logo
Samsung Galaxy's Massive 2GB Update: What's New & Improved

Samsung Galaxy's Massive 2GB Update: What's New & Improved

Geeky Gadgets9 hours ago

Samsung has introduced a substantial 2GB software update for its Galaxy smartphones, bringing a host of enhancements aimed at improving system performance and advancing AI-driven features. At the core of this update is the latest version of the Samsung Vision Model (2.1.09.10), which delivers faster processing speeds, improved battery efficiency, and a smoother overall user experience. While the rollout is staggered across regions and devices, the update's potential to elevate your smartphone's functionality makes it worth anticipating. The video below from Sakitech gives us more details about what is included in the update.
Watch this video on YouTube. Key Feature: Upgraded Samsung Vision Model
The centerpiece of this update is the upgraded Samsung Vision Model, now at version 2.1.09.10. This enhancement significantly boosts the performance of AI-powered tools, allowing your Galaxy device to handle tasks with greater efficiency and speed. Whether you're editing photos, using AI-driven applications, or multitasking, this update ensures quicker response times and smoother interactions.
Key improvements include: Faster loading and seamless integration of photo ambient wallpapers.
and seamless integration of photo ambient wallpapers. Enhanced AI tools for real-time assistance and advanced photo editing capabilities.
for real-time assistance and advanced photo editing capabilities. Improved compatibility with creative and productivity applications.
Although the rollout is gradual, once the update becomes available for your device, you can expect a noticeable enhancement in the performance of AI features, making everyday tasks more efficient and enjoyable. Smarter AI Features for Everyday Use
This update introduces significant advancements to the AI capabilities of Galaxy smartphones, making them more intuitive and practical for daily use. Here's what you can look forward to: Photo Assist Tools: These tools now offer enhanced precision for editing and optimizing images, helping you achieve professional-quality results with ease.
These tools now offer enhanced precision for editing and optimizing images, helping you achieve professional-quality results with ease. Driving Assist Technology: Navigation and on-road guidance have been improved for greater accuracy and responsiveness, making sure a safer and more reliable driving experience.
Navigation and on-road guidance have been improved for greater accuracy and responsiveness, making sure a safer and more reliable driving experience. Drawing Assist Tools: Sketch generation is now faster, and creative workflows are more intuitive, making it easier for users to bring their ideas to life.
For those who enjoy personalizing their devices, the update also refines the functionality of photo ambient wallpapers. These wallpapers now load more quickly and adapt seamlessly to changes, making sure your device remains visually appealing without compromising performance. System Performance and Battery Life Boost
Beyond the AI enhancements, this update focuses on optimizing overall system performance. Everyday tasks such as launching apps, multitasking, and switching wallpapers are now faster and more efficient. These improvements not only make your device feel more responsive but also contribute to a smoother and more enjoyable user experience.
Battery optimization is another key focus of this update. By streamlining background processes and reducing unnecessary resource usage, the update helps extend your device's battery life. This means you can use power-intensive features for longer periods without worrying about frequent recharging, adding convenience and reliability to your daily routine. Staggered Rollout: When Will You Get It?
Samsung is deploying this update in phases, meaning its availability will vary depending on your region and device model. To check if the update is ready for your phone: Open your device's Settings .
. Navigate to Software Update .
. Follow the on-screen prompts to download and install the update if it is available.
Once installed, you'll gain access to all the new features and performance improvements, making this update a valuable addition to your device. Staying up to date ensures you can take full advantage of the latest advancements and optimizations. Why This Update Matters
Samsung's latest 2GB update for Galaxy smartphones represents a comprehensive upgrade that enhances both AI-driven features and overall system performance. With the upgraded Samsung Vision Model, smarter photo and drawing assist tools, and improved battery efficiency, this update delivers a more refined and efficient user experience. While the staggered rollout may require some patience, the benefits it brings to your device make it a worthwhile upgrade. Be sure to monitor your update notifications to ensure you don't miss out on these valuable enhancements.
Master Samsung Galaxy Update with the help of our in-depth articles and helpful guides.
Source & Image Credit: sakitech Filed Under: Android News, Mobile Phone News, Top News
Latest Geeky Gadgets Deals
Disclosure: Some of our articles include affiliate links. If you buy something through one of these links, Geeky Gadgets may earn an affiliate commission. Learn about our Disclosure Policy.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Small business AI use is lagging, but one firm is channeling Sherlock Holmes and knocking out 'grunt work'
Small business AI use is lagging, but one firm is channeling Sherlock Holmes and knocking out 'grunt work'

NBC News

time9 minutes ago

  • NBC News

Small business AI use is lagging, but one firm is channeling Sherlock Holmes and knocking out 'grunt work'

Chris Schwegmann is getting creative with how artificial intelligence is being used in law. At Dallas-based boutique law firm Lynn Pinker Hurst & Schwegmann, he sometimes asks AI to channel Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts or Sherlock Holmes. Schwegmann said after uploading opposing counsel's briefs, he'll ask legal technology platform Harvey to assume the role of a legal mind like Roberts to see how the chief justice would think about a particular problem. Other times, he will turn to a fictional character like Holmes, unlocking a different frame of mind. 'Harvey, ChatGPT ... they know who those folks are, and can approach the problem from that mindset,' he said. 'Once we as lawyers get outside those lanes, when we are thinking more creatively involving other branches of science, literature, history, mythology, that sometimes generates some of the most interesting ideas that can then be put, using proper legal judgement, in a framework that works to solve a legal problem.' It's just one example of how smaller businesses are putting AI to work to punch above their weight, and new data shows there's an opportunity for much more implementation in the future. Only 24% of owners in the recent Small Business and Technology Survey from the National Federation of Independent Business said they are using AI, including ChatGPT, Canva and Copilot, in some capacity. Notably, 98% of those using it said AI has so far not impacted the number of employees at their firms. At his trial litigation firm of 50 attorneys, Schwegmann said AI is resolving work in days that would sometimes take weeks, and said the technology isn't replacing workers at the firm. It has freed up associate lawyers from doing 'grunt work,' he said, and also means more senior-level partners have the time to mentor younger attorneys because everyone has more time. The NFIB survey found AI use varied based on the size of the small business. For firms with employees in the single digits, uptake was at 21%. At firms with fifty or more workers, AI implementation was at nearly half of all respondents. 'The data show clearly that uptake for the smallest businesses lags substantially behind their larger competitors. ... With a little attention from all the relevant stakeholders, a more equal playing field is possible,' the NFIB report said. For future AI use, 63% of all small employers surveyed said the utilization of the technology in their industry in the next five years will be important to some degree; 12% said it will be extremely important and 15% said it will not be important at all. Some of the most common uses in the survey were for communications, marketing and advertising, predictive analysis and customer service. 'We still have the need for the independent legal judgment of our associate lawyers and our partners — it hasn't replaced them, it just augments their thinking,' Schwegmann said. 'It makes them more creative and frees their time to do what lawyers do best, which is strategic thought and creative problem solving.' The NFIB data echoes a recent survey from Reimagine Main Street, a project of Public Private Strategies Institute in partnership with PayPal. Reimagine surveyed nearly 1,000 small businesses with annual revenue between $25,000 and $50,000 and also found that a quarter had already started integrating AI into daily workflows. Schwegmann said at his firm, AI is helping to even the playing field. 'One of the things Harvey lets us do is review, understand and incorporate and respond much faster than we would prior to the use of these kinds of AI tools,' he said. 'No longer does a party have an advantage because they can paper you to death.'

Federal judge rules copyrighted books are fair use for AI training
Federal judge rules copyrighted books are fair use for AI training

NBC News

time23 minutes ago

  • NBC News

Federal judge rules copyrighted books are fair use for AI training

A federal judge has sided with Anthropic in a major copyright ruling, declaring that artificial intelligence developers can train on published books without authors' consent. The decision, filed Monday in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, sets a precedent that training AI systems on copyrighted works constitutes fair use. Though it doesn't guarantee other courts will follow, Judge William Alsup's ruling marks the first of dozens of ongoing copyright lawsuits to give an answer on fair use in the context of generative AI. It's a question that's been raised by creatives across various industries for years since generative AI tools exploded into the mainstream, allowing users to easily produce art from models trained on copyrighted work — often without the human creator's knowledge or permission. AI companies have been hit with a slew of copyright lawsuits from media companies, music labels and authors since 2023. Artists have signed multiple open letters urging government officials and AI developers to constrain the unauthorized use of copyrighted works. In recent years, companies have also increasingly inked licensing deals with AI developers to dictate terms of use for their artists' works. Alsup on Monday ruled on a lawsuit filed by three authors — Andrea Bartz, Charles Graeber and Kirk Wallace Johnson — last August, who claimed that Anthropic ignored copyright protections when it pirated millions of books and digitized purchased books to feed into its large language models, which helped train them to generate human-like text responses. 'The copies used to train specific LLMs were justified as a fair use,' Alsup wrote in the ruling. 'Every factor but the nature of the copyrighted work favors this result. The technology at issue was among the most transformative many of us will see in our lifetimes.' His decision stated that Anthropic's use of the books to train its models, including versions of its flagship AI model Claude, was 'exceedingly transformative' enough to fall under fair use. Fair use, as defined by the Copyright Act, takes into account four factors: the purpose of the use, what kind of copyrighted work is used (creative works get stronger protection than factual works), how much of the work was used, and whether the use hurts the market value of the original work. 'We are pleased that the Court recognized that using 'works to train LLMs was transformative — spectacularly so,'' Anthropic said in a statement, quoting the ruling. 'Consistent with copyright's purpose in enabling creativity and fostering scientific progress, 'Anthropic's LLMs trained upon works not to race ahead and replicate or supplant them — but to turn a hard corner and create something different.'' Bartz and Johnson did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Graeber declined to comment. Alsup noted, however, that all of the authors' works contained 'expressive elements' earning them stronger copyright protection, which is a factor that points against fair use, although not enough to sway the overall ruling. He also added that while making digital copies of purchased books was fair use, downloading pirated copies for free did not constitute fair use. But aside from the millions of pirated copies, Alsup wrote, copying entire works to train AI models was 'especially reasonable' because the models didn't reproduce those copies for public access, and doing so 'did not and will not displace demand' for the original books. His ruling stated that although AI developers can legally train AI models on copyrighted works without permission, they should obtain those works through legitimate means that don't involve pirating or other forms of theft. Despite siding with the AI company on fair use, Alsup wrote that Anthropic will still face trial for the pirated copies it used to create its massive central library of books used to train AI. 'That Anthropic later bought a copy of a book it earlier stole off the internet will not absolve it of liability for the theft,' Alsup wrote, 'but it may affect the extent of statutory damages.'

From Assembly Line to Attraction: China's EV Factories Are Redefining Tourism
From Assembly Line to Attraction: China's EV Factories Are Redefining Tourism

Auto Blog

time2 hours ago

  • Auto Blog

From Assembly Line to Attraction: China's EV Factories Are Redefining Tourism

A different kind of showcase In China's capital city, Beijing, a long list of historical sites and other attractions attracts visitors from home and abroad every year, including the Forbidden City, the Olympic Stadium known as the Bird's Nest, and even a section of the Great Wall of China. With a history that stretches back to 1045 BC, Beijing is a city that blends both the rich history of China's past with the wonders of a new age. Today, alongside other major Chinese cities such as Shenzhen and Shanghai, it thrives as a dynamic economic hub, and sites that showcase the country's latest technological and industrial dominance have become the focus of some curious visitors. Previous Pause Next Unmute 0:00 / 0:10 Tesla sales in Europe drop yet again Watch More Chinese EV factories are the new science museum According to a new report published by Wired magazine, the latest must-see attraction in Beijing is not something old, but something relatively new: its electric vehicle (EV) factories. According to the tech authority, tens of thousands of people have flooded online ticket lotteries each month for a chance to walk through the factory floors of the country's most advanced EV makers like Xiaomi and Nio. It's not just car lovers lining up, either. Families, tech-obsessed geeks, and even students treat these factory visits as if they're a stroll through a museum or gallery. Consumer electronics giant turned EV powerhouse Xiaomi was one of the first to open its doors to the public, kicking off the craze by offering tours of its Beijing factory to those who wanted to see inside. Very quickly, the demand to see inside the factory where the Xiaomi SU7 is made reached Wonka-levels. When the company started offering tours, Xiaomi's online lottery system gave the 'golden tickets' to just 60 people per month. However, demand has since exploded, and Xiaomi expanded the program. It aims to accommodate more than 1,100 visitors in July, with one tour each weekday and six on most weekends. According to data from the Xiaomi app, more than 27,000 people applied for July slots on the first night after registration opened. The future of automaking, now These tours offer a rare glimpse into what the future of ultra-automated manufacturing will look like. Xiaomi's plant boasts a 91% automation rate, with some lines being entirely run by robots. Visitors are shuttled around the factory, where they observe robotic arms moving with machine-like precision, lifting and assembling components without a human in sight. Autoblog Newsletter Autoblog brings you car news; expert reviews and exciting pictures and video. Research and compare vehicles, too. Sign up or sign in with Google Facebook Microsoft Apple By signing up I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy . You may unsubscribe from email communication at anytime. 'The factory is huge, with only a handful of workers. As I stood there watching, it was all robotic arms doing the work. The robots were all running preset programs—picking up parts from one place and delivering them to another, all in a very orderly manner,' Yuanyuan, a Beijing resident who took her 13-year-old daughter on the Xiaomi tour in May, told Wired. Xiaomi's Electric Vehicle Factory In Beijing — Source: Getty Images However, Xiaomi's factory isn't just about watching robots; the experience combines the exhibits of a science museum, a factory tour, and ends with amusement park-esque thrills. Before touring one of three active production lines out of six total to gawk at the workers and robots, guests stroll through a tech-filled exhibit hall. At the end, thrill-seekers hop into a Xiaomi SU7 electric sedan and experience a test ride with a professional driver who is glad to showcase the car's seat-pinning acceleration. Xiaomi isn't the only company capitalizing on this trend. Chinese electric vehicle giant Nio recently opened its partially automated factory in Hefei and welcomed over 130,000 visitors in 2024. To take a tour, prospective visitors must register through the Nio app and pay 1,000 'Nio points,' which is equivalent to $14. Users can either purchase these points or earn them for free by regularly engaging with the Nio app. Final thoughts Guided tours are nothing new for car manufacturing. Stateside, some facilities, including BMW's Spartanburg, South Carolina plant, Honda facilities in Ohio, and GM's Bowling Green, Kentucky plant, allow visitors to book tours. But in the same way that the factory tours mentioned in the West help connect with enthusiasts, Chinese EV factory tours help market the brand. Freya Zhang, a research analyst at Tech Buzz China, told Wired that by opening doors, EV makers allow the public to 'experience the human side' of these brands. I agree. It's one thing to advertise, but I think a complimentary latte with foam shaped like BYD car models' logos, or an affordable lunch and souvenirs at the Xiaomi factory, will etch a kind of feeling that will stick with potential buyers. BYD, Nio, and Xiaomi have even organized tours for elementary school students, which is a covert way to develop brand loyalty from the start. They'll definitely remember that field trip. However, these tours of EV manufacturing facilities, where industrial robots can outnumber people, can be a sobering reminder of reality for some visitors. After the tour, Yuanyuan, the mom who tried really hard to secure the coveted Xiaomi tour tickets, told Wired that her daughter said, 'I need to study harder or robots will take all the jobs,' after they went. About the Author James Ochoa View Profile

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store