This is phenomenal, but my biggest question is (which is probably a more of a long-term one that comes from genuine curiosity/fascination, not doubt): does she use it/enjoy it? I'm so curious to see what happens over time. Does she learn the functions of these buttons, years before having words for what they're doing? Does she write some music? Does she grow up expecting things with knobs to be this interactive/creative? SO cool!
This is fantastic in every way. The hardest part of participating for me was finding more time closer to the holidays as the challenges got harder. Fewer, better challenges, with more space between them and the end of the year is a brilliant solution. So excited and grateful.
1. What is under the “Apple Intelligence” umbrella and what isn’t? There were a lot of AI features shown before that branding was brought up, I think.
2. The only supported iPhone is the iPhone 15 Pro? But any M1 iPad? Does this mean “Apple Intelligence” or all AI features announced? For instance…
3. For instance, is private cloud compute only available on iPhone 15 Pro?
Looked in several places, but I can’t figure out exactly what sort of microcontroller they aim to support… are we talking ATmega? ESP32? ARM Cortex M? All of those?
Yes. I have a set that appear to my iPhone to be legit, including auto-connect/disconnect, noise-canceling modes and all, though the functionality isn’t actually reliable. My iPhone doesn’t seem to know any difference between my real AirPods Pro 2 and these fakes.
When you see a paper like this, what, if any, path is there to seeking this kind of treatment? I know someone who would likely be interested in this, but I know from prior experience of my own that just trying to reach out to the researchers listed is a long process that can be fruitless. Is there an intended/better way? I know about clinicaltrials.gov, but that’s only helpful if there’s an ongoing study of the thing you’re interested (which is less likely if you’re reading about findings).