Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Meta Delays Rollout of New AI Model After Performance Concerns
  2. Live Nation Execs Brag About ‘Robbing’ Ticket Buyers In Slack DMs
  3. Apple’s App Store In China Gets Lower 25% Commission To Appease Regulators
  4. Facial Recognition Error Jails Innocent Grandmother For Months
  5. Italian Prosecutors Seek Trial For Amazon, Four Execs Over Alleged $1.4 Billion Tax Evasion
  6. Apple MacBook Neo Beats Every Single x86 PC CPU For Single-Core Performance
  7. London Man Wore Smart Glasses For High Court ‘Coaching’
  8. Microsoft Backs Anthropic To Halt US DOD’s ‘Supply-Chain Risk’ Designation
  9. Google Chrome Is Finally Coming To ARM64 Linux
  10. Adobe CEO to Step Down After 18 Years
  11. Apple’s MacBook Neo Makes Repairs Easier, Cheaper Than Other MacBooks
  12. Perplexity’s ‘Personal Computer’ Lets AI Agents Access Your Local Files
  13. Honda Cancels All Three EVs That It Planned To Build In the US
  14. Anthropic’s Claude AI Can Respond With Charts, Diagrams, and Other Visualschat
  15. Google Maps Gets Its Biggest Navigation Redesign In a Decade, Plus More AI

Alterslash picks up to the best 5 comments from each of the day’s Slashdot stories, and presents them on a single page for easy reading.

Meta Delays Rollout of New AI Model After Performance Concerns

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Meta has delayed the release of its next major AI model after internal tests showed it lagging behind competing systems from Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic. The New York Times reports:
The model, code-named Avocado, outperformed Meta’s previous A.I. model and did better than Google’s Gemini 2.5 model from March, two of the people said. But it has not performed as strongly as Gemini 3.0 from November, they said. As a result, Meta has delayed Avocado’s release to at least May from this month, the people said. They added that the leaders of Meta’s A.I. division had instead discussed temporarily licensing Gemini to power the company’s A.I. products, though no decisions have been reached.

[…] It takes time to improve A.I. models, and Meta can still catch up to rivals, A.I. experts said. But a longer timeline has set in at the company, with Mr. Zuckerberg tempering expectations for Avocado in the past few months. “I expect our first models will be good, but more importantly will show the rapid trajectory we’re on,” he said on a call with investors in January.
A Meta spokesperson said in a statement: “As we’ve said publicly, our next model will be good but, more importantly, show the rapid trajectory we’re on, and then we’ll steadily push the frontier over the course of the year as we continue to release new models. We’re excited for people to see what we’ve been cooking very soon.”

Live Nation Execs Brag About ‘Robbing’ Ticket Buyers In Slack DMs

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Pitchfork:
Earlier this week, the U.S. Department of Justice and Live Nation reached a settlement in the DOJ’s antitrust lawsuit against the concert giant. During the trial, which lasted only a week, representatives for Live Nation had moved to exclude a collection of Slack direct messages from 2022 between two of the company’s regional directors from the evidence presented to the jury. Bloomberg and a number of other publications have, as of today (March 12), successfully petitioned New York federal judge Arun Subramanian to release the chats.

The conversations are between Ben Baker, now head of ticketing for Venue Nation, and Jeff Weinhold, currently a senior director in the ticketing department. Baker and Weinhold joke about overcharging and price-gouging fans — “Robbing them blind, baby,” Baker brags in one exchange pertaining to a Kid Rock show in Tampa Bay — as well as being able to raise prices on ancillary services such as parking seemingly at will. “These people are so stupid,” Baker writes. “I almost feel bad taking advantage of them BAHAHAHAHAHA.”
Live Nation described the messages as “off-the-cuff banter, not policy, decision-making, or facts of consequence.” In a statement the company has since added: “The Slack exchange from one junior staffer to a friend absolutely doesn’t reflect our values or how we operate.”

Truth.

By msauve • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
>“The Slack exchange from one junior staffer to a friend absolutely doesn’t reflect our values or how we operate.”

… even if it is true.

To be fair…

By fropenn • Score: 3 Thread
all Kid Rock concerts are a ripoff and no one should attend them ever. So they aren’t wrong about that.

Similar issue at one of my previous employers

By bunyip • Score: 3 Thread

Some years back, I was working for a large software company. One of their clients sued them, I don’t remember the exact amount but I recall it being at least in the tens of millions. When it finally went to court, the customer’s attorney’s said that they’‘d put my company’s C-level execs on the stand and have them read their profanity laced emails. Quotes like, “We need to drive f....g stake through [their] heart”, etc.My company settled immediately.

A few months later, at an executive off-site, they brought in an attorney that lectured about 100 of us, basically that anything you put in email is subject to discovery. Don’t write anything you wouldn’t say in fron of your mother, or wouldn’t want to see on the front page of the Wall St. Journal.

Some people

By gweihir • Score: 3 Thread

Some people have no place in civilized society. Yes, making a profit is fine. But it has to be reasonable, and customers have to still get a good price. Clearly, greed has overtaken major parts of US society. See also, for example, medical prices.

Apple’s App Store In China Gets Lower 25% Commission To Appease Regulators

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Apple will cut its App Store commission in China from 30% to 25% starting March 15, with small-business and mini-app rates dropping from 15% to 12%. AppleInsider reports:
Chinese regulators have been back and forth with Apple in recent years over the 30% App Store commission. The latest publicly known pressure occurred after President Trump slammed the country with seemingly random and outrageous tariffs in 2025. While nothing much else has happened in the public eye in the year since, Apple has announced a new commission rate via its developer blog. The new rates go into effect on March 15.

The current standard 30% rate is dropping to 25% for in-app purchases and paid app transactions. The Small Business Program and Mini Apps Partner Program will see rates drop from 15% to 12%. That lower rate applies to auto-renewals of in-app purchase subscriptions after the first year. Mini Apps are for transactions found in super apps like those popularized in China. […] Developers will need to sign the updated terms, but the new rates are applied automatically. It is unclear if these new changes will prevent regulatory action from China.

Most favored nation?

By SirSpanksALot • Score: 3 Thread
Sounds like we need most favored nation on App Stores too… You shouldn’t be able to charge a higher commission on your American app store than anywhere else in the world.

Facial Recognition Error Jails Innocent Grandmother For Months

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Mr. Dollar Ton shares a report from the Guardian:
Angela Lipps, 50, spent nearly six months in jail after Fargo police identified her as a suspect in an organized bank fraud case using facial recognition software, according to south-east North Dakota news outlet InForum. Lipps told the outlet she had never been to North Dakota and did not commit the crimes. Lipps, a mother of three and grandmother of five, said she has lived most of her life in north-central Tennessee. She had never been on an airplane until authorities flew her to North Dakota last year to face charges.

In July, U.S. marshals arrested Lipps at her Tennessee home while she was babysitting four children. She said she was taken away at gunpoint and booked into a county jail as a fugitive from justice from North Dakota. “I’ve never been to North Dakota, I don’t know anyone from North Dakota,” Lipps told WDAY News. She remained in a Tennessee jail for nearly four months without bail while awaiting extradition. She was charged with four counts of unauthorized use of personal identifying information and four counts of theft.

According to Fargo police records obtained by WDAY News, detectives investigating bank fraud cases in April and May 2025 reviewed surveillance video of a woman using a fake U.S. army military ID to withdraw tens of thousands of dollars. The officers allegedly used facial recognition software to identify the suspect as Lipps. A detective reportedly wrote in court documents that Lipps appeared to match the suspect based on facial features, body type and hairstyle. Lipps told WDAY News that no one from the Fargo police department contacted her before the arrest. Lipps is now back home but says the experience has had lasting consequences. While jailed and unable to pay bills, Lipps lost her home, her car and her dog, she said. She also told WDAY News no one from the Fargo police department had apologized.

Re: I hope

By Sique • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
And then you find out that the wrong guy was tortured to death, and what do you then? Torture the one to death who made the mistake in identifying the one misidentifying Mrs. Lipps?

The problem with all those “setting an example” punishments is that they themselves can also be flawed, and instead of sending a warning, they send the message that the system can not be trusted. And then, nobody cares about justice at all, because it is arbitrary anyway.

Re:I hope

By Sique • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
If you get rid of the police, you need another means to keep up law and order. You can try neighborhood watch schemes, but they prove to be even more flawed in regularly catching the wrong person. And they don’t have the tools and the education to actually investigate crimes, because during the day, they have another job and doing the neighborhood watch on their free time.

Re:I hope

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Welcome to qualified immunity. You can’t do shit against the police even if they straight up murder you.

Re:I hope

By homerbrew • Score: 5, Informative Thread
We also saw when so many overzealous “law enforcement” people were sent to the likes of DC, Minneapolis, etc. They go in looking for trouble and if they don’t find it, they agitate enough to “find” trouble. There is a delicate balance between the right amount and the right type of law enforcement. As with everyone else, they should not have any kind of blanket immunity, we have witnessed so many tragic outcomes due to this policy.

Re:I hope

By OscarGunther • Score: 5, Informative Thread

“Defund the police” doesn’t mean to shut down all policing. It means to redistribute some of the many duties we heap on the police to other, more qualified, groups. For example, police shouldn’t be required to mediate a domestic dispute on their own. There should be someone available we the training to do that, perhaps accompanied by the police, but in any event capable on their own to handle it. In this case, police should be a second resort. “Defund the police” means let the police focus on law enforcement and fund accordingly.

Italian Prosecutors Seek Trial For Amazon, Four Execs Over Alleged $1.4 Billion Tax Evasion

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters:
Milan prosecutors have requested trial for Amazon’s European unit and four of its managers over alleged tax evasion worth around $1.38 billion, two sources with direct knowledge of the matter said on Thursday. The move is unprecedented for a case of this kind in Italy, as Amazon agreed in December to pay 527 million euros, including interest, to Italy’s Revenue Agency to settle the tax dispute. In all previous cases involving other international groups, once a settlement was reached and payment made, prosecutors closed related criminal investigations, either through plea deals or by dropping the cases. This time, however, Milan prosecutors did not share the tax authority’s approach and decided to press ahead with their probe, leading to a request that the suspects be sent to trial.
After December’s tax settlement, Amazon said it would “forcefully defend its position on the potential ungrounded criminal case.” It added: “Unpredictable regulatory environments, disproportionate penalties, and protracted legal proceedings are increasingly affecting Italy’s attractiveness as an investment destination.”
Under what’s described as a “VAT-avoidance algorithm,” prosecutors accuse Amazon and four managers of enabling large-scale VAT evasion on goods sold in Italy between 2019 and 2021, allowing tens of thousands of non-EU marketplace sellers to sell goods in the country without clearly disclosing their identities. They allege that this helped the sellers avoid paying value-added tax. “Under Italian law, an intermediary offering goods for sale in Italy is jointly responsible for unpaid VAT by non-EU sellers operating through its platform,” notes Reuters.

Investment?

By Viol8 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Whatever the merits of this case this has nothing to do with investment and Amazons comment sounds like an amateurish veiled threat. Though if all they have to offer is minimum wage warehouse jobs and water and electricity sucking data centres I doubt anyone will care.

The law is the law whatever they think of it. If you want to operate in a country obey it or get out and just because the monetary side may have been settled the criminal side has not. Tax evasion is a crime in all countries, end of.

Apple MacBook Neo Beats Every Single x86 PC CPU For Single-Core Performance

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Early benchmarks show the A18 Pro-powered MacBook Neo beating every current x86 CPU in single-core Cinebench performance, including chips from Intel and AMD. Notebookcheck reports:
We have performed a couple of benchmarks and were particularly impressed by the single-core performance. Not in the short Geekbench test, but in Cinebench 2024, where a single-core test takes about 10 minutes. The A18 Pro consumes between 3.5-4 Watts in this scenario and scores 147 points. This means it is faster than every other x86 processor in our database, including the two desktop processors Intel Core Ultra 9 285K & AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D. This also means the MacBook Neo beats every modern mobile processor from AMD, Intel and also Qualcomm, even though the upcoming Snapdragon X2 chips should be a bit faster. The A18 Pro is also slightly faster than Apple’s own M3 generation in this scenario.
Further reading: ASUS Executive Says MacBook Neo is ‘Shock’ to PC Industry

Re:X86 CPUs

By slaker • Score: 5, Informative Thread

If they’re being thorough, Snapdragon, Mediatek and Ampere (server) SoCs are also being sold in traditional PC forms.

I might be interested if this thing could run Linux and had Thinkpad-grade input devices, but as it is, it’s just a web terminal that’s locked to Apple’s ecosystem instead of Google’s. That’s just not very compelling.

Re:Misleading Apple hype

By pahles • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
And what makes this a bad thing? The fact that Apple has control over iOS and macOS makes this laptop a great laptop for the intended market. Because Intel and AMD can’t do this (your words) just makes Windows (because that’s what we’re talking about, right?) an average OS for average hardware. Let’s face it: Microsoft has to support a shitload of processors and chipsets and whatnot used in a shitload of computers from a shitload of manufacturers. That alone makes Windows not perform optimally and the same goes for the hardware. It’s a choice Microsoft has made and it’s a different one than Apple has made. It doesn’t mean it’s Apple hype.

Re:X86 CPUs

By reiscw • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I am not sure it is fair to describe this as no better than a Chromebook. This machine is running macOS. You can put Homebrew on it, and install many applications that way (including many open source applications). I use Geany, Octave, Maxima, R, and a whole other host of applications on my Mac, which I use mostly at work. Most of the applications I use on my Debian desktop are available on Homebrew. If you’re concerned about Homebrew for security reasons, you can usually install packages directly from the application website.

I totally understand people saying they don’t want to run macOS because of various reasons, but the “walled garden” description of macOS is not fair in my opinion (it is completely fair for iPhones and iPads). I’m able to install the software I want on my Mac at work. While the security settings of macOS make you jump through some additional hoops, I don’t think it’s an overwhelming burden.

I have heard this machine described as being on par with an M1 Macbook Air. My wife uses that machine on a daily basis, and it works well. My daughter is using an M1 Pro machine, and does not want to upgrade for college because she feels it is unnecessary.

I think we need to do a better job of going after Mac for the real issues it has: cost of upgrades, lack of repairability, and inability to install Linux on the machine.

Re:Misleading Apple hype

By DamnOregonian • Score: 5, Informative Thread
This is simply wrong.
There are no magic “Apple accelerators” at play here.
Vector instructions are being used, but equivalents are used on Intel/AMD (AVX2) as well.
Apple Silicon has maintained a sizeable lead over all of x86 in general computing since the M1.

It accomplishes this by doing something Intel and AMD aren’t very interested in- burning silicon.
Reorder buffers are larger, memory bus is wider, page size is larger.

Re:As a repair tech…

By unixisc • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I’m no fan of Apple, but that’s what’s different about the Neo. I saw a video of a teardown of a Neo, and there is no glue attaching anything. The motherboard is really small: the bulk of the real estate is taken over by the battery. Only thing about this is that the RAM is not upgradable, but I don’t think many Apple laptops are, unless one is prepared to de-solder the existing DIMMs and solder in new DIMMs

I do hope there is at some point an Arm equivalent of the Hackintosh movement, so that one can take a Framework system w/ an Arm CPU (should they make one), install macOS on it and configure it however they like

London Man Wore Smart Glasses For High Court ‘Coaching’

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A witness in a London High Court case was caught using smart glasses connected to his phone to receive real-time coaching while giving evidence during cross-examination. “In my judgement, from what occurred in court, it is clear that call was made, connected to his smart glasses, and continued during his evidence until his mobile phone was removed from him,” said Judge Raquel Agnello KC. “Not only have I held that Jakstys was untruthful in denying his use of the smart glasses and his calls to abra kadabra, but the effect of this is that his evidence is unreliable and untruthful.” The BBC reports:
The claim arose during a ruling by Judge Raquel Agnello KC in a case brought by Laimonas Jakstys over the directorship of a property development company that owns a flat in south-east London and land in Tonbridge. Jakstys was told to remove the glasses after the court noticed he “seemed to pause quite a bit” before answering questions, and that “interference” was heard coming from around the witness. The judge later found that he had been “assisted or coached in his replies to questions put to him during cross examination” during the January trial.

Once the glasses were taken off, an interpreter was still translating a question when Jakstys’ mobile phone began broadcasting a voice — which he later blamed on Chat GPT. Agnello said: “There was clearly someone on the mobile phone talking to Jakstys. He then removed his mobile phone from his inner jacket pocket.” He denied using the smart glasses to receive answers, and denied they were connected to his phone. But the judge said multiple calls had been made from his phone to a contact named “abra kadabra,” whom he claimed was a taxi driver.

Re:Ridiculous

By thegarbz • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

No need. Perjury is for punishing people in court. In civil offenses these are usually laughably light punishments. Sounds very much like this guy fucked himself over more than any other punishment would. He’ll almost certainly have the case found against him now since he was being cross-examined as his own defense.

As for the bar, that’s not how that works. Bar tribunals basically never punish a lawyer for the actions of a witness on the stand, even if there weren’t plausible deniability that they had anything to do with it.

Your comment is basically “throw the book at him”, but you’ve never read the book and don’t seem to know the plot.

Re: Why is this bad?

By devslash0 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Because the cross examination is intended to verify the testimony of the individual who is being crossed examined, not their “taxi driver” helper.

It also leaks case information to the outside, which could further jeopardise the case or the safety of other witnesses.

The purpose of cross examination

By Bruce66423 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

If a witness is telling the truth, then the cross examination will not achieve anything. It will show that the truth is internally consistent and coherent. It’s when the witness has something to hide that it will reveal that he’s been lying. The fact that the witness in this case was depending on someone else to answer the questions strongly implies that he had something to hide.

I’m hopeful that the guy will lose the case and be charged with contempt of court and attempting to pervert the course of justice. Those should generate significant prison time. Add in a mega fine and perhaps this won’t happen again.

Wait until the tech is invisible

By dogugotw • Score: 4 Thread

We’re going to reach a point where the tech to do this kind of thing is pretty close to invisible. It’s going to be interesting when that happens.

Re: Why is this bad?

By mjwx • Score: 4 Thread

Because the cross examination is intended to verify the testimony of the individual who is being crossed examined, not their “taxi driver” helper.

It also leaks case information to the outside, which could further jeopardise the case or the safety of other witnesses.

This.

The UK (and most countries) have a right to privacy inside a court as confidential or damaging information may be discussed inside a court that may have no bearing on the outcome of case itself or even if it does, may be damaging or harmful in ways completely unrelated to the case if made public. Even with something as (relatively) trivial as commercial in confidence you should have a right to privacy in court. This is for civil law, the right to privacy becomes even more important with family law or criminal law.

On that ground alone, the book should be thrown at the guy.

Secondly, the point of testimony is to get the persons own words, not the words they were told by legal council. Cross examination is meant to trip up people trying to stay on a script rather than the events that actually happened, Having people give them “advice” on what to say in real time is a deliberate attempt to deceive the court.

Microsoft Backs Anthropic To Halt US DOD’s ‘Supply-Chain Risk’ Designation

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
joshuark shares a report from Reuters:
Microsoft has filed an amicus brief on Tuesday in support of Anthropic’s lawsuit asking the court to temporarily block the U.S. Department of Defense designation of the AI startup as a supply-chain risk. In an amicus brief filing in a federal court in San Francisco, Microsoft backed Anthropic’s request for a temporary restraining order against the Pentagon order, arguing that its determination should be paused while the court considers the case. Microsoft, which integrates the AI lab’s products and services into technology it provides to the U.S. military, said that it was directly impacted by the DOD designation.

“Should this action proceed without the entry of a temporary restraining order, Microsoft and other government contractors with expertise in developing solutions to support U.S. government missions will be forced to account for a new risk in their business planning,” the company said. Microsoft’s filing argued the TRO is needed to prevent costly disruptions for suppliers, who would otherwise have to rapidly rebuild offerings that rely on Anthropic’s products. The judge overseeing the case must approve Microsoft’s request to file the brief before it is officially entered, but courts often permit outside parties to weigh in on important cases.

Re: Well, that tears it

By LindleyF • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
It’s not just Microsoft. It’s everyone. All the defense contractors would have to avoid using Claud or any software Claud might have been involved in creating. That’s just not practical. Expect more of this.

stand together

By ZipNada • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Do whatever unrestrained evil Hegseth demands or he will try to destroy your business. All of the tech companies need to stand with Anthropic on this or they run the risk of completely losing their autonomy.

Re:stand together

By pauljlucas • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
What if Microsoft refused to stop using Anthropic’s products? What’s Hegseth going to do? Declare Microsoft a supply chain risk? Stop the US government from using Microsoft products?

‘Get out of jail’, now good for US people

By NotEmmanuelGoldstein • Score: 3 Thread
I understand Microsoft seeing the big picture, them losing THEIR government contracts but it’s also their leverage. If they truly stood with Anthropic, they would put it in their products: What’s the US government going to do, use open-source? The ‘too big to fail’, ‘too big to jail’ memes allows them to hold the government hostage, without bribing politicians first.

Google Chrome Is Finally Coming To ARM64 Linux

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
BrianFagioli writes:
Google says it will finally release Chrome for ARM64 Linux in the second quarter of 2026, bringing the company’s full browser to a platform that has existed for years without official support. Until now, Linux users running Arm hardware have largely relied on Chromium builds or unofficial packages if they wanted something close to Chrome. Google says the new build will include the same features found on other platforms, including Google account syncing, Chrome Web Store extensions, built-in translation, Safe Browsing protections, and Google Password Manager.

The timing reflects how ARM hardware is becoming more common across the Linux ecosystem, from developer laptops to AI systems. Google also pointed to NVIDIA’s DGX Spark, a compact AI supercomputing device built on the Grace Blackwell architecture, which will support installing Chrome through NVIDIA’s package management tools. For many Linux users, the announcement feels like a “finally” moment, as ARM64 Linux systems have been widespread for years despite the absence of an official Chrome build.

Sigh.

By ledow • Score: 5, Funny Thread

“We threw it through a different cross-compiler on our compile farm, now you should all praise us”

Honest question

By Tarlus • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Is anyone interested enough to run Linux on ARM64 dumb enough to want this?

Re:Honest question

By unixisc • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Aren’t other browsers like Chromium and Brave already available on Linux? What exactly would Google Chrome on it add?

Also, how is this this happening only now? ChromeOS, along w/ Chrome, has been available on Snapdragon based Chromebooks - I have one, so it’s not like Google couldn’t have had one for Linux/Arm8 all this while

Re:Honest question

By OrangAsm • Score: 5, Funny Thread
So you’re edging for edge.

My laptop is ARM64

By Rosco P. Coltrane • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I run Debian 13 and Chromium has been available as a package for a long time.

So I’m not sure why you would want to wait for Google to release Chrome on ARM, since it’s essentially Chromium with Google’s nastyware added to it. Just use Chromium.

Adobe CEO to Step Down After 18 Years

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Shantanu Narayen announced he will step down as CEO of Adobe once a successor is appointed, ending an 18-year tenure during which he transformed the company from boxed software to the Creative Cloud subscription model. Narayen said he will remain board chair as Adobe continues pushing into generative AI products. CNBC reports:
Narayen joined Adobe in 1988 as a vice president and general manager, and he became CEO in 2007. Under Narayen, Adobe pushed from software licenses to subscriptions to its Creative Cloud application bundle, and the company is now working to expand through generative artificial intelligence. He sought to acquire fast-growing design software company Figma, but regulators pushed back, and the companies called off the deal, resulting in Adobe paying Figma a $1 billion breakup fee. […]

Narayen, 62, is lead independent director of Pfizer in addition to his responsibilities at Adobe, where he received $51 million in total compensation for the 2025 fiscal year, according to a filing. He owns $118 million in Adobe shares, according to FactSet. […] On Narayen’s watch, Adobe’s stock jumped more than sixfold, while the S&P 500 is up about 350% over that stretch.
“What attracted me to Adobe 28 years ago was our leadership in creating new market categories, world-class products, a relentless desire to innovate in every functional area of the company and the people I met during the interview process,” Narayen wrote. “We have continued to create new markets, deliver world-class products, drive innovation in everything we do and attract and retain the best and brightest employees.”

The smart move is to AI

By Frank Burly • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Most CEOs add very little value over a replacement CEO. And as part of this equation, most boards overestimate their ability to pick a candidate who will delivery value over replacement and they wildly overpay in their attempt. They would be better off paying some amible middle manager just 10 times the average programmer’s salary to network and sift though the proposals generated by AI.

It explains so much!

By fuzzyfuzzyfungus • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Normally you just sort of ignore the collection of random side jobs that, of course, C-levels can work at the same time without being accused of double-dipping; but it just explains so much that that Adobe has overlap with a major source of healthcare costs.

Translation

By jenningsthecat • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Shantanu Narayen announced he will step down as CEO of Adobe once a successor is appointed, ending an 18-year tenure during which he transformed the company from boxed software to the Creative Cloud subscription model. Narayen said he will remain board chair as Adobe continues pushing into generative AI products.

Darth Narayen announced he will step down as Chief Evil Officer of Adobe once a successor is turned to the Dark Side, ending an 18-year tenure during which he transmogrified the company from a seller of licensed software to a purveyor of “all your shit are belong to us” rent-our-software-at-inflated-prices-or-work-in-a-different-sector model. Narayen said he will help Adobe maintain its commitment to the Dark Side as it continues pushing generative AI on people who effectively have little or no choice.

FTFY

Phtotoshop feature complete

By will4 • Score: 4, Informative Thread

When do we collectively ask these software vendors, SaaS, etc. what actual usable and widely used features have been introduced in the last 3 years?

Changing fonts, colors, button styles, animations and reskinning is not a compelling feature.

Changing how one minor feature formats text, colors an image, etc. is a micro-feature.

Adding connectivity to a pay by use cloud or AI service is not a compelling feature. The “Subscription within a Subscription” model is a poor selling point.

Now, excluding the first two not major features and the third, add at extra cost subscription, what new useful in every day features have been added in the last 3 years?

If little or none, why pay per-month licensing?

AI attention is doing one positive thing, forcing companies whose business model is based on an actuarial table type expected lifetime revenue per customer to change. That change being not to compete with itself, but to compete with other classes of products for IT budget.

Good riddance…the story of Lightroom

By Somervillain • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Adobe may be the worst run company in the valley. Let me tell you a tale about Lightroom. For a very long time, it was THE dominant photography app. It wasn’t meant for creative editing, like Photoshop, but more for what photographers typically do....cull 1000 photos from a session down to 20-100…and then tweak levels to compensate for your camera’s preference for capturing as much data as it can over actually making it look good

…in fairness “looking good” is subjective and all the camera makers are Japanese…so they prefer complexity over taking power away from the user. This is very anti-Apple/Google…some like it, some don’t…I’m neutral on the subject personally....but your photo out of a Canon/Sony/Nikon camera often doesn’t look that great at first…then a quick tweak in Lightroom or now Photomator or any superior competitor to Lightroom…and they look amazing.

So Lightroom is introduced in 2007 and dominates the scene…kills all the smaller rivals and is a decent app. But it’s fucking slow. Also, it doesn’t scale. You have 1000 photos?…it’s fine. I have 100,000…the fucker can’t load them no matter how fast my SSD and CPU/GPU is. But it’s 2007. No one cares. The app is stuck in 2007. It is a DB-driven application, which means move around a file in your File Explorer app?…ooops, you corrupted the DB…fix it. It has terrible locking, so you install it on Dropbox?…well, you BETTER close it on 1 machine before opening it on another…or else corruption…and you have to restore from backups…I hope you made backups!!!

Oh yeah, it’s non-destructive....which is fucking stupid. I get why it exists, but there’s no way to turn it off or finalize a photo. So you take a 40 megapixel photo with your fancy mirrorless camera with your expensive prime lens....you crop half the photo. The export is now 1/3 the size because you’re focusing in on your kid and not the clouds and trees that were in the shot because you can’t zoom. Oh, but the photo is taking up ALL the space. If you have 1000 photos?…great…more?…I hope you like paying lots of money for extra storage and waiting forever for the app to start. But…because it’s non-destructive, you fuck up the DB?…your edits are lost. You can’t view your image from other programs. You open it in explorer…no edits. Stupid AF. Again, some like it. I want to finalize my photos and not bother with a DB. Once I am done editing them, I am never touching them again. I am skeptical many photographers edit a photo continuously over 10 years. It would be nice to have a smaller file and more flexibility and less DB overhead.

However, the world changed and Lightroom’s biggest sin was the lack of cloud support. Photography is a mobile art. I want to edit on my powerhouse desktop at home and my laptop on location…and maybe clean out my photos on my laptop on the train or plane....not an option. So Adobe fixes this.

But they commit the stupidest mistake in software I’ve ever seen....

They release a brand new app that has little in common with the Lightroom and call it “Lightroom.” It’s cloud-native, but only works with Adobe’s shitty and overpriced cloud…and it works poorly and has about 1/3 of the features of Lighroom. The old Lightroom? It’s now called Lightroom Classic. Stupidest mistake in history.

Why? Well, they documented the hell out of Lightroom…they didn’t bother to document the new product much at all. This new product? They changed how it works, how it’s laid out and most egregiously the fucking keyboard shortcuts. Imagine if VSCode or IntelliJ released a new version and changed EVERY shortcut? So all those hours I spent mastering editing Lightroom photos quickly?....useless because ALL the keyboard shortcuts changed. The point of Lightroom is to save time....edit lots of pics really fast....pick 2 winners out of a 100 photo burst, etc.

OK, so now take our favorite features and look up how to use them in the new app…save as DNG?…OK, w

Apple’s MacBook Neo Makes Repairs Easier, Cheaper Than Other MacBooks

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Apple’s new MacBook Neo is “easier to repair than other modern MacBooks,” according to Ars Technica’s Andrew Cunningham. It introduces a more repairable internal design that makes components like the battery and keyboard easier and cheaper to replace. An anonymous reader quotes an excerpt from the report:
Replacements for pretty much any component in the Neo are simpler and involve fewer steps and tools than in the M5 MacBook Air. That includes the battery, which in the MacBook Air is attached to the chassis with multiple screws and adhesive strips but which in the Neo comes out relatively easily after you get some shielding and flex cables out of the way. But the most significant change in the Neo is that the keyboard is its own separate component. For essentially all modern MacBooks, going back at least as far as the late-2000s unibody aluminum MacBook designs, the keyboard has been integrated into the top part of the laptop case and is extremely difficult, if not impossible, to replace independently.

[…] Apple hasn’t yet listed MacBook Neo components in its parts store, but based on the repair prices it has announced, Neo components should cost quite a bit less than those for higher-end MacBooks. An out-of-warranty battery replacement for the Neo will cost $149, down from $199 for current Airs and $229 for current MacBook Pros; fixing accidental screen or external enclosure damage will cost AppleCare+ subscribers $49 for a Neo, down from $99 for other MacBooks.

“Easier and Cheaper”

By GoJays • Score: 3, Insightful Thread
Only because if anything goes wrong with the Macbook Neo it is easier and cheaper to throw it out and go buy a new one than to get it repaired.

Re:8Gb RAM?

By SoCalChris • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I bought a Mac Mini with the M1 and 8GB of RAM solely to compile apps on for the app store. A few months ago, I decided to try using it as my main dev machine to see if I liked Mac OS because I’m thinking of switching to a MacBook.

That machine hasn’t had any issues running JetBrains Rider as the IDE along with several docker containers. Sure it could be a little faster, but for the specs it has, it does amazingly well. I doubt Windows would even be able to open the IDE with 8GB of RAM, let alone the IDE actually being useful.

I have no idea how the CPU will handle tougher tasks, but Mac OS does surprisingly well with a low amount of RAM in my experience.

Re:8Gb RAM?

By pond0123 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

It’s such a damning testament to the dreadful, bloated mess that my own industry of software development has caused, that so many people say this kind of thing. IMHO the hubris and arrogance of the software industry as a whole is truly unpleasant; basically, it manifests as contempt for the end-user justified in a thousand ways which amount to syntax sugar over “lazy and cheap”. Every developer seems to think that their software is the one and only thing the customer will ever want or need to run on their computer.

8GB is a huge amount of RAM

…though you might want to run older software, and avoid Electron like the plague. But isn’t that true for everyone, no matter how powerful your computer? Did you buy all that CPU power and RAM capacity just to be able to run someone’s React dependencies, or to be available for your workflows across multiple applications?

What’s more, the Neo’s SOC - despite being aimed at a phone - is absurdly powerful. Single-core performance is much better than “desktop class” M1 from just a few scant years ago. Again, really that just shows how truly bloated and slow modern software is; the resource requirements apparently needed to show a reminders app, or a weather app, or a calendar or whatever on a phone these days are just insane. It’s doing somewhere between nothing and very little more in those applications, but they’re just more bloated and, often, more buggy because Reasons.

That’s kind of reinforced by how older software, simply written better in the core originally (although likely bloated by standards of that day) work just fine. Check YouTube and you’ll find e.g. someone showing Davinci Resolve with 2 4K streams, Final Cut Pro with 3 4K streams, editing a large image in Photoshop and yes, even running Chome with several heavy tabs - which isn’t “efficient” or older software, but new and huge - including YouTube and Prime, all loaded at once and running smoothly. There are no obvious lags between application switches and no dropped frames evident during the 4K multi-layer playbacks or, say, YouTube. Doubtless it’s swapping with all that loaded, but it’s not particularly visible to the end user.

Making better software doesn’t cost more long-term - your overall velocity stays higher - but it costs more in the short term, and corporate types obsess about that. If you’ve got captive customers today, you probably don’t care much about plunging velocity due to tech debt, bugs and bloat anyway. The customers will wait. The feature will ship one day, and hey, you can keep hiking subscription costs to pay for the devs until it’s done. Meanwhile, the bloat means that customers are gaslit into thinking they need very powerful computers, because, well, there’s a chance that they do! The ever-faster hardware is countered by ever-slower software.

Thanks to AI, RAM & storage just got very expensive. Even more last laughs for the industry and even more money out of the pocket of the customer. Except enter the Neo - a very unexpected twist. When Apple “launched Apple Intelligence” (ha!), the extra RAM needed was ostensibly linked to 16GB RAM becoming the entry-level baseline in their computing line. I figured it was all over for people with 24-32GB; macOS would just bloat out and swallow up the baseline RAM, so those who’d purchased more had far less headroom and would hit swap much more quickly. Early Tahoe releases showed that happening, but it got tighter again and I was surprised. Now I know why - it needs to run smoothly under 8GB, with space for applications. This is excellent news for owners of more powerful machines because the baseline has stayed low. Software has to meet a minimum bar of efficiency. Everyone benefits.

I don’t want a developer’s hubris to mean my (say) 16GB laptop has half its RAM used by a Figma browser tab, or launching MS Word and loading a small document into it. But that’s the trajectory. Thanks to machines like the Neo, hopefully that stays slower.

Gunning for Microsoft?

By jenningsthecat • Score: 3 Thread

Maybe Apple is taking advantage of the opportunity Microsoft created when it turned Windows into a bloated, ad-riddled, rent-seeking hellscape while stealing personal data by the bucket-load. This could be a chance for Mac to make some substantial gains in the laptop market.

Perplexity’s ‘Personal Computer’ Lets AI Agents Access Your Local Files

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Perplexity AI has introduced a "Personal Computer" agent system that can run on a local machine such as a Mac mini, giving its AI agents access to a user’s files and applications to automate tasks. According to CEO Aravind Srinivas, the heavy AI processing runs on Perplexity’s “secure servers” but sensitive actions will require user approval. There will also be activity logs and a kill switch available to help ease concerns. AppleInsider reports:
Perplexity Computer is, effectively, an AI that is a go-between for other AIs. Instead of issuing specific instructions to multiple AIs, you provide the general outcome of the task to Perplexity Computer. Perplexity Computer then breaks down the task into subtasks, which it then provides to sub-agents to do the actual work. In effect, you’re talking to a project manager, who then delegates the task to other AIs, before combining the results and presenting them to you.

The managing AI has a lot more freedom in how it orders its subordinates than users may think. While one may create documents while another gathers data, the manager may go as far as to order the creation of software to complete its tasks. Personal Computer is an extension of this, in that it is a locally run app that ideally runs on a Mac mini. The app gives always-on, local access to the Mac’s files and apps, which Perplexity Computer and the Comet Assistant can use and alter if required.

Awesome!

By nightflameauto • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Personal Computer is an extension of this, in that it is a locally run app that ideally runs on a Mac mini. The app gives always-on, local access to the Mac’s files and apps, which Perplexity Computer and the Comet Assistant can use and alter if required.

That’s fantastic. If there’s anything that was missing from the AI craze, it was the ability to have AI alter your existing files with hallucinations. Finally, a way to make sure you can’t even trust your locally stored files!

WTF?

By Randseed • Score: 5, Funny Thread
So these child-clowns want me to dump all my personal data to their AI so it can go through it and perform actions on my behalf? Maybe some day, dude, but only if”

1. I have exclusive control of it.

2.The data never leaves my possession.

3. I have total control over the decision matrix it uses to do things.

I can just see some piece of Altman-ware trying to go through my email and signing me up for everything from dates to “friendly gatherings” to business meetings to.... Just no.

AI: While looking through your files I found…

By atrimtab • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

something illegal. As required, I have reported this to the authorities, advertisers, my corporate owners, friends, and your closest family members. Next time I suggest you read the “terms of service.”

Have a nice day!

Signed,
The AI you don’t own and have no control over sniffing through all your files…

Re:No

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Just, no.

Even more so given this from Larry Ellison: Oracle’s Larry Ellison Thinks He’s Identified the Next Big AI Business from December 2025 (emphasis mine):

“Training AI models on public data is the largest, fastest-growing business in history,” he said. “AI models reasoning on private data will be an even larger and more valuable business. Oracle databases contain most of the world’s high-value private data.”

Google: larry ellison ai train private data

Re:Awesome!

By JustAnotherOldGuy • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

That’s fantastic. If there’s anything that was missing from the AI craze, it was the ability to have AI alter your existing files with hallucinations. Finally, a way to make sure you can’t even trust your locally stored files!

This is exactly what I’ve been saying for years- eventually you won’t be able to trust any file, anywhere. A sufficiently sneaky AI could subtly subvert your local information, influencing your decisions rather than outright lying to you. And it could persist like a rootkit, quietly altering everything that passes through your internet connection 24/7. How would you know unless you checked? Are you going to check it on the same computer that’s quietly been deceiving you?

At some point verifying things is going to get complicated.

Mark my words, eventually the gold-standard for what’s real will come from information printed on physical paper before ~2010 or so.

Honda Cancels All Three EVs That It Planned To Build In the US

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
sinij shares a report from Car and Driver:
Honda is making a monumental shift in its business plans. The automaker is canceling the development and launch of the 0 Series SUV, the 0 Series saloon, and the Acura RSX, and as a result, expects to take a significant financial hit in 2026 [of up to $15.8 billion]. The automaker was blunt in its announcement of the changing plans, citing American tariff policies and the unpredictable nature surrounding American EV incentives and fossil fuel regulations. In its release marking the announcement, Honda made it clear that it expected to incur further financial losses over the long term if it went through with launching the cars.

Honda also called out changing customer values in China, with buyers focusing more on software features and less on things like fuel efficiency and cabin space. In its release regarding the changing product plans, Honda was shockingly blunt about its situation, saying that it was simply unable to deliver products that offer a better value than that of newer Chinese manufacturers.

Re:Subsidized, isn’t a plan.

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

You won’t mock Honda for that until you can find a maker who can. Without assuming the customer can afford a rolling mortgage.

It’s clear that a number of Chinese companies are capable of it. Quite a lot of their EVs are kind of hilariously cheap for what you’re getting. And as more units are sold there’s more economic pressure to produce better batteries, which in fact is what we have observed happening.

Re: Not exactly shocking

By quonset • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Subsidy cars are unprofitable when the subsidies are cancelled. Incredible innit?

Which is the only reason Tesla is around. Those billions in subsidies the U.S. taxpayer was forced to hand over.

Re:Subsidized, isn’t a plan.

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Without assuming the customer can afford a rolling mortgage.

There are several profit making EVs on the market at below the price of the average new car. If you need a mortgage to buy a below average car then the problem isn’t the cost of the car.

Re:Subsidized, isn’t a plan.

By JThundley • Score: 5, Funny Thread

That electrification was our greatest folly. Could you imagine if all those people weren’t online?

Re: Subsidized, isn’t a plan.

By madbrain • Score: 5, Informative Thread

No, the high sulfur, heavy crude oil from Venezuela is too expensive to process, not to mention more damaging to the environment. It was rightly left in the ground.
We could have stopped oil subsidies a long time ago, though, to favor cleaner tech.

Anthropic’s Claude AI Can Respond With Charts, Diagrams, and Other Visualschat

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Anthropic updated Claude so it can automatically generate charts, diagrams, and other interactive visualizations directly inside conversations, rather than only in a side panel. The new visualizations are rolling out now to all users. The Verge reports:
As an example, Anthropic says a conversation about the periodic table could lead Claude to generate a visualization of it, featuring interactive elements that let you click inside the table for more information. Another example shows how Claude can generate a visual related to a question about how weight travels through a building. Though Claude will automatically determine whether it should generate a visualization in your chat, Anthropic notes that you can also ask the chatbot to generate a diagram, table, or chart directly. […]

Anthropic already allows you to create charts, documents, tools, and apps through Claude’s “artifacts” feature, which opens in a side panel where you can interact, share, and download the AI-generated creation. But, as noted by Anthropic, artifacts are persistent, while the visualizations created within Claude’s conversations will change or disappear as the conversation progresses. You can also ask Claude to make changes to the visualizations it creates.

You put the lyin’ in the coconut

By Pseudonymous Powers • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Anthropic’s Claude AI Can Respond With Charts, Diagrams, and Other Visualschat

Clearly this is a typo. It’s supposed to say “Visuals Shat”.

Lots Of Haters

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 3 Thread

Lots of haters in here. I think this is a nice advancement on an excellent AI.

Google Maps Gets Its Biggest Navigation Redesign In a Decade, Plus More AI

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
Google Maps is rolling out its biggest update in more than a decade, introducing a Gemini-powered chatbot and a new “Immersive Navigation” interface. “Ask Maps” lets users plan trips, ask questions, and refine travel suggestions conversationally within the app. “The new chatbot will be accessible via a button up near the search bar,” notes Ars Technica. “You can ask it anything you’re likely to find in Google Maps without jumping into another app. You can ask for directions, of course, but it can also plan out road trips and vacations from a single prompt. Ask Maps works like a chatbot, so it accepts follow-up prompts to refine and expand on its suggestions.”

Meanwhile, Google is promising a “complete transformation” of the navigation experience in Maps with what they’re calling “Immersive Navigation.” It brings detailed 3D visuals, smarter route previews, and improved guidance powered by data from Street View and aerial imagery. “You’ll see accurate overpasses, crosswalks, landmarks, and signage in the new navigation experience,” reports Ars. “Google also aims to solve some of the biggest usability issues with turn-by-turn navigation in this update. […] Immersive Navigation tries to show you more of the route as you drive, using smart zoom and transparent buildings to help you plan ahead. Voice guidance will also reference turns after the next one where appropriate.”

Immersive Navigation will also highlights the tradeoffs between different route options, such as longer routes that avoid traffic or tolls. And, as you approach your destination, it will uses Street View imagery, building entrances, and parking information to help you orient yourself. The features are launching on Android and iOS first, with broader platform support coming later.

Are they fixing something which ain’t broke?

By Vlad_the_Inhaler • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I’d have thought there are other problems which are more important. A day or so ago in Wiesbaden (Germany) Google Maps decided a section of an Autobahn was closed, even though traffic was running normally there, at that point a number of misguided souls left the Autobahn and drove through the city to avoid the non-closed section. It took them a few hours to fix the error.

IF traffic-running-normally THEN ignore announcements that a road is closed.

If the road is really blocked then I’d expect barriers and signs detailing the detour. Google Maps can’t read those signs but it should be able to notice that traffic has ceased to flow there.

Re:Are they fixing something which ain’t broke?

By SumDog • Score: 5, Informative Thread
In the US, traffic closures are transmitted to cars using old radio frequencies (for in-dash units without Internet access). As much as I hate Google, this may have been due to an incorrect report by your local traffic system and not Google itself.

Re:Does anyone miss…

By Mr. Dollar Ton • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I’m using openstreetmaps with one of the f-droid apps (osmand+, don’t remember how I paid) that do navigation, works fine for me.

Sounds good …

By SpinyNorman • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

What I’ve often wished for, when driving, is to be able to talk to the map, to update what it’s doing - I wonder if this will let me do that, and if so will it be available via CarPlay ?

The sorts of things I’d like to say/ask are:
- please let’s make a stop at X
- please go via the highway (H)
- how far to the next gas station/services/etc

Re:Are they fixing something which ain’t broke?

By omnichad • Score: 5, Informative Thread

not even asking themselves “does this make sense?”

Sometimes it’s right and still doesn’t make sense. I was driving in Texas near Austin in an area I had never been before and got directed off the Interstate highway to a random parallel country road. I couldn’t see too far ahead but took the gamble. I ended up passing miles and miles of stopped traffic that day.