Philips Hue and other smart bulbs based on the Zigbee standard could soon act as motion sensors without the need for any additional hardware. This would mean they could automatically switch on when someone enters a room without using a separate motion sensor.
Even better, the new functionality looks set to be added to existing Hue bulbs through an update to the Hue Bridge β¦
We finally know when Sonic will grace movie theaters again: Paramount has announced Sonic The Hedgehog 4 will arrive on March 19, 2027, Variety reports. The company confirmed the next installment back in December, but we only knew that Spring 2027 was its premiere goal.Β
The first Sonic The Hedgehog movie premiered in early 2020, just before the world shut down. The third movie came out just before Christmas last year β though Paramount had already announced its follow up was in the works. Similarly, it was first announced about two years before its final release date. If the pattern continues then we should get a trailer in late 2026.Β
Each of the movies has done well at the box office, with Sonic The Hedgehog 3 currently grossing $218 million domestically and $422 million globally. Paramount also claims that the movies have driven another $180 million-plus from digital purchases and at-home rentals.Β
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/tv-movies/sonic-the-hedgehog-4-will-arrive-on-march-19-2027-133002387.html?src=rss
Google is doubling down on artificial intelligence with a fresh $1 billion investment in Anthropic, according to a report by the Financial Times on Wednesday. This new funding, which pushes the AI startupβs valuation to a staggering $60 billion, is [β¦]
Lights that turn on when you walk into a room and turn off when you leave are one of the most desirable smart home features. But you need to buy additional hardware like motion sensors to make this βmagicβ happen. A new ambient sensing technology called Sensify could make this easier by turning your light bulbs into motion sensors. And it might be landing on a Philips Hue bridge near you very soon.
Sensify is a wireless network sensing (WNS) technology developed by Ivani that can turn mains-powered Zigbee devices into motion sensors for controlling your lights with just a firmware update β no additional hardware needed. The best part is that it can work on devices already in most homes. βThere are tens of millions of devices with the base firmware already out there; weβre just working on the final touches to light up the full experience,β Ivani cofounder Justin McKinney tells The Verge.
An obvious use case for this is a Zigbee-based smart lighting system such as Philips Hue. Thereβs been speculation that Hue is working on a Zigbee sensing technology since its sister company Wiz debuted a similar tech called SpaceSense in 2022, which uses WNS over Wi-Fi. The well-informed hueblog.com reports that Zigbee wireless network sensing is the technology Hue will most likely use. The Verge reached out to Signify, which owns Hue, but hasnβt yet received a response.
This engineering video demonstrates how Sensifyβs Zigbee ambient sensing can turn lights on and off based on occupancy. Video: Ivani
McKinney wouldnβt say which companies are using Ivaniβs Sensify, which has been in development since 2016, but he did share that the company is working βwith some large household names poised to deploy the technology very soon.β He also said itβs the only company offering this capability over Zigbee networks.
Ivani is a member of the Connectivity Standards Alliance (CSA), which runs the Zigbee protocol, but Sensify is a proprietary solution that leverages the Zigbee network. Despite reports indicating this sensing tech is coming to all Zigbee devices, the CSA confirmed to The Verge that this is not a new feature within Zigbee itself.
WNS works by detecting disturbances in radio frequencies and can also be applied to Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and Thread technologies. McKinney says Sensify requires three or more devices positioned around a detection area to detect motion and occupancy in the space. The tech also allows for precise detection zones based on where the devices are situated. βThe devices send messages to each other, look at underlying network diagnostic information, and process it to provide occupancy sensing decisions,β says McKinney.
Performance-wise, McKinney says Sensify is βequivalent or superiorβ to passive infrared sensing (PIR) tech, which is traditionally used for motion sensing. It also doesnβt need line of sight, as PIR does. However, itβs not as precise as technologies like mmWave sensing, which can determine if someone is in a room through as slight a movement as breathing. βThe lights will still likely turn off if youβre still, even if youβre in the space,β he says.
The good news is that Sensify can run on Zigbee networks with a range of chipsets working together, meaning it can be deployed as a software update to existing systems. McKinney also confirmed Sensify runs locally on your Zigbee network, thereβs no Sensify cloud, and any sensing data is only accessible to the manufacturer deploying the technology.
This video, published by the CSA, illustrates how Ivaniβs wireless network sensing works over a Zigbee network.
Motion sensing in the smart home has several use cases, from lighting control and security to energy management and elder care. Two big advantages of WNS here are cost and scale. Thereβs no need to buy additional hardware to get the capability, and many homes already have devices that can use it.
Ivani is currently the only company with a Zigbee solution, but there are WNS solutions out there that use Wi-Fi. Origin Wireless and its partner company, Nami, were the first to develop Wi-Fi sensing, and they are leading Matterβs efforts around bringing ambient RF sensing technologies to the smart home standard.
Originβs technology powered Linksys Aware, a feature the router company launched in 2019 that turned its routers into motion sensors, and last year, Threshold launched a smart plug using Originβs Wi-Fi sensing to allow caregivers to monitor a loved oneβs activity remotely.
In 2021, I tested Hex Home, a proof-of-concept security system from Origin that used Wi-Fi sensing instead of motion sensors. But false positives made it virtually unusable. I also tried Wizβs Wi-Fi-based SpaceSense when it first launched. It was more reliable but still fairly inconsistent. However, according to McKinney, advances in machine learning and AI have brought significant improvements to WNS technology.
He says Ivaniβs Sensify tech is ready for deployment over Zigbee, and theyβre just waiting for their partners to fine-tune how best to βintroduce the feature within their product lines.β He expects they will update existing products in the next few months. βWe have the pleasure of experiencing our partnerβs products and their beta tests in our homes, and it really is the promise of what home automation was supposed to be.β
There have been a lot of promises around home automation over the years, with very few being fulfilled. But the idea of, say, every Philips Hue light bulb in your home turning into a motion sensor overnight, making it simple to automate control of your lights without sticking white plastic sensors everywhere, is a fairly exciting one.
If Ray-Ban Meta glasses are not your style, the company is expected to launch a pair of Oakley smart glasses later this year. These will likely mirror the functionality of Metaβs existing AI glasses, but with very different styling.
The Oakley glasses are reportedly based on the Sphaera model, which is primarily aimed at cyclists and other athletes β¦
Bluesky attracted many X users following the U.S. election in November. The decentralized social media platform has now grown to over 28 million users.
It's a challenging time to be a developer these days, according to GDC's 2025 State of the Game Industry report that surveyed over 3,000 game devs and industry professionals. In one of the worst years ever for game industry job losses, 11 percent of developers said they were let go from their positions in 2024 and 29 percent observed direct colleagues being laid off. All of that is part of an unfortunate trend caused in part by consolidation that could see around 14,000 layoffs in 2024 when final tallies are done.
Meanwhile, live service games appear to be here to stay, despite the spectacular flameout of ConcordΒ and the axing of several Sony projects. One-third of AAA developers said they're currently working on live service games (GaaS), with 16 percent across the entire developer base working on such titles. That doesn't mean they all like it though, as 41 percent expressed that they weren't interested at all on working on GaaS style games. That lines up with a general malaise among gamers with regard to live service titles.Β
One encouraging upward trend is in PC games, where 80 percent of developers reported that they were working β up massively from 66 percent last year. That could be due in part to Valve's Steam deck, as 44 precent of devs said they were interested in working specifically on that platform. Browser games are also on the upswing, with 16 percent of respondents working on releases. Finally, while gaming execs seem to love the potential for AI in gaming, developers hate it, with 30 percent saying it's having a negative impact on the industry β up 12 percent from last year.Β
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/eleven-percent-of-game-developers-were-laid-off-in-2024-according-to-gdc-survey-130003228.html?src=rss
When George Avetisov was the founder and CEO of cybersecurity startup HYPR, he spent a lot of time in the trenches with the companyβs sales team. He quickly realized that regardless of how good his sales team was, they were consistently pulling in other departments to answer customer questions or fill out technical questionnaires. βThey [β¦]
As enterprises look at how they can best leverage AI to increase their employeesβ productivity, search is an obvious use case. In most companies, after all, data lives in multiple disconnected silos and the combination of large language models, retrieval augmented generation (RAG) and enterprise-grade integration services now makes it easier than ever to not [β¦]
The Truecaller app has long been able to flag some incoming spam and scam phone calls, enabling you to reject them, but Apple privacy rules prevented the iOS version from working as effectively as the Android one. This means the iPhone would fail to identify many callers that would be flagged on Android phones.
A new Apple API in iOS 18.2 solves the privacy problem, and additionally now allows Truecaller to automatically block known spammers β¦
OpenAI will build and open AI infrastructure worth $500 billion in the United States over the next four years in partnership with SoftBank. The two entities have teamed up to establish a new company called the Stargate Project to build AI data centers for the ChatGPT maker, and according to their announcement, it will "secure American leadership in AI" as well as "create hundreds of thousands of American jobs." SoftBank will finance the project, while OpenAI will be in charge of its operations. Masayoshi Son, the CEO of SoftBank, will serve as its chairman.Β
While OpenAI and SoftBank will serve as the Stargate Project's lead partners, there are several other companies involved in the initiative. In addition to OpenAI, Arm, NVIDIA, Oracle and, of course, Microsoft will be its key initial technology partners. The company's official announcement says OpenAI, NVIDIA and Oracle will work together to "build and operate this computing system," though it didn't expound on what that means.Β
As for Microsoft, the company has posted an announcement about its involvement in the project and said that it will continue its "strategic partnership" with OpenAI. Microsoft will still have the right to use OpenAI IP on its products, and the OpenAI API will still exclusively run on Azure. However, it will no longer be OpenAI's exclusive provider for computing capacity. Whenever OpenAI needs additional capacity as its needs grow, Microsoft will have the "right of first refusal," which means the ChatGPT-maker has to check with it first before working with other parties.Β
The Stargate Project is releasing $100 billion immediately for its first data center buildouts, starting with one in Texas. As TechCrunch notes, it was previously reported that OpenAI was in talks with Oracle to lease a data center in Abilene, Texas that can reach almost a gigawatt of electricity by 2026. It didn't mention any other sites, but it did say that it's "evaluating potential" locations across the country.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/openai-and-softbank-team-up-for-a-500-billion-ai-data-center-venture-120018021.html?src=rss
As we wait for the company to dribble out additional information in the coming weeks and months, we thought we'd take a quick look at the biggest outstanding questions and concerns we still have about Nintendo's next gaming platform, along with some analysis of what we know, what we can guess, and what we expect on each score.
Launch date?
The teaser trailer's promise of a "2025" Switch 2 release technically covers any launch date between "tomorrow" and December 31. But we can probably narrow that window down a bit.
A four-year-old London startup backed by Peter Thiel has raised a $55 million Series B round as it sets about βfixing the broken clinical trial industry.β The announcement comes as artificial intelligence is shaping up to revolutionize drug discovery and development, in turn spurring demand for a streamlined clinical trial process to help get new [β¦]
Lumon Industries is on the lookout for employees with "wisdom, etiquette, and zeal," according to a creepy recruiting ad that conveniently fails to mention the soul-sucking, brain-hacking part of the gig. Lumon isn't a real company, of course--it's the evil empire at the heart of the hit Apple TV+ drama Severance. And the new spot...
Google is announcing a variety of classroom and accessibility-focused ChromeOS features today, and one of the standouts is being able to control your computer with your head and facial expressions. The feature β aimed at those with motor impairments β was first announced in early December, but itβs now rolling out to more users with compatible Chromebooks (Google recommends 8GB of RAM or more).
This isnβt Googleβs first foray into the face-as-a-cursor space. It previously made an open-source AI accessibility tool for Windows games called Project Gameface, which was also announced for Android. Hereβs a sample video from Google of the tech in action, demoed by software engineer Amanda Lin Dietz who helped develop it.
Additionally, Google is also teasing a boatload of new Chromebooks for 2025, with over 20 new devices in its standard Chromebook and Chromebook Plus lines coming this year. That estimate may be a bit of a stretch, since Google seems to be counting the Samsung Galaxy Chromebook Plus that launched back in October, but it does also count the just-announced 14-inch Lenovo Chromebook Plus 2-in-1 and more to come.
Along with laptops aimed at educators and students, Googleβs got a new batch of classroom-focused ChromeOS features called Class Tools. These allow teachers to have real-time control of their studentsβ screens. Once a pairing code is shared, educators will be able to send students direct content on their Chromebook screens, flip on live captions or translations for them, remotely view their screens, and share a studentβs work with the whole class.
In addition to these collaborative tools, Google Classroom is also getting an integration with Figmaβs FigJam, allowing teachers to assign online whiteboards to students for brainstorming and group work. Maybe the combination of FigJam with the teacherβs ability to snoop on studentsβ screens will reveal whoβs really doing all the work for the group.
The Indonesian government has said that it expects its iPhone 16 ban to be lifted βwithin one or two weeks,β but has not explained the basis for this.
The countryβs investment minister issued only a rather strangely-worded and somewhat contradictory comment which implied that a deal was close β¦