Arm Holdings unveiled new chip designs and software tools to enhance AI capabilities on smartphones, along with a new approach to delivering these designs to speed up their adoption. The company collaborated with Samsung and TSMC to provide ready-to-manufacture blueprints, aiming to help chipmakers bring products to market faster while focusing on integrating neural processing units for optimal AI performance.
Samsung Galaxy phones offer a range of hidden features that can enhance user experience. These include customizing the home screen grid size, cloning messaging apps for multiple accounts, shooting in RAW format for advanced photo editing, using gestures to take screenshots, assigning a second function to the side key, muting calls and alarms by flipping the phone face down, adding effects to video calls, enabling flash notifications, locking the home screen layout to prevent accidental changes, and creating a secure folder to hide select apps and files.
Nvidia has released a set of software tools to help companies guard against unwanted responses from chatbots. The tools are designed to help AI system creators put into place important safety measures, such as ensuring that chatbots do not respond with potentially dangerous information such as how to create weapons or send users to unknown links that could contain computer viruses. The tools are provided free of charge and aim to put industry standards into software code if and when they do arrive, whether through industry consensus or regulation.
Adobe has launched Firefly, a generative AI tool that uses plain English requests and Adobe's software tools to create original content. The company sees the technology as an opportunity to expand its business and stay ahead in the content creation industry.