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SocialAI is a social network where everyone but you is a bot

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SocialAI is a social network where everyone but you is a bot

Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 53, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If you’re new here, welcome, so psyched you found us, and also you can read all the old editions at the Installer homepage.) 

This week, I’ve been reading about Beyoncé and Rosanna Pansino and Bowen Yang, pouring my life back into Todoist, watching the end of The Grand Tour, catching up on some My Brother, My Brother and Me episodes, seeing if the Pixel Recorder app can replace my trusty voice recorder, and moving Headspace to my homescreen to see if it helps me meditate more. (So far… no.)

I also have for you a truly wild new pair of AR glasses, a Batman-adjacent show on HBO, a great new book about the end of Twitter, a funny twist on social networks, and much more. Lotta good new TV this week! Let’s do it.

(As always, the best part of Installer is your ideas and tips. What are you super into right now? What should everyone else be reading / playing / watching / buying / downloading / building out of Legos right now? Tell me everything: installer@theverge.com. And if you know someone else who might enjoy Installer, forward it to them and tell them to subscribe here.)

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The Drop

  • SocialAI. The reaction to this “social network” for iOS, where you post and a thousand AI bots immediately reply, was so funny. Some people loved it, some hated it, half seemed to think it was a joke. It’s not a joke, and it’s actually a really thoughtful take on how to interact with LLMs. It also feels alarmingly similar to being on actual social networks these days. Maybe even better.
  • Character Limit: How Elon Musk Destroyed Twitter. An excellent addition to the canon of books about Musk’s takeover and overhaul of the social network we once knew. There’s a lot of great new detail in here about the chaos of becoming X, too — a really good read.
  • Simple Snapchat. I’d love to tell you to buy Snap’s new Spectacles, but they’re ridiculous and also not available for regular people to buy. But you will be able to get Snapchat’s new design, which is so much cleaner and more approachable than the app has been in recent years. I’m not sure it’ll win many new users, but Snapchat is still one of the best messaging apps out there.
  • The Bose QuietComfort Earbuds. The AirPods 4 got all the shine this week, but I’ve been a fan of Bose’s earbuds for a while — they sound great, they have great battery, and I love the new “Hey headphones” wake word on the new model. And at $179, these are a solid Apple alternative.
  • Omni Loop. The read on this time-travel movie starring Ayo Edebiri and Mary-Louise Parker seems to be that sticklers for continuity will be frustrated but there’s some good and thoughtful stuff and a lot of fun to be had. I will be having that fun ASAP. 
  • The Penguin. “Gritty Batman show on HBO” is all you need to tell me for me to be fully in on The Penguin. The reviews so far are a bit mixed — I’ve seen “best show in forever” and “kinda meh,” and a lot of people are comparing it unfavorably to The Sopranos. Personally, I can’t wait.
  • Tripsy 3.0. I’m traveling a lot this fall, so I’m back on the hunt for a good place to put all my confirmation numbers, flight details, and expenses. Tripit is fine, but Tripsy looks way better. I’m also into the map view, which is a surprisingly helpful way to plot out a day.
  • Agatha All Along. WandaVision is the only Marvel show I recommend to people who don’t care about Marvel because the whole thing was so unusually structured and smart. This spinoff sounds just as inventive and just as cool. More Kathryn Hahn is always a good thing.
  • UFO 50. A bunch of developers in 2024 decided to make a bunch of games that look like they’re from the 1980s. Taken together, what they made is kind of a historical document about gaming but also just, like, a bunch of really fun retro-style games. Such a cool concept.
  • The Mark Zuckerberg Interview.” You probably saw the pictures from last week of the Acquired podcast hosts interviewing Zuck at the Chase Center in San Francisco. The resulting 90-minute episode is… kind of awkward in spots but also really revealing in spots. I don’t think I’ve heard Zuckerberg talk through his own history as a CEO like this before.

Screen share

Alex Goldman, the excellent podcaster and former cohost of best-tech-pod-ever Reply All, has a new show! It’s called Hyperfixed, and basically, Alex’s job is to fix people’s problems of all kinds. The first two episodes are silly and deep, and this show is going to be great.

I asked Alex to share his homescreen with us as his new show launches because if there’s one thing I know about Alex, it’s that he’s a person of many interests and obsessions. (I always enjoyed him posting about songs he made in his attic, just to name one example.) I was curious what his phone would say about what he’s up to right now.

Here’s Alex’s homescreen, plus some info on the apps he uses and why:

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The wallpaper: A picture of my kids being cool on the beach.

The apps: Camera, Weather, Settings, Notes, App Store, FaceTime, Amazon, Proton Mail, Find My, Overcast, Patreon, Koala, Messages, Google Voice, Gmail, Safari.

I know my homescreen is a mess, but I have long since given up on trying to organize it. It has reached an uneasy stasis in which I know where everything is, and it’s been a while since I’ve downloaded an absolutely essential new app.

Everything I need is on the front page: from games to exercise stuff, apps for watching TV and playing music, social media platforms, and so on. My go-to apps are Notes (every morning, I make a bulleted list of things I need to get done), Voice Memos (it’s super convenient if you’re thinking of an idea or a good melody pops into your head to just go ahead and record it before it’s long gone) and Threes. Threes is a game where you try and combine blocks of the same number on a playing field without running out of space, and I have truly not gotten further in the past three or four years, but I still play it like four times a day. Just out of nervous habit. And then Overcast is the podcast app. Everything else is lame in comparison.

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I also asked Alex to share a few things he’s into right now. Here’s what he sent back:

  • Pinball Map. I love pinball. But loving pinball means you’re a pinball snob and you like certain games better than others. For me, the mid-’90s Midway/Williams pinball games were a renaissance, so I’m constantly trying to find copies of Attack From Mars, Medieval Madness, Twilight Zone, Monster Bash, Creature from the Black Lagoon, and Bride of Pinbot. Fortunately, the Pinball Map helps me locate them.
  • Koala. Koala is an incredibly powerful sampler app. You can record sounds directly off your phone or load sounds in, or rip sound directly from a video. It has nearly all the functionality of the classic Roland SP-404 Samplers, except those are $500, but Koala is around $5.
  • Erica Synths’ LXR-02. A cheap handheld drum machine that you can load sounds on to or make sounds with. I am very much a dude making little beats on public transit.
  • WFMU’s Beware of the Blog. A blog for a nonprofit radio station in New York City that was shut down almost a decade ago but is full of fantastic obscure recordings, comics, and bizarre culture stories. Probably most famous for being the only place you can find the story of how Paul Simon allegedly stole a bunch of songs on Graceland from Los Lobos.

Crowdsourced

Here’s what the Installer community is into this week. I want to know what you’re into right now as well! Email installer@theverge.com or message me on Signal — @davidpierce.11 — with your recommendations for anything and everything, and we’ll feature some of our favorites here every week. For even more great recommendations, check out the replies to this post on Threads

“Funny timing that you’d mention Short Film YouTube three days after I discovered a channel that’s a horror treasure trove. The channel is called Vintage Eight, which is by a film professor from the University of New Orleans by the name of Paul Catalanotto. His most popular videos are The Tangi Virus, The Oracle Project, and The Human Trial, which are also conveniently more interconnected than other videos on the channel.” — Drake

Hild is the best historical fiction I’ve ever read in my whole life. Anyone jonesing for Game of Thrones but IRL (ish) who is also a fan of Tolkien’s references to ancient languages of Britain / Anglos / Saxons / old Norse will love it.” — Christopher

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Caravan SandWitch is a wonderful cozy game. It’s on everything and is just lovely.” — Iain

“Played around with NotebookLM from Google. One fun but helpful use case is to take research papers and generate podcasts. I’ve been reading a bunch of complex ML papers as an engineering student, so I convert them into podcasts and listen on my commute. Certainly interesting TTS application.” — Kruti

“In the most recent newsletters, someone recommended the No Rolls Barred YouTube channel but neglected to mention their best content: Blood on the Clocktower. It’s a social deduction game by The Pandemonium Institute for 7–20 (!!) players. Think like Werewolf or Mafia, but more fun. There’s endless content on YouTube that I can’t stop watching, and I love hosting big parties for it.” — Greg

“With Today in Tabs on hiatus, Caitlin Dewey’s newsletter Links I Would Gchat You If We Were Friends has become the most dependable curated reading list around. (Also don’t miss her excellent 10-year retrospective of G*mergate.)” — Kevin

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“After years of loyalty to Things 3, I bit the bullet and moved over to Todoist. Natural language input is a big factor, but also fed up with long lists in Things — kanban in Todoist breaks things up nicely. I do miss the UI of Things though.” — Scott

“It’s been great following along with RocketJump on their Patreon as they write, plan, and produce their independent action-comedy film! They go really in-depth on everything from location planning to studio pitch decks.” — Josh

“I can’t stop playing Astro Bot. It feels like a love letter to 30 years of PlayStation, and having been a PlayStation fan my entire life, every level just puts a smile on my face.” — Nick

Signing off

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On Wednesday, I was at the Made on YouTube event in New York City (the crowd was made up of me and like 200 extremely cool and fun creators), where CEO Neal Mohan and a bunch of other executives rolled out some new features. But forget the new features — the absolute highlight of the event was the singer / songwriter / creator D4vd, who talked about an AI project and then did a live performance of his mega-popular song, “Here With Me.” It was awesome, and I’ve been reading about and watching his videos ever since. Here’s a great GQ interview with lots of details on his story, here’s his TikTok, and here’s his YouTube channel.

To be fair, D4vd is already very popular, so maybe I’m the last one to discover him. But I figured I’d share just in case. I’m a huge fan.

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Pearl Jam’s Jeff Ament and Eddie Vedder on the road

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Pearl Jam's Jeff Ament and Eddie Vedder on the road


On the road with Pearl Jam, lead singer Eddie Vedder’s dressing room contains all the comforts of home: a dartboard (“Gives me a little focus before we run out,” he said); a Chicago Bears football jersey (No. 34, Walter Payton); and a picture of the great Hawaiian surfer Duke Kahanamoku, which always travels with him.

Vedder, who loves to paddle out, likens songwriting to surfing: “You put these building blocks together, so you can kind of, let’s say shape the perfect wave, you know, that has a couple turns, and then a barrel, and then the lyrics come – the lyrics come from surfing that wave.”

Pearl Jam’s latest wave, “Dark Matter,” is the 12th studio album from a band that’s been playing together for nearly 35 years. Vedder said, “Pretty much everything I’ve ever written, it’s always started as a paper napkin. Now cloth napkins, ’cause we’re staying in better hotels!” he laughed.

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even-flow-performance.jpg
Pearl Jam performs at a sold-out concert at Washington-Grizzly Stadium in Missoula, Montana, part of their “Dark Matter” World Tour.

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Vedder was 12 when his mother gave him his first guitar. “My birthday is December 23,” he said. “So, I begged to have the two gifts put together to afford something as extravagant as an electric guitar, which I think was $115.

“I walked in Christmas morning. And I could see the silhouette of it. [!!!]  And then the lights came on and it was a vacuum!  And then everybody finished opening their presents. [I’m getting a little chills!]  And they said, ‘Oh, one more…’ And they pulled out a guitar case. So, that was nice!” Vedder laughed.

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That sounds kind of cruel! “Well, I don’t think they meant to,” said Vedder. “How ’bout my mom getting lucky and getting a vacuum for Christmas?”

Vedder’s record collection included The Jackson 5, James Brown, and The Who. “We had a babysitter bring over ‘Who’s Next,’ and left it there. I didn’t see the sun for about two weeks!” he laughed.

He called The Who’s music a lifeline: “Records like ‘Quadrophenia’ gave me the knowledge and hope and antidote to despair, knowing that somebody else was going through what I was going through.”

Vedder was living in San Diego in 1990, when he heard a group of Seattle musicians was looking for a singer. They sent a cassette of instrumental songs. He wrote lyrics to them, while surfing: “I was doing those midnight shifts security. So, when I went for a surf in the morning, I remember it being super foggy and one of those days where you think, ‘Maybe I won’t go out.’ But I had the music in my head, the instrumental, and just kind of wrote it. And then, I was still wet when I hit ‘record.’”

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Pearl Jam’s Eddie Vedder. 

CBS News


Bassist Jeff Ament listened to Vedder’s tape, went out for coffee, then returned to listen to it again. “And then, I remember calling Stone and I said, ‘You need to come over here right now,’” he said. 

Ament, and guitarists Stone Gossard and Mike McCready, flew Vedder up to Seattle to audition.

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“You felt it,” Vedder said. “You were like, ‘Oh, this is what it is. This is heaven.’”

Pearl Jam’s debut album, “Ten,” would be one of the biggest-selling rock records ever, staying on the Billboard charts for nearly five years.

The sudden success was overwhelming: “It was an avalanche that hit us at the front end of all of that,” Ament said. “So, we were just digging out, trying to survive, and you sort of regain control, sort of feel like we were in control of our destiny.”

They fought with their label, refused to make videos, and sued Ticketmaster. Ament said, “I remember those tickets came out, and the tickets would say, $28 Pearl Jam. But then we’d be like, ‘Wait a minute, we’re charging $16.’”

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“You just felt this corporate, you know, fingerprints on you,” Vedder said. “And you wanted to break free, and rebel, and claim your music for yourself and your crowd.”

Pearl Jam and its “crowd” have long been deeply loyal to each other.

In Missoula, Montana, where Ament has lived since he went to the University of Montana, he hosts a fan fair with local non-profits before the gig: “You just want to help people, you just want to do more for the community.” He thinks of this tour stop as a hometown show. “Yeah. It’s like a lot of history, family, and old, old friends,” he said.

anthony-mason-jeff-ament-missoula-mt.jpg
Correspondent Anthony Mason with Pearl Jam’s Jeff Ament in Missoula, Montana.

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CBS News


On tour, Vedder labors over every set list, selecting from a voluminous list, which also contains “a lot of covers, things we played once.”

How long does that process take? “Sometimes a ridiculously long amount of time!” he laughed.

He writes up his set lists in calligraphy, which he learned to pass the time on the road. “It keeps me focused and entertained,” he said.

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Eddie Vedder’s set list for Pearl Jam’s Missoula, Mont., gig. 

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Does he still enjoy being on the road? “Wrong question!” Vedder laughed.

When several band members got seriously ill this summer, Pearl Jam had to cancel three dates. “This was like a Euro bronchial with pneumonia on top of it,” Vedder said. He described it on stage as almost like a near-death experience. “A near-awful-death experience. I don’t necessarily mind dying!” he laughed.

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WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Pearl Jam performs “Even Flow”: 


Pearl Jam performs “Even Flow” by
CBS Sunday Morning on
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Vedder turns 60 this December. Ament is 61. Mason asked, “You obviously must have a lot of trust that if you all get together, something’s gonna happen?”

“Well, it does,” Vedder replied.

Asked why they think the band is still working after all this time, Ament replied, “It’s miraculous in some ways that we made it through. And then also it’s just a testament to our friendship.”

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“I was gonna say, good, clean living!” Vedder laughed.

You can stream Pearl Jam’s latest album, “Dark Matter,” by clicking on the embed below (Free Spotify registration required to hear the tracks in full):

      
For more info:

     
Story produced by Jon Carras. Editor: Mike Levine. 

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Ultra-strong stretchy material could enable shape-shifting aircraft

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Ultra-strong stretchy material could enable shape-shifting aircraft

An artist’s rendering of a futuristic aircraft with morphable wings

AFRL / NASA

An alloy of titanium and nickel is as strong as steel but stretches like a rubbery polymer. With some clever engineering, it may eventually lead to technologies like shape-shifting aircraft.

Imagine a plane with long wings that contract in midair to become shorter – and make the craft more aerodynamic – as it gains speed. To make this futuristic technology, engineers would need a material that is stretchy enough to change shape yet strong enough to withstand the elements during flight. Xiaobing Ren at the National Institute for…

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Giambattista Valli Women's S/S Haute Couture 2023 #womenswear #hautecouture #GiambattistaValli #2023

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Giambattista Valli Women's S/S Haute Couture 2023 #womenswear #hautecouture #GiambattistaValli #2023


Giambattista Valli Women’s S/S Haute Couture 2023 #womenswear #hautecouture #GiambattistaValli #2023

Music: Cannonball Adderley ~ Aquarius
Album: Soul Zodiac, 1972

About the Brand & Collection:
There’s nothing like the gorgeously sumptuous escapism of a Giambattisa Valli haute couture show. Never mind what darkness there may be around us, his purpose is to create a permanent dolce vita of overwhelmingly pretty color and optimism. “In this confusing moment I like the idea to bring the spectator through, to a holding moment of relaxed and peaceful effortlessness.”

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And there it all was: Giambattista Valli’s recipe for visual relaxation therapy, laid out before us in yards and yards of sugar pinks, pastel blues, and orange sorbet. He had a pinboard full of inspiration pictures of Beverly Hills as a starting point this season. That’s where the sunshine colors came from, he said. Asked about the starting point for the two stunning liquid silver knotted and draped siren dresses somewhere in the middle of the collection, he replied, “Oh, they’re just draped like she’s got out of the pool and just tied it around her. Easy, like a pareo!”
-Sarah Mower(Vogue Runway)

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EmuDeck is slowly taking over my PC gaming setup

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EmuDeck is slowly taking over my PC gaming setup

I was once like you. I thought EmuDeck was just a quick and easy way to set up emulators on my Steam Deck, and despite using it for years, I never thought more of it than that. But slowly over the past few months, EmuDeck has become one of the most essential apps I have installed on my gaming PC.

EmuDeck showed up on the scene in 2022, originally built as a “collection of scripts that allows you to autoconfigure your Steam Deck” for emulation. It will install your emulators, configure them, create directories for your games, and hook into apps like Steam ROM Manager so you can see all of your emulated games in your Steam Deck library. It’s been an essential tool for retro and emulation enthusiasts since release, but EmuDeck has grown into something much more powerful — and it’s not slowing down.

Always humble beginnings

A suite of retro games in the Steam Deck library.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

Although most of the documentation for EmuDeck is signed by the “EmuDeck team,” a sole developer remains the main producer of the project — DragoonDorise on GitHub. Speaking with the developer, he told me that the Steam Deck actually wasn’t the inspiration behind the project. “The very first code I built was because when I bought my Odin,” he told me. The Odin is a handheld emulator built on Android. “I didn’t want to do all the setup manually again.”

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming

EmuDeck was originally built for Android, and it was under the name Pegasus Installer. “Everything started with the RetroidPocket 2 and the Pegasus frontend. Setting that up was a chore, so I tried to automate it,” the developer told me. Eventually, the Steam Deck was revealed, and DragoonDorise said it was “a huge deal” for him. “I was lucky enough to get [a Steam Deck] on the first wave and that’s how EmuDeck was born. It took me a weekend to release the first version, and boy, it was rough… but it worked.”

Pegasus Installer became EmuDeck, and at first, it was just for the Steam Deck. Given the handheld form factor and problems getting around desktop mode without a keyboard and mouse, EmuDeck made perfect sense. If nothing else, it minimized the amount of time you’d need to spend on the desktop, all while installing and configuring everything you need through a single, easy-to-use package. But it didn’t stop there.

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Eventually, the ROG Ally came out, following on the Steam Deck’s success. And EmuDeck responded in kind by developing a Windows version of the utility. Now, you’ll find installers for SteamOS, Windows, ChimeraOS, Android, and general Linux distros. You can get EmuDeck on just about any platform now as a quick and easy way to set up your emulators, but I’ve been so drawn to the utility for everything it does beyond its core function.

More than emulation

Cloud sync settings in the EmuDeck apps.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

EmuDeck could’ve stopped at just being a utility that automatically configures a bunch of emulators, but it’s grown to encompass a ton of additional features. Here’s a sampling:

  • Compressor — Compresses your ROM library to reduce its size.
  • Auto save — Automatically saves your progress in emulated games when closing them so you don’t need to manually create a save state.
  • Cloud sync — Uses an online storage service like Box or Google Drive to store and sync your save files for emulated games.
  • EmuDecky — A plug-in specifically for the Steam Deck that allows you to access emulator hotkeys from the Steam Deck’s game mode.
  • Local multiplayer — Allows you to start local multiplayer games for emulated titles.
  • Rom Library — A dedicated second Steam Library for the Steam Deck filled only with emulated games.
  • Game mode — A tool that bypasses Windows processes to launch directly into Steam Big Picture mode.

That is just a sampling, too. EmuDeck has a slew of smaller features, from a BIOS checker to Retro Achievements support to migration utilities that allow you to carry your entire library to other systems. All of these features were developed on top of the “gazillion of hours invested in testing” of the core of EmuDeck, too, according to DragoonDorise.

Homebrew games in EmuDeck.
There’s even a collection of homebrew games built into the app. Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

Although I’ve used most of EmuDeck’s features on various machines, game mode has really made the difference in the way I play PC games. As anyone who’s tried to set up a console-like PC knows all too well, you need a keyboard and mouse on hand to at least get into whatever controller-support interface you’re using (usually Steam), and even then, notifications, start-up apps, and other pesky windows can get in the way. With game mode, I’m finally able to have the console-like PC experience I’ve dreamt about for years.

Rebirth of the Steam Machine

An Origin PC Steam Machine.
Digital Trends

Ever since Valve tried (and failed) to get the Steam Machine to catch on, there’s been countless attempts to make a small form factor PC behave like a console. You start it, grab a controller, and plop down on the couch to start playing games. Although there are ways to get close to that experience — specifically with Linux distros like ChimeraOS or HoloISO — you’ve always needed to settle either for a portable keyboard or spotty compatibility due to Linux. Game mode gets around that entire issue.

DragoonDorise describes it like this: “What it does is replace your Windows desktop with Steam, so it boots faster into Big Picture mode — it’s kind of like a Steam Deck.” You can already have Steam immediately launch into Big Picture mode — the controller-friendly interface that mirrors the Steam Deck — and you can set Steam as a startup app. But game mode is doing more than that in EmuDeck.

Game mode inside of EmuDeck.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

From what I can tell, it’s doing two main things. First and most important is that it never starts (or at least significantly limits) Windows File Explorer. You might think of File Explorer as just a way to browse your files, but the process in Windows actually does a lot more. It commands the taskbar, your desktop wallpaper, the Start menu, and even your desktop icons. EmuDeck runs a PowerShell script to bypass all of the junk you don’t need for a living room setup and goes directly into Big Picture mode. It takes only a few seconds — if I don’t turn on my TV fast enough, I’ll completely miss the script running.

The other thing it does is suppress notifications and other windows that try to go on top of the Big Picture interface. In my case, I have a VPN installed on my living room PC, along with an outdated AMD driver that I don’t use. I may get everything in order for the PCs I use for work, but when I’m sitting down to relax and game, I’m lazy. They aren’t causing problems, and I couldn’t care less. Both want to command the screen when I sit down and power on my PC and EmuDeck’s game mode stands in the way to block them.

The Registry Editor in Windows 11.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

As impressive as game mode is, it can’t actually log you into Windows. Thankfully, I’ve found a simple way around that if you aren’t concerned about security. Go to the Registry Editor and head to the following path: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindows NTCurrentVersionPasswordLessDevice. Then, set the value of DevicePasswordLessBuildVersion to 0. Restart your PC, press Windows + R and enter netplwiz. Uncheck the box that requires a password, click Apply, enter your current password, and you’re done.

With this setup, I’m able to press the power button on my PC, turn on a controller, and start playing. Since I started using EmuDeck in this way, I haven’t had to break out a Bluetooth keyboard. It feels like I’m properly playing on a console — just with much better performance.

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An essential app

Settings in the EmuDeck app.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

EmuDeck started as a way to set up emulators on the Steam Deck, but it’s become a critical part of my PC setup since then. Never since I installed Special K — make sure to read my column on that app — have I found something that will go on any new PC I build. Game mode is the main draw for me, but I’ve engaged with EmuDeck’s other features, too. I have a treasure trove of ROMs on an external hard drive, and EmuDeck allows me to sync my saves between my PC and Steam Deck, as well as keep my configuration consistent between devices.

Even better, most of what EmuDeck offers is free. New features, particularly those developed by EmuDeck alone, first show up for members of its Patreon, but you can get a lot of functionality out of EmuDeck — including its core function of setting up emulators — free of charge. And if you want to sign up and get the latest features, it’ll run you about $35 per year.

Since installing EmuDeck, I’ve played retro classics I would’ve never touched, modded modern games in ways I never thought was possible, and let my consoles gather dust as I transition all of my gaming to PC. If you’re even remotely interested in emulation, give EmuDeck a shot — you’ll be impressed by how powerful it really is.



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CNN TÜRK – 🔴 Canlı Yayın ᴴᴰ – Canlı TV izle

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CNN TÜRK - 🔴 Canlı Yayın ᴴᴰ - Canlı TV izle


HABER | Son Dakika Haber ve Güncel Haberleri İlk Bilen Siz Olun…

#cnntürk #canlı #gündem #haber #sondakika

CNN TÜRK YOUTUBE KANALINA ABONE OL
➤ https://bit.ly/2LzuZ1H

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Canlı Yayın
➤http://www.cnnturk.com/canli-yayin

CNN TÜRK, CNN’in kendi ismiyle, Atlanta dışında yönetilen, 24 saat ulusal bir dilde haber yayıncılığı yapan ilk ulusal kanaldır.

Yayın Akışı:
➤https://www.cnnturk.com/tv

Son Dakika:
➤http://www.cnnturk.com/sondakika

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İlk bilen siz olun:
➤ http://www.cnnturk.com
➤ http://twitter.com/cnnturk
➤ http://facebook.com/cnnturk
➤ http://instagram.com/cnnturk/
➤ http://youtube.com/cnnturk

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Soon, your T-Mobile agent could be an AI chatbot

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Soon, your T-Mobile agent could be an AI chatbot

As time goes on, companies try to push the world toward this AI-powered Utopia we’re envisioning. Thus, more tasks that require human beings are being handed over to AI chatbots. As an example, T-Mobile is thinking of bringing AI-powered agents that will even be able to perform actions on your account.

T-Mobile wants your agents to be AI chatbots

In order to bring this, T-Mobile had to go to the King of AI, OpenAI. Right now, we don’t know too many specifics about this deal, but it seems pretty straightforward. T-Mobile wants to use OpenAI’s technology to make agents that are just AI chatbots communicating with the user. We’re not sure if customers will communicate with these chatbots over the phone or only through text.

This platform is called IntentCX. The agents will gain access to the customers’ account information so they’ll have important information about their accounts. So, if you need some troubleshooting done, you should be able to contact the bot to see what’s going on with your account.

Not only will the agent be able to see your account information, but they’ll even be able to make changes to your account. In order for them to do this, they’ll need to get the consent from the user. We don’t know what sort of changes the bots will be able to make; it’d make sense if there were some limits to what they can do.

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Right now, there’s not much information about these new bots. We know that we won’t see them this year, as T-Mobile plans to launch these next year. We’ll get more information about these chatbots as we get closer to the official launch.

We all know the issue with this

Obviously, there’s one blaring issue with this implementation. While we don’t know how T-Mobile plans to go about doing this, we have to wonder what’s going to happen to the human beings in T-Mobile’s call centers. If an AI bot is able to perform the tasks that people have been able to do, then we can foresee T-Mobile cutting staff left and right. Let’s hope it doesn’t come to that… but this is a major corporation we’re talking about.

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