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Anthropic's Claude AI reportedly getting two-way voice mode soon

PCWorld

According to Bloomberg, AI startup Anthropic is about to release a voice mode for Claude. Currently, it's only possible to communicate with the Claude AI assistant via text, and adding voice mode would bring it up to parity with other advanced AIs like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Sesame. Claude's voice mode will initially only be available in English, with three different voice modes named "Airy," "Mellow," and "Buttery." According to Bloomberg, Claude's voice mode could be released as early as April, but it will initially be rolled out to a limited number of users. Anthropic hasn't yet commented on Claude's voice mode.


Trump wants to revive the lagging US shipbuilding industry. Here are the hurdles he faces

FOX News

President Donald Trump is turning his attention to the U.S. shipbuilding industry, which is leagues behind its near-peer competitor China, and recently signed an executive order designed to reinvigorate it. Trump's April 10 order instructs agencies to develop a Maritime Action Plan and orders the U.S. trade representative to compile a list of recommendations to address China's "anticompetitive actions within the shipbuilding industry," among other things. Additionally, the executive order instructs a series of assessments regarding how the government could bolster financial support through the Defense Production Act, the Department of Defense Office of Strategic Capital, a new Maritime Security Trust Fund, investment from shipbuilders from allied countries and other grant programs. But simply throwing money at the shipbuilding industry won't solve the problem, according to Bryan Clark, director of the Hudson Institute think tank's Center for Defense Concepts and Technology. "It is unlikely that just putting more money into U.S. shipbuilding โ€“ even with foreign technical assistance โ€“ will make U.S. commercial shipbuilders competitive with experienced and highly-subsidized shipyards in China, Korea, or Japan," Clark said in a Monday email to Fox News Digital.


This Roomba robot vacuum and mop is 46 percent off right now

Engadget

The Roomba Y0140 robot vacuum and mop combo unit is on sale for 149 via Amazon. This represents a discount of 46 percent, as it typically costs 250. It's rare we see robots that can vacuum and mop at this price point. The Y0140 is actually a combo version of the vacuum-only Q0120, which topped our list of the best robot vacuums on a budget. We loved the iconic design and the surprisingly-robust suction power.


Trump risks leaving behind a legacy of failure in Ukraine

Al Jazeera

A day before Easter, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a temporary ceasefire for the Christian holiday. Like other Russian promises, this one was broken too. Ukrainian media reported Russian drone attacks, shelling and firefights across the front lines. Ukrainian civilians were also targeted. This ceasefire that wasn't came on the tail of another one: a 30-day ceasefire that was supposed to cover energy infrastructure.


My two favorite AI apps on Linux - and how I use them to get more done

ZDNet

When AI first hit the scene in its current form, I was dead set against it because of the generative nature of what was being sold to the public. I considered any shortcut to creating art to be offensive to the craft. But then I realized I could use AI for something that traditional searching was starting to fail at: Research. Also: Claude AI can do your research and handle your emails now - here's how With both sides of my writing career (fiction and nonfiction), I have to do quite a bit of research, and Google was becoming a hindrance to that process. Instead of being fed helpful information, I was inundated with ads, sponsored content, and its own AI-based answers (which were rarely helpful).


Fitbit is dying a slow death

ZDNet

It was another exciting week for fitness tracker news, with Google dropping several hints about what's coming in future smartwatch and health tracker updates. Also: Oura Ring vs. Apple Watch: Here's which health tracker is right for you If you want a quick roundup of some of the biggest stories of the week in the health and wearables space, I've kept my eyes on the news so you don't have to. Keep reading for the latest. Google disabled yet another Fitbit feature this week: the Google-owned step counter is losing Google Assistant. "Over the next few weeks, we will be progressively phasing out Google Assistant on your Fitbit device. This change means that Google Assistant voice control for activities will soon no longer be available on your Fitbit device," a moderator on the Fitbit forum wrote in March.


Motorola to outfit first responders with new AI-enabled body cameras

ZDNet

Motorola Solutions is bringing AI to the front lines, launching a new AI solution to help first responders make timely decisions, improve police reporting, and foster interaction with the community. On Monday, Motorola unveiled AI Assist, which the company describes as "a new category of human-AI collaboration for public safety." It also unveiled SVX (which stands for secure voice and video converged), a first-of-its-kind body camera with radio. Paired with AI Assist, SVX fuses AI with core law enforcement tools to help first responders work more efficiently. Also: AI unleashes more advanced scams.


Learn how to boss around AI bots before they become your boss

Popular Science

But AI is a tool; like any tool, it is only as good as the person wielding it. Now's the time to get the upper hand on AI and learn how to use tools like ChatGPT and automation platforms to work for you. The ChatGPT & Automation E-Degree from Eduonix Learning Solutions gives you the knowledge to stay on top for just 29.99 (MSRP 790) The course includes 12 modules and 25 hours of content you can move through at your own pace, and they never expire. You'll learn how to automate workflows, streamline repetitive tasks, and get AI to handle the boring stuff while you take credit for the results. It also dives into prompt engineering, real-world use cases, and customizing ChatGPT to fit your job, industry, or hustle.


Nvidia CEO lobbies Japan to generate more power to fuel AI

The Japan Times

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang met with Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba on Monday to push for more electricity generation to meet artificial intelligence's needs. The two discussed how Japan is particularly well-positioned to develop AI, given its leadership in robotics and industrial manufacturing, Huang told reporters after the meeting. But he also said that generating and creating intelligence will require energy. "The country needs to build new infrastructure," Huang said, eschewing his usual black leather jacket for a blue suit and tie. "Energy is essential for all industrial growth."


AI is pushing the limits of the physical world

MIT Technology Review

Architecture often assumes a binary between built projects and theoretical ones. What physics allows in actual buildings, after all, is vastly different from what architects can imagine and design (often referred to as "paper architecture"). That imagination has long been supported and enabled by design technology, but the latest advancements in artificial intelligence have prompted a surge in the theoretical. "Transductions: Artificial Intelligence in Architectural Experimentation," a recent exhibition at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, brought together works from over 30 practitioners exploring the experimental, generative, and collaborative potential of artificial intelligence to open up new areas of architectural inquiry--something they've been working on for a decade or more, since long before AI became mainstream. Architects and exhibition co-curators Jason Vigneri-Beane, Olivia Vien, Stephen Slaughter, and Hart Marlow explain that the works in "Transductions" emerged out of feedback loops among architectural discourses, techniques, formats, and media that range from imagery, text, and animation to mixed-reality media and fabrication.