Tag: desktop

  • Apple gets ready for AI in the enterprise with new ChatGPT configuration options

    Apple gets ready for AI in the enterprise with new ChatGPT configuration options

    As AI technology makes its way into the enterprise, Apple is rolling out new tools that will give businesses more granular control over where and how their employees can tap into artificial intelligence. With the release of Apple’s software updates arriving in September, the tech giant is adding another option for enterprise customers: the ability to configure the use of an enterprise version of OpenAI’s ChatGPT.

    Apple has already seen the demand for ChatGPT for Enterprise, which OpenAI says now has over 5 million business customers. These companies use the AI service to connect with their own internal data when using AI agents.

    However, what’s interesting about the way Apple’s integration with ChatGPT for Enterprise has been structured is that it’s not hard-coded to only restrict or allow ChatGPT itself.

    Instead, Apple’s support documents indicate that IT administrators will be able to restrict or allow any “external” artificial intelligence provider, not just OpenAI’s technology. That leaves the door open for Apple to forge other deals with large AI players used in the enterprise environment, without having to recode things at the protocol level.

    As Apple has rolled out new AI features aimed at its devices’ end users — like writing tools or visual intelligence, for example — it’s also rolled out ways for IT departments to control access to those features.

    While the company fully believes in its Private Cloud Compute architecture, it knows that it can take time for companies to agree to make changes to sensitive systems and data. That’s why it leaves it up to businesses to decide if data should be processed in the cloud or on the device, for example.

    In addition to letting businesses pick and choose which AI features to enable, this setup allows businesses to decide whether employees’ AI requests can go to ChatGPT’s cloud service, even when the business doesn’t have its own enterprise deal with OpenAI. (ChatGPT, you’ll recall, has been integrated with Apple Intelligence across Apple’s software platform to handle AI requests that Apple’s own cloud can’t. Because requests never go from Apple’s cloud to ChatGPT directly — it’s either/or — it’s easier to disable the ChatGPT setting.)

    While AI updates are a highlight of the enterprise-related updates due out in the fall, Apple is also rolling out other new features to its largest customers.

    It will launch an API for its Apple Business Manager service, which will allow the service’s functions to be integrated into other IT tools, like MDM products, inventory management services, or help desks, among others. It’s also debuting new tools for Device Management to make it easier to migrate devices to a different management service — something that often comes up in M&A scenarios when a new company takes over employee devices and assets.

    Apple’s Return to Service solution, which lets devices quickly get wiped and readied for the next user, will now offer the option to leave all apps installed, saving time and bandwidth since IT admins and users won’t need to reinstall them. Plus, Return to Service will become available for Vision Pro for the first time.

    On shared Macs, an authenticated Guest Mode lets employees log in with account credentials from their identity provider, then has their data (but not apps) erased upon logout. Another option lets businesses add NFC readers to Macs, so employees can just tap their watch or phone to log in.

    These tools will also roll out in September as part of Apple’s broader software updates for iPhone, iPad, Mac and more.

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  • Tesla shareholders to vote on investing in Musk's AI startup xAI

    Tesla shareholders to vote on investing in Musk's AI startup xAI

    Tesla shareholders will soon vote whether to let the electric vehicle maker invest in Elon Musk’s AI startup xAI, a proposal pitched as a way to strengthen Tesla’s ambitions in AI, robotics, and energy. 

    Listed in Tesla’s proxy statement alongside a company-backed push to raise Musk’s 10-year pay package to $1 trillion, the proposal comes from Stephen Hawk, a Florida shareholder with a $2,000 stake of common stock. His supporting statement reads:

    Tesla’s integration of Grok into its vehicles demonstrates the tangible benefits of collaboration with xAI. As Tesla pivots toward AI-driven technologies, including Full Self-Driving and robotics, a strategic investment in xAI would secure access to advanced AI capabilities, enhance product innovation, and drive shareholder value. 

    The board, which often suggests investors vote against shareholder proposals, is neutral on this one.  

    If Tesla does end up investing in xAI, it would be the second of Musk’s companies to do so. SpaceX, Musk’s aerospace company, has committed to investing $2 billion in xAI as part of a $5 billion equity raise. Analysts have speculated that SpaceX’s involvement in xAI could signal the AI firm is having trouble raising from outside investors. (Musk also merged X, the company formerly known as Twitter, with xAI earlier this year.)

    Some Tesla shareholders have argued that xAI is a rival to Tesla, since Musk has often described his EV company as an AI company. Last year, shareholders sued Musk and the company for allowing Musk to start a rival AI firm, but the case was dismissed.

    Hawk’s proposal comes as Tesla grapples with weakening EV sales and a lackluster robotaxi rollout. The company has attempted to direct investor attention away from those headwinds and toward Tesla’s AI efforts, which center on testing and deploying autonomous vehicles and Optimus, its humanoid robot. 

    Musk has argued that he requires more of a controlling stake in Tesla to lead the company’s AI efforts, rather than get distracted by his other AI company. Alongside the proposal to invest in xAI, shareholders will vote on a Tesla-backed 10-year compensation plan for Musk that could give him more than 25% control. 

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    The filing comes as Tesla continues to appeal a Delaware judge’s decision to strike down Musk’s earlier $56 billion pay package. The new plan would tie Musk’s compensation to ambitious benchmarks, including boosting Tesla’s market value from about $1 trillion today to more than $8 trillion.

    “Tesla’s not going to get to $8 trillion market cap based on FSD and robotaxi. To get to that $8 trillion, you kind of need xAI,” Gene Munster, managing partner at Deepwater Asset Management, told TechCrunch. “We’re talking numbers that have historically been inconceivable. To get to those, we need things to happen that are inconceivable right now. And one of them is humanoid robots everywhere; that’s probably the biggest lever.”

    The investor noted that xAI could help Tesla reach that market cap in several ways.

    “Just the excitement around xAI and Tesla together is going to move Tesla’s valuation higher,” he said, adding that potential returns from that investment and access to xAI’s resources, like compute, could help boost shareholder value and Tesla’s own AI ambitions.

    Tesla’s shareholder vote is scheduled for November 6 at 3 p.m. central time at Tesla’s Gigafactory Texas, and will stream live here. 

  • Sony is increasing the price of the PlayStation 5 as new tariffs take hold

    Sony is increasing the price of the PlayStation 5 as new tariffs take hold

    Sony will raise the price of PlayStation 5 consoles, the company announced on Wednesday. These changes will be effective as of Thursday, August 21.

    Citing “a challenging economic environment” — which appears to reference President Trump’s tariffs on imported products — Sony is increasing console prices by about $50. In the U.S., the prices will increase to $549.99 for the PlayStation 5, $499.99 for the PlayStation 5 Digital Edition, and $749.99 for the PlayStation 5 Pro. On July 31, the White House announced a 15% tariff on Japan.

    The company said that it does not have plans to change prices in other countries, nor does it intend to hike the cost of accessories. However, Sony already raised prices for PlayStation consoles sold in Europe, Australia, and New Zealand in April, citing the same challenging environment.

    In some regions, Sony previously increased console prices in 2022 due to inflation, but U.S. markets were not impacted at the time.

    Some of Sony’s peers have also announced pricing changes to gaming products amid the news of Trump’s tariffs. Microsoft indicated in May that it would increase console prices by $80 to $100, while also increasing the prices of some games, controllers, and accessories.

    Nintendo chose to raise the prices of some accessories for the new Nintendo Switch 2 console, but not the console itself.

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  • Bounce launches a service for moving accounts between Bluesky and Mastodon

    Bounce launches a service for moving accounts between Bluesky and Mastodon

    Bounce, a new technology that adds a critical component to the open social web, launches to the public on Monday. The cross-protocol migration tool offers a service that allows users of open social networks like Bluesky and Mastodon to move their follow graphs between their accounts, even though the networks rely on different underlying protocols.

    Today, Mastodon users unhappy with the service can opt to move their account to a different Mastodon server, while Bluesky is developing technology that allows users to migrate their account to a new PDS (Bluesky’s term for “personal data server”) on its network. However, Mastodon runs on the ActivityPub Protocol and Bluesky on the AT Protocol, which has limited the ability to migrate accounts across the two platforms until now.

    To work, Bounce uses technology first developed for Bridgy Fed, a tool that connects Mastodon and Bluesky by making users’ profiles on one service visible on the other.

    To move accounts, Bounce first moves a user’s Bluesky account to a bridged account that straddles the two networks, then to the user’s Mastodon account. This migration also supports Pixelfed, an Instagram-like social app that also runs on ActivityPub, like Mastodon.

    At launch, Bounce can migrate users from Bluesky to Mastodon or Pixelfed, but not the other way around. That’s because Bluesky’s infrastructure currently only allows users to move off their servers, but doesn’t allow migrations back. When that changes, Bounce will launch migration in the opposite direction, too.

    In addition, early adopters should be aware that once they move their account off of Bluesky, they won’t be able to use their Bluesky credentials to log into the app again or other AT Protocol-based services again.

    Developed by a nonprofit called A New Social, which is also the maker of Bridgy Fed, Bounce’s launch is particularly timely for Bluesky users in Mississippi. On Friday, Bluesky announced that it would block its service in the state rather than comply with a new age assurance law that it considers overly invasive from a privacy standpoint and that would require too many resources for Bluesky’s small team to manage. This has left Bluesky users in the state without access to the social network, highlighting the need for tools that would allow users to take their accounts elsewhere.

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    Bounce’s beta is available starting Monday and is aimed at early adopters and open web enthusiasts who are willing to try the service and offer feedback. While the service is open to the public, users should familiarize themselves with the migration process before making the commitment to move their accounts, given that it’s not yet possible to move back to Bluesky after they leave.