The Morning After: First look at the transparent phone Nothing

As suspected, the first phone from Nothing, Carl Pei’s new company, is close to the transparent look of the gadget. This seems to be the design aesthetic of Nothing, which matches its wireless headphones (1) from last year.

According to video clips from an event at Art Basel, where the phone was unveiled (inside a box), even segments on the back of the phone will be illuminated. This might just be a decorative trick, but Nothing’s narration has driven the intentional design choice, so it’s probably related to notifications or something else I can’t imagine so early in the morning.

For now, the company keeps the finest specifications (and crucial details like price and availability) a secret, but nothing says it will reveal everything in July.

“Mat Smith.”

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However, “Steam on Nreal” is still in beta.

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Nreal users can now play some Steam games with their augmented reality glasses. A beta version of “Steam on Nreal” offers users a way to play games from their computer to their AR glasses. Nreal admits that installing the beta version will take some effort to set up, and the current version is not yet optimized for all Steam games. It will work on both Nreal Light and Nreal Air models, but is already compatible with some popular games, including the Halo series.

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An appeal confirms the 2018 agreement.

Musk has filed an appeal against a judge’s decision not to release him from an agreement with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which requires lawyers to review some of his tweets.

Musk’s pact with the SEC stems from an infamous 2018 incident in which he tweeted that he had “guaranteed funding” to turn Tesla into a private company, although it was not supposed to be so. The SEC has accused Musk of fraud of securities, which has not removed the tweet in question almost four years later.

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Apparently, TikTok’s rival is also raising viewers for long-running videos.

YouTube has hinted that the shorts are doing well, but now it’s clear what that means. The company says its mini-video clips service now has more than 1.5 billion monthly active and registered users. It’s amazing: Arch-nemesis TikTok had accumulated 1 billion monthly users by September 2021, even though it was there for much longer, and it served as a very obvious inspiration … for the shorts.

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Tesla cars were involved in 70 percent of the incidents.

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The National Traffic Safety Administration has published its first batch of data for semi-autonomous driving technology. The agency linked 392 accidents to partial autonomous driving and driver assistance systems during the 10 months between July 1, 2021 and May 15, 2022. About 70 percent of them, 273 , were Tesla vehicles using Autopilot or the beta version of Full Self-Driving. . Honda cars were linked to 90 incidents, while Subaru models were involved in 10.

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