Apple's Secret Weapon: This AI Could Power Its Smart Glasses

apple's-secret-weapon:-this-ai-could-power-its-smart-glasses

Right now, Apple’s Vision Pro is more like a glorified monitor you can wear on your face. It has its uses, and it is a technological marvel, but it doesn’t do much at the moment. Plus, its size and price mean it’s not something you can use every day. However, Apple has plans for a future pair of smart glasses, and this is the AI model that could run on it.

Meet Apple’s new AI model for its smart glasses

It’s not surprising that the Vision Pro hasn’t become mainstream. Like we said, the size and price put it out of reach for most people. If Apple wants something that can be adopted by the masses, smart glasses are the way to go. But smart glasses aren’t smart without software, which is why, according to a report from 9to5Mac, they speculate that Apple’s new FastVLM AI model could drive the device.

According to Apple’s description of the AI model, “Based on a comprehensive efficiency analysis of the interplay between image resolution, vision latency, token count, and LLM size, we introduce FastVLM—a model that achieves an optimized trade-off between latency, model size, and accuracy.”

The AI ​​model’s core is the FastViTHD encoder,

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The Hidden Cost of 'Free' AI: What You're Really Losing When You Ask ChatGPT

the-hidden-cost-of-'free'-ai:-what-you're-really-losing-when-you-ask-chatgpt

ChatGPT and OpenAI Logo Background

When you ask ChatGPT for a recipe, an Excel formula, or a product recommendation, it feels like magic—instant answers, no scrolling, no ads. But that magic comes with a hidden price tag we’re all about to pay.

What if I told you that every time you ask ChatGPT for an answer, a website dies a little?

The convenience of AI makes it feel free, even magical. But it’s not. The models powering those instant responses were built on the backs of millions of writers, artists, journalists, and creators—most of whom were never asked, never paid, and now find their livelihoods quietly evaporating.

This isn’t just a copyright issue. It’s a slow bleed of the internet’s soul. A death by a thousand cuts, if you will. And now, a new lawsuit from Ziff Davis, one of the biggest digital publishers on the internet, is trying to stop it before it’s too late.

Ziff Davis vs OpenAI: The Lawsuit That Could Set A Precedent

ChatGPT Steal Data Red

Last month, digital publishing giant Ziff Davis (owner of popular sites like IGN, PCMag, and Mashable) filed a lawsuit against OpenAI. It claimed the AI company “intentionally and relentlessly” copied its content without permission to build ChatGPT.

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