The Current-Sat Plus: Tracking cookies are dying, crypto con man, best reads of the week β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β In partnership with LinkedIn | Hello there on this lovely Saturday! Todayβs trivia is for all my language dorks. Which of these words was not added to the Merriam-Webster dictionary in 2023? Is it β¦ A.) Fluffernutter, B.) Rizz, C.) Doggo or D.) Cromulent? Answer at the end! π Don't let your email provider decide what you see! Hit Reply to this email now, and you can leave me a comment, too. It tells the algorithms you want my content, keeping Big Tech from shoving me in your spam folder. Itβs extra important since we just switched providers. Yep, thatβs why you notice a new email address in your inbox. Thank you so much! Now, on to the tech goodies. β Kim π« First-time reader? Sign up here. (Itβs free!) IN THIS ISSUE π When Google comes up empty πͺ Bye-bye, tracking cookies π€ The spooky future of AI |
TODAY'S TECH HACK This new AI search tool blew me away For years now, I've predicted that someday, somehow, someone would create a search tool that would rival Google. Some say it's already happened with ChatGPT. But it's loaded with problems. I'm betting historyβs about to repeat itself with this AI search website, which has just 40 employees operating out of a small, shared office in San Francisco β¦ kinda like the early days of Google. Flying under the radar, sorta The website is Perplexity AI. It started two years ago, but the owners kept a low profile to work out the bugs and make their AI search reliable. Perplexity has only 10 million users a month. Google processes over 8.5 billion searches per day. But as of Jan. 1, it has the backing of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, who's betting big on the Google challenger. He and his partners just invested $74 million. (Jeff, call me.) I tested it with questions ChatGPT gets wrong. So far, Perplexity is spot on. The best part? It's free. Spot on, you say? It seems to dig much deeper than the other AI chatbots I've used, which makes sense since it's designed for research. You'll see citations and sources all over the place. I wish ChatGPT did this. Here's a good example. I asked Perplexity, "Does Kim Komando have a dog?" It brought up quotes about my girl, Abby, and even showed me a picture of us together on the cover of AARP magazine. ChatGPT says, "I don't have specific information about whether Kim Komando, the technology journalist and radio host, has a dog." Wompβwomp. Then I asked, "How do I listen to The Kim Komando Show?" Perplexity sent me the link to my handy station finder with an explanation of how to use it. It even told me that you can listen without ads as a Komando Community member. Appreciate the free marketing! Thatβs cool, but what about in my everyday life? Glad you asked. We're really just at the edge of what AI can do for us personally and professionally. Some of us use it every day and others aren't sure what to do with AI yet. I gotcha. Don't just guess if you're setting up new tech. A good example: "I just got an iPhone 15. What settings should I change first?" Shortcut an annoying task. "I have to make a 2024 budget. Can you help me with a basic outline?" Get free, tangible advice if no one in your life can help. "How do I improve my resume to get more responses?" Solve a mystery or learn something new about the world. "Why do volcanoes erupt?" (Good for settling arguments, eh?) Give AI a try if you're confused about something or feeling out of the loop. "Why is everyone talking about the Roman Empire?" π© Want to try it out? Hereβs the link one more time. No, they didn't ask me to promote. It's an incredible tool I want you to know about! If you discover anything you think is awesome, reply to this email and let me know. |
WEB WATERCOOLER πͺ All good things crumb to an end: Google just ditched third-party cookies in Chrome for 30 million people β 1% of its users. Chrome will now group you into categories for targeted ads, like "sports fan" or "tech loverβ without giving away your exact details. Are you in the 1%? In Chrome, click the three-dot menu > Settings > Privacy and security. If all the toggles are on, you might be in luck. You can also look for an eyeball icon in your URL bar. The long con: For years, folks online questioned whether Steven Reece Lewis, CEO of the HyperVerse crypto fund, was real. He said he worked at Goldman Sachs, sold a company to Adobe and more. The Guardian did some digging and found no trace of any of it β the CEO was a deepfake video. HyperVerse swindled over $1.3 billion in investments in 2022. Jesus, take the wheel: Tech firms in Texas are gearing up to launch self-driving delivery trucks. Yep, no drivers. They've already been hauling stuff from Walmart and FedEx, guided by advanced software and sensors. Hope they're not made by GM's Cruise division. π€ In the year 2116: Around 2,700 AI pros were surveyed about the future of artificial intelligence. The outlook? Grim. One in 10 researchers thinks there's a 25% chance AI will destroy humankind. How? Bad guys using it for stuff like bioweapons, rulers wielding it to dominate and AI widening the rich-poor gap. Carb load: Microsoft's Xbox Series S toaster is a real thing. It's got six toasty settings and burns the Xbox logo onto your English muffin. Priced at $39.99 at Walmart, it's a steal compared to the actual console. Microsoft's playing along with jokes about the Xbox looking like the kitchen appliance β it totally does. |
LISTEN UP | What to do with that old computer Cleaning out your old tech? I've got some tips you won't want to miss β especially when it comes to staying secure. Play Now β’ 7:33 βΆ |
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TECH LIFE UPGRADES πͺ Groceries are so expensive: Flipp compares prices so you don't have to. Type in what you're looking for and your address, city or ZIP code to find sales near you. At least eggs arenβt $8 a dozen anymore. Talk to the hand: You can use Alexa without vocal controls or needing to touch the screen if you have an Echo Show. Open your Alexa App and tap More > Settings. Select Device Options and tap Gestures. Now, just lift your hand to stop a timer. Take an eerie walk down memory lane: Sign into your Google account, then open Google Maps. Click the hamburger menu in the top-left corner. Choose Your Timeline > Your Places > Visited. Something big is brewing: Take a second right now and tap or click here to subscribe to my YouTube channel. This way, when my new video show drops, youβll be part of the in crowd automatically. You wonβt want to miss it! |
WHAT THE TECH? Almost as bad as when thereβs a hair tickling your arm. |
UNTIL NEXT TIME ... The answer: A.) Fluffernutter. That made it into the dictionary in 2022. Seems late, right? If you donβt know, itβs a sandwich made of peanut butter and marshmallow fluff. No, thanks! βRizzβ is short for charisma (that βitβ factor), a βdoggoβ is dog, and βcromulentβ means βacceptable.β Fun fact: βCromulentβ came from βThe Simpsons.β β One last thing: Spread the love and share this email with a friend who wants to be as tech-smart as you. Use your unique sharing link. When they sign up, you earn sweet prizes. And be sure to rate this issue below so we know how weβre doing. See you tomorrow with the Sunday edition of the best tech newsletter in the USA! β Kim |
Komando Referral Program Share this newsletter β Earn prizes! Step 1: Copy your unique referral link: https://www.komando.com/friends/?referralCode=0rvmdp6 Step 2: Share your link! Post it on social media, send it in a text or paste it into an email to a pal. If they sign up using that link, you get the credit! | |
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