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05 Oct 12:34

OpenAI’s Canvas can translate code between languages with a click

by Benj Edwards

On Thursday, OpenAI unveiled Canvas, a new interface for ChatGPT designed to enhance collaboration on writing and coding projects. The feature bears similarities to a feature called Artifacts in Anthropic's Claude AI assistant, introduced in June. Canvas displays content in a separate window alongside the AI chat history, allowing users to keep an eye on working document drafts or programming code while collaborating with the AI assistant.

OpenAI began rolling out canvas to ChatGPT Plus and Team users globally on Thursday, while Enterprise and Education users will gain access next week. The company also plans to make canvas available to all free ChatGPT users once it exits the beta stage.

Like Artifacts, Canvas is sort of a scratch pad, a way to visually separate portions of the active working context (the user prompt) to keep them from getting lost in the chat backlog. From our experience, Artifacts can ease the process of working on projects with Claude that require editing and revisions, and Canvas functions in a very similar way.

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06 Feb 17:58

Peloton launches a $90 forearm-worn heart-rate monitor with LED indicators

by Corey Gaskin
Promotional image of a man wearing a Peloton arm band working out.

Enlarge (credit: Peloton)

Peloton has just launched a new forearm-worn heart-rate band that will replace the company's current chest-strap monitor. The $90 heart-rate monitor (HRM) uses optical sensors rather than the electrodermal ones found on the chest strap it will soon replace.

Meant for use with the Peloton suite of exercise equipment, the original HRM retailed for $50 and is now being sold for $34 while supplies last. It uses ANT+ and Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) to connect to equipment and track effort levels. The new strap lacks ANT+, but it will have the same functions and log heart rate and heart-rate zones while contributing to Peloton's proprietary Strive Score metric. The exclusion of ANT+ means that some third-party equipment (particularly those that lack Bluetooth) won't be compatible with the latest strap.

  • Peloton's new heart-rate monitor features five multicolor LEDs to display battery, heart-rate zone, and connectivity information. [credit: Peloton ]

The new heart-rate band adds five multicolor LEDs to relay information about your heart-rate zones, the strap's battery level, and connectivity status. The battery is also now rechargeable, unlike its predecessor, and it's rated for about 10 hours of use.

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27 Nov 08:16

These Are the Best Black Friday Sales From Target

by Lauren Rouse

Black Friday sales can be overwhelming, but we at Lifehacker are here to do the hard yards and scope out the best deals for you. Including from Target, who is running some great prices across home appliances, tech and merchandise.

Some highlights include up to 40% off LEGO sets and 20% off big a range of big toy brands. There’s also deals on home exercise equipment, appliances including blenders, toasters and juicers and some great headphone deals. Target is also running some great gaming deals with Nintendo Switch consoles going for $399 and a range of PlayStation 4 hits games for $12 – all of which will be backwards compatible with the new PS5.

Target’s Black Friday sales are available all through the weekend up until midnight Monday, November 30. The retailer also offers free delivery on orders over $45 and click and collect.

Check out some of the best deals below. You can see the rest on Target’s Black Friday website.

Cyber Monday Online Deals

  • Get $50 off clothing, footwear, homewares and a range of Christmas stock when you spend $200 online (use promo code: CYBER50)
  • OL 60005 Bahamas Airjet Inflatable Spa – $499
  • Crock-Pot Express Multi Cooker CPE200 – $99

Black Friday Home Appliance Deals

  • Nutribullet 900W NB90507 – $69
  • Bellini Digital Air Fryer BTAF19 – $69
  • Sunbeam Duraceramic Air Fryer – $99
  • Sunbeam NutriSeal Vacuum Blender – $199
  • Russell Hobbs One Temperature Iron – $55
  • Sunbeam Snack Pie Maker – $39
  • Bellini Upright Vacuum – $79
  • Nutribullet 1000W 8 Piece set – $115
  • Sunbeam Chic Collection Kettle – $55
  • Nutribullet 800W Juicer – $149
  • George Foreman Entertaining Grill – $69

Black Friday Homewares and Entertainment Deals

  • Instax Mini 9 Camera and Film bundle – $85
  • Up to 40% off Selected LEGO Sets
  • 20% off Canninvale Sleep Easy Range
  • 20% off 1000TC sheet sets
  • 20% off The Green Pan Range

Black Friday Gaming Deals

  • Nintendo Switch Console (+ Mario Kart 8 Download) – $399
  • Nintendo Switch Ring Fit Adventure – $99
  • PS4 DualShock Controllers (Select Colours) – $58
  • Animal Crossing (Switch) – $64
  • Super Smash Bros. Ultimate (Switch) – $69
  • Death Stranding (PS4) – $20
  • Marvel’s Avengers (PS4) – $39
  • Ghost of Tsushima (PS4) – $59
  • Spider-Man (PS4) – $20
  • FIFA 21 (PS4, Switch, Xbox) – $39
  • Watch Dogs Legion (PS4, Xbox) – $59
  • Just Dance 2021 (PS4, Xbox) – $49
  • Red Dead Redemption 2 (PS4, Xbox) – $49

Black Friday Audio Deals

  • Sony Noise Cancelling Headphones – $59.40
  • Sony True Wireless Headphones – $129
  • Sony Bluetooth Headphones – $129
  • Sony Headphones MDR-ZX110B – $26.40
  • UE Boom 3 Speaker – $169

Black Friday Fitness Deals

  • Garmin Vivofit Jr 2 – $69
  • Fitbit Charge 4 – $169
  • Homedics Massage Gun – $79
  • Homedics Easy Lounge Massage Chair – $479.20
  • Fila Cross Trainer – $224.25
  • Fila Hex Dumbbell 10kg – $21.75
  • Fila Magnetic Bike Gen II – $96.75

Get in quick to grab these sales before stocks run out. You can also check out our round-up of other great Black Friday sales here.

This article has been updated with additional information.

The post These Are the Best Black Friday Sales From Target appeared first on Lifehacker Australia.

16 Jul 13:43

10 Ways To Make Your Dog Happier

by Paul McGreevy and Melissa Starling

In our book, Making Dogs Happy, we use scientific research, illustrative photos and practical tips to help dog owners to appreciate what their dogs may be feeling from moment to moment, and have strategies ready to respond in ways that support their dogs.

Making Dogs Happy is focused on the pragmatic application of current theory to improve your relationship with your dogs and, of course, in the process make them happy.

There are many ways in which we can misjudge dogs by assuming that they are little furry humans.

Here are ten common misconceptions that stem from assigning human values and needs to dogs.

1. Dogs have a human appreciation of sharing

Humans can rationalise and appreciate the benefits of sharing. In contrast, among dogs, possession is ten-tenths of the law. So we should not take toys, bones and chews away from dogs unless we have trained them to accept this form of intervention.

2. Dogs always enjoy common human physical displays of affection

Humans often show their affection for others by hugging and cuddling them. Dogs simply do not have the limbs and joints to achieve this and so have not evolved to give each other a loving squeeze. When embraced by humans, many can find this uncomfortable or threatening. The same goes for patting dogs on the head.

3. Barking and growling dogs are always threatening or dangerous

These are distance-increasing behaviours. The dogs using these signals are chiefly trying to buy space so they can feel safer. All dogs, regardless of their temperament or training, can at times want more space. They usually try more subtle signalling first, but many dogs learn that subtle signals don’t work and go straight for shouting.

4. Dogs will welcome unfamiliar dogs to their home

Dogs evolved from wolves and are therefore primed to defend what is theirs. They have an attachment to their home territory and the resources within it. Dogs have no way of knowing that the dogs and human we invite around to our home, for example for a play-date, are ever going to leave. They can be forgiven for thinking that this is the way it is going to be from hereon. So it is to be expected that they will often try to lay out the local ground-rules and put the new arrivals in their place.

5. Dogs like relaxing as much as humans do

We go to work and go to school, so we greatly value the opportunity to chill out at home and maybe watch TV. In contrast, dogs spend most of their time at home and so value exercise off the property far more than time spent on the sofa. So, for dogs, a change is not just as good as a rest – it’s much better.

6. An effusive dog is a friendly dog

“Friendly” for one dog is not friendly for all dogs, and some dogs use excessive friendliness as a way to alleviate anxiety associated with meeting another dog or human. Owners of very friendly dogs may be surprised when every other dog does not cheerfully receive their dog. Some dogs prefer sedate greetings and lots of personal space.

7. Dogs approach when they want to engage playfully

Sometimes owners are confused when a dog approaches a human or another dog in a friendly fashion and then growls or snaps at them. These dogs may be motivated to approach chiefly to gain information, rather than to interact, and some may like strangers in principle, but nevertheless become anxious and overwhelmed all of a sudden. If you are seeing this pattern, call your dog away from new dogs and humans after a couple of seconds.

8. A big yard can replace walks

Because dogs spend so much time at home in the yard, they often find the area a little too familiar and sometimes rather dull. The size of a yard is far less important to dogs than what happens in it. Dogs truly thrive on play with each other, with us and with toys. They particularly love to do so in a novel environment, so time spent out of the yard is the very best of fun.

9. Dogs are wilfully defiant when they don’t do as they are told

Rather than deciding to disobey us, dogs sometimes simply can’t do what we ask them to. Either they don’t actually know what we’re asking them to do, or they have much, much more pressing things to do at the time. Dogs are not great at generalising, so just because they sit nicely when asked to in the kitchen when you have treats in your hand doesn’t mean they automatically know what “sit” means when they are at the off-leash dog park.

And while your dogs might know what “sit” means when being trained at home without distractions, asking them to do so when visitors are at the door might be like asking a child to kneel and pray upon arriving at an amusement park.

10. Barking, snapping, or lunging is the first sign of an unhappy dog

Dogs often give subtle signs they are becoming anxious, like avoiding eye contact with whatever is worrying them, licking lips, brow furrows, lifting a paw, tightening muscles in their face. If nothing is done to help these dogs move away from whatever is worrying them, these signs can often escalate to more troubling behaviour that is more obvious, such as growling and snapping.

 

This article was originally published on The Conversation.

This article has been updated since its original publish date.

 

The post 10 Ways To Make Your Dog Happier appeared first on Lifehacker Australia.

11 Apr 07:43

NASA sees an “exponential” jump in malware attacks as personnel work from home

by Dan Goodin
The words

Enlarge (credit: Christiaan Colen / Flickr)

NASA has experienced an exponential increase in malware attacks and a doubling of agency devices trying to access malicious sites in the past few days as personnel work from home, the space agency’s Office of the Chief Information Officer said on Monday.

A new wave

“A new wave of cyber-attacks is targeting Federal Agency Personnel, required to telework from home, during the Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak,” officials wrote in a memo. The wave over the past few days includes a(n):

  • Doubling of email phishing attempts
  • Exponential increase in malware attacks on NASA systems
  • Double the number of mitigation-blocking of NASA systems trying to access malicious sites (often unknowingly) due to users accessing the Internet

The last item is particularly concerning because it suggests that NASA employees and contractors are clicking on malicious links sent in email and text messages at twice the rate as normal. Tricking people into clicking on malicious links or opening malicious email attachments remains one of the easiest ways to gain entry into enterprise networks and individual computers users alike.

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09 Feb 06:26

If You Could Replay A Game For The First Time, Which Would You Choose?

by Narelle Ho Sang

In 2019, I played the brilliant sci-fi space exploration game, Outer Wilds. If only the game’s time loop was a real thing so that I could go back and experience it all over again.

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04 Aug 11:58

Nanoleaf's Canvas Can Now Control Your Other HomeKit Devices

by Tercius on News, shared by Chelsea Stone to Kotaku

The Nanoleaf Canvas, the first touch controlled modular smart lights, is adding “smart button” to its list of skills.

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10 Jun 11:27

Cryptocurrency Company Hacks Itself Before Hackers Can Hack It

by Brian Barrett
Microsoft deletes its facial recognition database, hackers hit health care, and more of the week's top security news.
29 Dec 19:11

Satellites watch over the graves of ancient steppe nomads

by Kiona N. Smith
Satellite photo of two burial mounds

Enlarge / This Google Earth image shows two large Scythian burial mounds, each over 20 meters (65.6 feet) wide. (credit: Caspari et al. 2018)

Around 900 BCE, a group of nomads from Siberia called Scythians began spreading across the central Asian steppe, their mounted archers sweeping across huge swaths of territory. Today the steppe from the Black Sea to northern China is dotted with thousands of their tombs—deep grave pits, covered with mounds of stone or soil. Centuries of looters have ransacked the burial mounds for the ornate gold art and jewelry, as well as the finely crafted weapons and horse gear buried with the Scythian dead. Satellite imagery sheds light on the extent of the destruction, and it may eventually help protect the ancient graves from modern looters.

University of Sydney archaeologist Gino Caspari and his colleagues searched for Scythian burial mounds, or kurgans, in high-resolution satellite images of a 110 square kilometer (68.4 square mile) area of the Xinjiang province in northwestern China. They mapped their findings and noted how many of the burial mounds looked like they’d been disturbed by looters. When looters dig up the contents of the grave pit, the center of the mound usually collapses. Observers who know what they’re looking for can spot that from above; imagine looking at a sheet of bubble wrap to see which ones have been popped.  Although the satellite images weren’t as precise as a detailed ground survey, they offered a pretty accurate estimate of the general situation on the ground—and the news wasn’t good.

Nearly three-quarters of the burial mounds in northern Xinjiang have been looted. That came as a grim surprise for Caspari and his colleagues. “We assumed that, due to the remoteness and the heavy presence of security forces in the region, we would find a higher proportion of intact tombs,” he said in a statement.

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21 Nov 08:05

2018/11/16 DARPA Announces 2019 AI Colloquium

2019 AI Colloquium
Throughout DARPA's history, artificial intelligence (AI) has been an important area of groundbreaking research and development (R&D). In the 1960s, DARPA researchers completed some of the foundational work in the field, leading to the creation of expert systems, or the first wave of AI technologies. Since then, DARPA has funded developments in the second wave of AI – machine learning – which has significantly impacted defense and commercial capabilities in areas such as speech understanding, self-driving cars, and image recognition.
01 Nov 22:32

Kineski restoran pobijedio ZAMP: Ne mora plaćati autorska prava

by Kruno Bošnjaković

Kineski restoran Mr. Chen u Zagrebu izvojevao je pobjedu nad ZAMP-om tvrdnjom da su izvodili staru tradicionalnu kinesku glazbu i da za to plaćaju naknadu u Kini. U restoran je ZAMP bio poslao svog referenta Tomislava C. koji je rekao da pri kontroli u restoranu nije utvrdio koja se vrsta glazbe i autorskih djela puštala na razglas te da nije mogao zaključiti o kojem izvođaču je bila riječ te koje su se kineske pjesme puštale, ali misli da je kineska tradicionalna glazba. Sud njegovu iskazu nije vjerovao, ocijenio ga je neistinitim i neuvjerljivim, a kontrolu nestručnom, nedovoljno detaljnom i neuvjerljivom. Jutarnji

01 Apr 09:07

Festival Diagonale 2018: Odlične odluke međunarodnog žirija

Na upravo završenom festivalu austrijskog filma Diagonale najboljim je filmom sasvim opravdano proglašen 'Murer: Anatomija jednog procesa' o suđenju nekadašnjem nazi oficiru, piše Monitorova kritičarka Marina Richter koja je bila na festu. Analizira i druge nagrađene filmove.

30 Mar 08:17

Je li papa Franjo upravo napravio svoje prvo čudo?