisite services, which include Level 2+ ADAS known as Afeela Intelligent Drive, immersive entertainment, the Afeela Personal Agent and more. Other features are a selection of media apps, 3D maps, spatial sound and 5G connectivity.

We’re getting a closer look at the near-final Afeela 1 tomorrow, so you can expect detailed impressions of the revised vehicle and its features later this week.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/transportation/evs/sony-opens-afeela-1-ev-reservations-at-ces-2025-011826937.html?src=rss 

Samsung’s first Unpacked event of 2025 will be on January 22

CES 2025 is full swing and Samsung has already made a slew of laptop and TV announcements, but the company already has more news on the horizon. The company is hosting it’s first Galaxy Unpacked event on January 22, 2025 at 1 PM ET to show off the latest in Galaxy AI, and presumably new Galaxy devices it runs on.

Samsung is hosting its event in San Jose, and like previous years, even if it hasn’t shared what its actually announcing, you can reserve the company’s new gear in advance for a $50 off and the chance to win a $5,000 Samsung gift card. That’s on top of Samsung’s typically generous trade-in credit — this year the company says you can get up to an additional $900 credit if you trade-in an old device.

Given the timing of Unpacked, Samsung is likely to announce the Galaxy S25 series, and there’s a good chance it’ll use the new Snapdragon 8 Elite chip and sport an updated design, at least on the Galaxy S25 Ultra. What might be more interesting are the non-smartphone devices Samsung could show off. The company is rumored to already have a Galaxy Ring 2 in the works, and there’s a good chance Samsung’s “Project Moohan” Android XR headset could make an appearance at the event.

Engadget will have all the details of Samsung’s announcements right here, but if you want to watch the event yourself, you’ll be able to tune in on Samsung.com, Samsung’s Newsroom or the company’s YouTube channel.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/mobile/smartphones/samsungs-first-unpacked-event-of-2025-will-be-on-january-22-230035883.html?src=rss 

Meta adds UFC CEO and Trump booster Dana White to its board

UFC CEO Dana White is joining Meta’s board, the company announced today. The addition of the mixed-martial arts impresario jives with Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s well-documented UFC fandom, but also the larger strategy Meta appears to be using heading into a second Trump term: tacking right.

That’s not to say White’s seat on the board is typical, however. Most of Meta’s current board members work in the tech industry. The two members Meta is adding alongside White, John Elkann and Charlie Songhurst, fit the social media company’s usual bill. White might say he’s “a huge believer that social media and AI are the future” in Meta’s press release, but the company he keeps is likely the more important reason he’s joining now.

Dana White and President-elect Donald Trump have been friends for years. White supported Trump’s campaign for re-election, and UFC as a whole fits his strong-man tastes. Putting White on the board is as much about burnishing Zuckerberg’s self-image as it is having access to the incoming Trump Administration. The President-elect might at one point have thought that Zuckerberg should “spend the rest of his life in prison,” but Meta’s CEO is doing everything in his power to court him. 

Zuckerberg visited Mar-A-Lago in November 2024 to have dinner with Trump, one of several tech CEOs to do so. Meta’s also been adjusting its executive ranks to better work with a conservative government. The company’s former President of Global Affairs Nick Clegg announced he was stepping down just last week, to be replaced by Meta’s most prominent Republican executive, Joel Kaplan. Among Kaplan’s credits is an eight-year stint in the Bush Administration. Zuckerberg has been in UFC mode for a while now, and it seems like for at least the next four years, Meta will be too.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/meta-adds-ufc-ceo-and-trump-booster-dana-white-to-its-board-230611306.html?src=rss 

TiVo OS is coming to the US on Sharp TVs

TiVo is back…sort of. Xperi, the owner of the TiVo brand as of 2019, announced at CES 2025 that TiVo OS will be available in the US for the first time on Sharp TVs. The storied TV brand was last seen stateside as the TiVo Stream 4K, a $50 streaming dongle. This new software push makes TiVo the main interface of participating affordable TVs, and puts it in direct competition with Roku’s operating system.

“The Sharp Smart TV Powered by TiVo” is a pretty standard TV for 2025, with an “Ultra High Definition and High Dynamic Range 55” QLED screen,” according to Xperi, and three HDMI ports for connecting various accessories. It’s big differentiator is TiVo OS. The operating system aggregates content from streaming services, linear TV channels, and sports packages, and gives users access to “a vast library of free and paid content,” Xperi says. The OS also supports “natural voice navigation” and “advanced search and recommendation capabilities.” Nothing too revolutionary when compared to the competition, but TiVo’s at least known for making user-friendly ways of navigating TV content.

TiVo OS was originally announced in 2022, but TVs using the operating system didn’t start shipping until 2023, and only in Europe. Sharp’s TV will be the first new TiVo product in the US since the launch of the TiVo dongle. It doesn’t exactly feel like a triumphant return, but to a certain kind of home theater aficionado, the TiVo name still means a lot, and Sharp is poised to take advantage of it.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/home/home-theater/tivo-os-is-coming-to-the-us-on-sharp-tvs-213938244.html?src=rss 

Apple will more clearly label Apple Intelligence notification summaries soon

Apple will soon update Apple Intelligence notification summaries to make it clearer that they’re AI-generated. (The feature currently uses a small icon to denote their AI-generated status.) The BBC complained to the company after discovering several bogus summaries that twisted the content of some BBC headlines. On Monday, Apple told Engadget that the update will arrive “in the coming weeks.”

“Apple Intelligence is designed to help users get everyday tasks done faster and more easily,” an Apple spokesperson wrote in a statement to Engadget. “This includes optional notification summaries, which provide users who choose to opt in a way to briefly view information from apps and tap into the full details whenever they choose. These are identified by a summarization icon, and the original content is a quick tap away. Apple Intelligence features are in beta and we are continuously making improvements with the help of user feedback. A software update in the coming weeks will further clarify when the text being displayed is summarization provided by Apple Intelligence. We encourage users to report a concern if they view an unexpected notification summary.”

The BBC flagged several botched AI notification summaries in multiple reports over the last month — accusing the AI blurbs of spreading misinformation. One falsely claimed that Luigi Mangione, the accused murderer of health insurance CEO Brian Thompson, had shot himself. Other erroneous summaries said that a darts player had won a world championship before playing in the final (maybe he’s just that good!), and that tennis superstar Rafael Nadal had come out as gay.

Notification summaries are one of the features from the first wave of Apple Intelligence that arrived in iOS (and iPadOS) 18.1 and macOS Sequoia 15.1. A second phase, bringing ChatGPT integration and Image Playground, came in iOS (and iPadOS) 18.2 and macOS 15.2.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/apple-will-more-clearly-label-apple-intelligence-notification-summaries-soon-215159614.html?src=rss 

The cute Samsung Ballie home robot will actually go on sale this year

At its CES 2025 press conference, Samsung just announced that the Ballie home robot it first showed off last year will actually be available for sale this year. This cute yellow rolling device has a built-in projector that allows it to beam images and videos on your walls and floors, so you can interact with it. 

This story is developing, please refresh for updates.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/home/the-cute-samsung-ballie-home-robot-will-actually-go-on-sale-this-year-223528677.html?src=rss 

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