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Tim Hardwick reporting on Gurmanās reporting in Bloomberg, which I donāt have access to, so Iām quoting the MacRumors article: While specific details are scarce, it's supposedly the biggest update to iOS since iOS 7, and the biggest update to macOS since
You can never do too much battery testing, but after a week with this phone I've got some impressions to share.
A core tenet of A Better Computer is showing, not telling. I donāt use a lot of press kit material or talking points from companies in my videos because I donāt particularly care about those. My incentives are fully aligned with showing software (and sometimes hardware)
NilĆ©ane has entered her keyboard era, Chris has a consumer warning as well as a really good macropad, and then we find the best games on the Mac. Weekly Topics Logitech MX Keys Mini Volt Plus+ numberpad (but probably donāt buy it) BNK8 macropad Stream Deck
I've been a proponent of high-refresh rate displays for years now, and I think it's pretty ridiculous that Apple doesn't put these displays in their sub-$1,000 iPhones. I think if you're just keeping up with the Apple ecosystem then you
More in technology
Guinness is one of those beers (specifically, a stout) that people take seriously and the Guinness brand has taken full advantage of that in their marketing. They even sell a glass designed specifically for enjoying their flagship creation, which has led to a trend that the company surely appreciates: āsplitting the G.ā But thatās difficult [ā¦] The post This Arduino device helps āsplit the Gā on a pint of Guinness appeared first on Arduino Blog.
AI is everywhere, but most websites are still managed manually by humans using content management systems like WordPress and Drupal. These systems provide means for tagging and categorizing content. But over time, these structures degrade. Without vigilance and maintenance, taxonomies become less useful and relevant over time. Users struggle to find stuff. Ambiguity creeps in. Search results become incomplete and unreliable. And as terms proliferate, the team struggles to maintain the site, making things worse. The site stops working as well as it could. Sales, engagement, and trust suffer. And the problem only gets worse over time. Eventually, the team embarks on a redesign. But hitting the reset button only fixes things for a while. Entropy is the nature of things. Systems tend toward disorder unless we invest in keeping them organized. But itās hard: small teams have other priorities. Theyāre under pressure to publish quickly. Turnover is high. Not ideal conditions for consistent tagging. Many content teams donāt have governance processes for taxonomies. Folks create new terms on the fly, often without checking whether similar ones exist. But even when teams have the structures and processes needed to do it right, content and taxonomies themselves change over time as the orgās needs and contexts evolve. The result is taxonomy drift, the gradual misalignment of the systemās structures and content. Itās a classic āboiled frogā situation: since it happens slowly, teams donāt usually recognize it until symptoms emerge. By then, the problem is harder and more expensive to fix. Avoiding taxonomy drift calls for constant attention and manual tweaking, which can be overwhelming for resource-strapped teams. But thereās good news on the horizon: this is exactly the kind of gradual, large-scale, boring challenge where AIs can shine. Iāve worked on IA redesigns for content-heavy websites and have seen the effects of taxonomy drift firsthand. Often, one person is responsible for keeping the website organized, and theyāre overwhelmed. After a redesign, they face three challenges: Implementing the new taxonomy on the older corpus. Learning to use the new taxonomy in their workflows. Adapting and evolving the taxonomy so it remains useful and consistent over time. AI is well-suited to tackling these challenges. LLMs excel at pattern matching and categorizing existing text at scale. Unlike humans, AIs donāt get overwhelmed or bored when categorizing thousands of items over and over again. And with predefined taxonomies, theyāre not as prone to hallucinations. Iāve been experimenting with using AI to solve taxonomy drift, and the results are promising. Iām building a product to tackle this issue, and looking implement the approach in real-world scenarios. If you or someone you know is struggling to keep a content-heavy website organized, please get in touch.
A simple question that takes some effort to answer in a satisfying way.
Tim Hardwick reporting on Gurmanās reporting in Bloomberg, which I donāt have access to, so Iām quoting the MacRumors article: While specific details are scarce, it's supposedly the biggest update to iOS since iOS 7, and the biggest update to macOS since