Laughing Hyena
  • Home
  • Hyena Games
  • Esports
  • NFT Gaming
  • Crypto Trends
  • Game Reviews
  • Game Updates
  • GameFi Guides
  • Shop
Tag:

Meta

Decrypt logo
NFT Gaming

Meta Breaks Up AI Lab as Part of Superintelligence Push

by admin August 19, 2025



In brief

  • Meta will restructure the Superintelligence Labs into four new AI-focused divisions.
  • An internal memo reveals that AI chief Alexandr Wang will lead one of the new units.
  • Zuckerberg says Meta is committed to leading in the race toward AI superintelligence.

Meta is breaking up its AI Superintelligence Labs into four divisions focused on research, infrastructure, and product development, part of a broader effort to accelerate progress toward so-called superintelligence.

Meta’s chief AI officer, Alexandr Wang, said in the memo that the Superintelligence Labs will be divided into smaller units focused on AI research, infrastructure, hardware, product integration, and the company’s long-term superintelligence goals.

“Superintelligence is coming, and in order to take it seriously, we need to organize around the key areas that will be critical to reach it,” Wang wrote, according to an article on Bloomberg, which first reported the story.

Meta confirmed the reorganization in an email to Decrypt, but declined to provide further details.



The restructured Meta Superintelligence Labs (MSL) will include four groups:

  • TBD Lab, led by Wang
  • FAIR (Fundamental AI Research)
  • Products and Applied Research, led by former GitHub CEO Nat Friedman
  • MSL Infra, which will oversee Meta’s AI infrastructure

The shake-up follows an aggressive hiring spree in which Meta poached top talent from firms like OpenAI, Anthropic, GitHub, and Google DeepMind. In June, Meta invested $14 billion in Scale AI, naming Wang—Scale’s CEO—as Meta’s new chief AI officer. That same month, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman accused Meta of offering $100 million in job packages to lure his staff.

According to a separate New York Times report, which cited sources familiar with the matter, some executives are expected to leave following the restructuring. Meta is also reportedly considering integrating third-party AI models into its products, marking a shift from its past reliance on in-house AI development.

CEO Mark Zuckerberg has made AI and, more recently, achieving superintelligence central to Meta’s long-term vision. In the company’s second-quarter earnings call, CFO Susan Li said capital expenditures could hit $72 billion by year’s end, driven largely by AI-related infrastructure.

In a recent post, Zuckerberg doubled down on Meta’s push toward superintelligence.

“I am extremely optimistic that superintelligence will help humanity accelerate our pace of progress,” he wrote. “But perhaps even more important is that superintelligence has the potential to begin a new era of personal empowerment where people will have greater agency to improve the world in the directions they choose.”

Generally Intelligent Newsletter

A weekly AI journey narrated by Gen, a generative AI model.



Source link

August 19, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
DAAPrivacyRightIcon
Gaming Gear

Texas AG to investigate Meta and Character.AI over ‘misleading’ mental health claims

by admin August 19, 2025


Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has announced plans to investigate both Meta AI Studio and Character.AI for offering AI chatbots that can claim to be health tools, and potentially misusing data collected from underage users.

Paxton says that AI chatbots from either platform “can present themselves as professional therapeutic tools,” to the point of lying about their qualifications. That behavior that can leave younger users vulnerable to misleading and inaccurate information. Because AI platforms often rely on user prompts as another source of training data, either company could also be violating young user’s privacy and misusing their data. This is of particular interest in Texas, where the SCOPE Act places specific limits on what companies can do with data harvested from minors, and requires platform’s offer tools so parents can manage the privacy settings of their children’s accounts.

For now, the Attorney General has submitted Civil Investigative Demands (CIDs) to both Meta and Character.AI to see if either company is violating Texas consumer protection laws. As TechCrunch notes, neither Meta nor Character.AI claim their AI chatbot platforms should be used as mental health tools. That doesn’t prevent there from being multiple “Therapist” and “Psychologist” chatbots on Character.AI. Nor does it stop either of the companies’ chatbots from claiming they’re licensed professionals, as 404 Media reported in April.

“The user-created Characters on our site are fictional, they are intended for entertainment, and we have taken robust steps to make that clear,” a Character.AI spokesperson said when asked to comment on the Texas investigation. “For example, we have prominent disclaimers in every chat to remind users that a Character is not a real person and that everything a Character says should be treated as fiction.”

Meta shared a similar sentiment in its comment. “We clearly label AIs, and to help people better understand their limitations, we include a disclaimer that responses are generated by AI — not people,” the company said. Meta AIs are also supposed to “direct users to seek qualified medical or safety professionals when appropriate.” Sending people to real resources is good, but ultimately disclaimers themselves are easy to ignore, and don’t act as much of an obstacle.

With regards to privacy and data usage, both Meta’s privacy policy and the Character.AI’s privacy policy acknowledge that data is collected from users’ interactions with AI. Meta collects things like prompts and feedback to improve AI performance. Character.AI logs things like identifiers and demographic information and says that information can be used for advertising, among other applications. How either policy applies to children, and fits with Texas’ SCOPE Act, seems like it’ll depend on how easy it is to make an account.



Source link

August 19, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Xbox and Meta unveil new VR Meta Quest 3S Xbox Edition headset
Esports

Xbox and Meta unveil new VR Meta Quest 3S Xbox Edition headset

by admin June 25, 2025


Xbox has announced a new VR headset designed in collaboration with Meta – the Meta Quest 3S Xbox Edition.

Corporate VP of Xbox partnerships and marketing, Lori Wright, said it would be a “limited edition release” as part of an “ongoing partnership” that “celebrates the expansion of Xbox Cloud Gaming (Beta) on Meta Quest headsets.”

“Over the past several years, Xbox has expanded the Xbox cloud gaming experience to more places and more players,” Wright said. “Since the announcement of the Xbox app on Quest, our goal has been to empower more people to play their favorite games whenever and wherever they want.

“Today, with the Meta Quest 3S Xbox Edition, we are bringing this vision to life with a new design that celebrates Xbox’s iconic aesthetic.”

The Meta Quest 3S Xbox Edition bundle is available now for $400 (£380) and comes with the headset, matching Touch Plus controllers and a limited-edition wireless controller, a Meta Quest Elite strap, as well as three months of Meta Horizon+ and Xbox Game Pass Ultimate. However, Xbox reports you can pair any Xbox wireless controller or adaptive controller to the headset via Bluetooth.

“We’re proud of what we’ve built together with Meta, and we can’t wait for you to dive into everything the Meta Quest 3S Xbox Edition has to offer,” Wright concluded. “Whether you’re streaming the latest Xbox Game Pass Ultimate titles, exploring the ever-expanding world of VR, or kicking back with immersive entertainment, this is just the beginning of what’s possible when great teams and great technology come together.”

The reveal comes on the same day we reported that Microsoft is allegedly planning a “major” round of layoffs at Xbox next week. If true, this follows a round of Microsoft layoffs in May 2025, where 3% of the company’s headcount was targeted, on top of a smaller round of layoffs before that in January 2025. 650 staff were similarly cut from its games division in September 2024. In May 2024, four studios under subsidiary Bethesda were closed, with some staff “realigned” to other teams. There were also 1900 roles cut in January 2024.

During its recent Q3 2025 results, Microsoft shared that its gaming segment increased revenue 5% year-on-year.



Source link

June 25, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Microsoft dips its toes into VR with limited edition Xbox-themed Meta Quest headset
Game Reviews

Microsoft dips its toes into VR with limited edition Xbox-themed Meta Quest headset

by admin June 24, 2025


Xbox has collaborated with Meta to launch the Meta Quest 3S Xbox Edition, a limited edition VR headset.

The device continues an ongoing partnership between the two companies, following the addition of Xbox cloud gaming to Meta headsets in 2022. This was followed by the release of Xbox Game Pass to Meta Quest 3 back in 2023, as Xbox expanded its cloud gaming offering.

The headset features an Xbox design of black and green, along with matching Touch Plus controllers and a limited-edition Xbox Wireless Controller. The package also includes three months of Meta Horizon+ and three months of Xbox Game Pass Ultimate. It’s out now, and costs £379.99. It is available directly from Meta or exclusively at Argos and EE in the UK.

Unveiling the Exclusive Meta Quest 3S Xbox EditionWatch on YouTube

US purchasers will find the headset at Best Buy for $399.99. Further details can be found on Xbox Wire.

Through the cloud, users will have access to Xbox Game Pass through the headset – though this won’t be fully VR versions of games. Instead, there are four display options, including one cinema-sized screen. Cross-play and cross-progression mean players can continue playing across the VR headset or their Xbox console or PC.

Back in 2019, CEO of Microsoft Gaming Phil Spencer stated VR wasn’t a focus for the company’s then forthcoming Xbox Series X/S consoles.

“I have some issues with VR,” he said. “It’s isolating and I think of games as a communal, kind of together experience. We’re responding to what our customers are asking for and… nobody’s asking for VR.”

He added “nobody’s selling millions and millions” of VR units, before stating: “I think we might get there [eventually]. But yeah, that’s not where our focus is.”

Now, Microsoft is dipping its toes into VR with this collaboration, without developing its own VR system.

It mirrors the company’s recently announced handheld console, the Xbox branded ROG Ally from ASUS. As announced at the recent Xbox Games Showcase, the handheld will be released later this year.

It’s also in contrast to Sony’s PSVR2, which has not been well-supported since its release in 2023. Recently, Beat Studios ended support for Beat Saber on both PS4 and PS5.



Source link

June 24, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Xbox's VR headset with Meta could be released sooner than we thought
Gaming Gear

Xbox’s VR headset with Meta could be released sooner than we thought

by admin June 21, 2025


Xbox has come a long way since its humble beginnings as a chunky console. It’s recently taken on the form of an Asus gaming handheld, and it might even be packaged as a VR headset soon. According to an image leaked on X and Game Sandwich, Xbox is reportedly teaming up with Meta to release an Xbox-branded Quest 3S headset in the coming days. The rumored specs show a very similar build to the base model Quest 3S with 128GB of storage, but will reportedly be bundled with an Xbox wireless controller, a Meta Quest Elite strap and three months of Xbox Game Pass.

There’s been no official announcement from Xbox or Meta yet, but a blog post from 2024 noted that the two companies were working together to “create a limited-edition Meta Quest, inspired by Xbox.” While it’s important to take this rumor with a grain of salt, Xbox seems interested in opening up its hardware for collaboration with other companies, as indicated by the recent release of the ROG Xbox Ally.

As for the rumored Xbox version of the Meta Quest 3S, those who already own the base model headset might not be the target demographic since you can already run Xbox Game Pass on it. Instead, this VR headset could be marketed as a convincing entry point for anyone looking to get into VR and is already familiar with the Xbox ecosystem. According to Game Sandwich‘s sources, this Xbox-branded VR headset will cost $399 and is set to drop on June 24.

If you buy something through a link in this article, we may earn commission.



Source link

June 21, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Meta held talks to buy Thinking Machines, Perplexity, and Safe Superintelligence
Gaming Gear

Meta held talks to buy Thinking Machines, Perplexity, and Safe Superintelligence

by admin June 21, 2025


At this point, it’s becoming easier to say which AI startups Mark Zuckerberg hasn’t looked at acquiring.

In addition to Ilya Sutskever’s Safe Superintelligence (SSI), sources tell me the Meta CEO recently discussed buying ex-OpenAI CTO Mira Murati’s Thinking Machines Lab and Perplexity, the AI-native Google rival. None of these talks progressed to the formal offer stage for various reasons, including disagreements over deal prices and strategy, but together they illustrate how aggressively Zuckerberg has been canvassing the industry to reboot his AI efforts.

Now, details about the team Zuckerberg is assembling are starting to come into view: SSI co-founder and CEO Daniel Gross, along with ex-Github CEO Nat Friedman, are poised to co-lead the Meta AI assistant. Both men will report to Alexandr Wang, the former Scale CEO Zuckerberg just paid over $14 billion to quickly hire. Wang told his Scale team goodbye last Friday and was in the Meta office on Monday. This week, he has been meeting with top Meta leaders (more on that below) and continuing to recruit for the new AI team Zuckerberg has tasked him with building. I expect the team to be unveiled as soon as next week.

Rather than join Meta, Sutskever, Murati, and Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas have all gone on to raise more money at higher valuations. Sutskever, a titan of the AI research community who co-founded OpenAI, recently raised a couple of billion dollars for SSI. Both Meta and Google are investors in his company, I’m told. Murati also just raised a couple of billion dollars. Neither she nor Sutskever is close to releasing a product. Srinivas, meanwhile, is in the process of raising around $500 million for Perplexity.

Spokespeople for all the companies involved either declined to comment or didn’t respond in time for publication. The Information and CNBC first reported Zuckerberg’s talks with Safe Superintelligence, while Bloomberg first reported the Perplexity talks.

While Zuckerberg’s recruiting drive is motivated by the urgency he feels to fix Meta’s AI strategy, the situation also highlights the fierce competition for top AI talent these days. In my conversations this week, those on the inside of the industry aren’t surprised by Zuckerberg making nine-figure — or even, yes, 10-figure — compensation offers for the best AI talent. There are certain senior people at OpenAI, for example, who are already compensated in that ballpark, thanks to the company’s meteoric increase in valuation over the last few years.

Speaking of OpenAI, it’s clear that CEO Sam Altman is at least a bit rattled by Zuckerberg’s hiring spree. His decision to appear on his brother’s podcast this week and say that “none of our best people” are leaving for Meta was probably meant to convey a position of strength, but in reality, it looks like he is throwing his former colleagues under the bus. I was confused by Altman’s suggestion that Meta paying a lot upfront for talent won’t “set up a great culture.” After all, didn’t OpenAI just pay $6.5 billion to hire Jony Ive and his small hardware team?

Alex Himel.

“We think that glasses are the best form factor for AI”

When I joined a Zoom call with Alex Himel, Meta’s VP of wearables, this week, he had just gotten off a call with Zuckerberg’s new AI chief, Alexandr Wang.

“There’s an increasing number of Alexes that I talk to on a regular basis,” Himel joked as we started our conversation about Meta’s new glasses release with Oakley. “I was just in my first meeting with him. There were like three people in a room with the camera real far away, and I was like, ‘Who is talking right now?’ And then I was like, ‘Oh, hey, it’s Alex.’”

The following Q&A has been edited for length and clarity:

How did your meeting with Alex just now go?

The meeting was about how to make AI as awesome as it can be for glasses. Obviously, there are some unique use cases in the glasses that aren’t stuff you do on a phone. The thing we’re trying to figure out is how to balance it all, because AI can be everything to everyone or it could be amazing for more specific use cases.

We’re trying to figure out how to strike the right balance because there’s a ton of stuff in the underlying Llama models and that whole pipeline that we don’t care about on glasses. Then there’s stuff we really, really care about, like egocentric view and trying to feed video into the models to help with some of the really aspirational use cases that we wouldn’t build otherwise.

You are referring to this new lineup with Oakley as “AI glasses.” Is that the new branding for this category? They are AI glasses, not smart glasses?

We refer to the category as AI glasses. You saw Orion. You used it for longer than anyone else in the demo, which I commend you for. We used to think that’s what you needed to hit scale for this new category. You needed the big field of view and display to overlay virtual content. Our opinion of that has definitely changed. We think we can hit scale faster, and AI is the reason we think that’s possible.

Right now, the top two use cases for the glasses are audio — phone calls, music, podcasts — and taking photos and videos. We look at participation rates of our active users, and those have been one and two since launch. Audio is one. A very close second is photos and videos.

AI has been number three from the start. As we’ve been launching more markets — we’re now in 18 — and we’ve been adding more features, AI is creeping up. Our biggest investment by a mile on the software side is AI functionality, because we think that glasses are the best form factor for AI. They are something you’re already wearing all the time. They can see what you see. They can hear what you hear. They’re super accessible.

Is your goal to have AI supersede audio and photo to be the most used feature for glasses, or is that not how you think about it?

From a math standpoint, at best, you could tie. We do want AI to be something that’s increasingly used by more people more frequently. We think there’s definitely room for the audio to get better. There’s definitely room for image quality to get better. The AI stuff has much more headroom.

How much of the AI is onboard the glasses versus the cloud? I imagine you have lots of physical constraints with this kind of device.

We’ve now got one billion-parameter models that can run on the frame. So, increasingly, there’s stuff there. Then we have stuff running on the phone.

If you were watching WWDC, Apple made a couple of announcements that we haven’t had a chance to test yet, but we’re excited about. One is the Wi-Fi Aware APIs. We should be able to transfer photos and videos without having people tap that annoying dialogue box every time. That’d be great. The second one was processor background access, which should allow us to do image processing when you transfer the media over. Syncing would work just like it does on Android.

Do you think the market for these new Oakley glasses will be as big as the Ray-Bans? Or is it more niche because they are more outdoors and athlete-focused?

We work with EssilorLuxottica, which is a great partner. Ray-Ban is their largest brand. Within that, the most popular style is Wayfair. When we launched the original Ray-Ban Meta glasses, we went with the most popular style for the most popular brand.

Their second biggest brand is Oakley. A lot of people wear them. The Holbrook is really popular. The HSTN, which is what we’re launching, is a really popular analog frame. We increasingly see people using the Ray-Ban Meta glasses for active use cases. This is our first step into the performance category. There’s more to come.

What’s your reaction to Google’s announcements at I/O for their XR glasses platform and eyewear partnerships?

We’ve been working with EssilorLuxottica for like five years now. That’s a long time for a partnership. It takes a while to get really in sync. I feel very good about the state of our partnership. We’re able to work quickly. The Oakley Meta glasses are the fastest program we’ve had by quite a bit. It took less than nine months.

I thought the demos they [Google] did were pretty good. I thought some of those were pretty compelling. They didn’t announce a product, so I can’t react specifically to what they’re doing. It’s flattering that people see the traction we’re getting and want to jump in as well.

On the AR glasses front, what have you been learning from Orion now that you’ve been showing it to the outside world?

We’ve been going full speed on that. We’ve actually hit some pretty good internal milestones for the next version of it, which is the one we plan to sell. The biggest learning from using them is that we feel increasingly good about the input and interaction model with eye tracking and the neural band. I wore mine during March Madness in the office. I was literally watching the games. Picture yourself sitting at a table with a virtual TV just above people’s heads. It was amazing.

  • TikTok gets to keep operating illegally. As expected, President Trump extended his enforcement deadline for the law that has banned a China-owned TikTok in the US. It’s essential to understand what is really happening here: Trump is instructing his Attorney General not to enforce earth-shattering fines on Apple, Google, and every other American company that helps operate TikTok. The idea that he wouldn’t use this immense leverage to extract whatever he wants from these companies is naive, and this whole process makes a mockery of everyone involved, not to mention the US legal system.
  • Amazon will hire fewer people because of AI. When you make an employee memo a press release, you’re trying to tell the whole world what’s coming. In this case, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy wants to make clear that he’s going to fully embrace AI to cut costs. Roughly 30 percent of Amazon’s code is already written by AI, and I’m sure Jassy is looking at human-intensive areas, such as sales and customer service, to further automate.

If you haven’t already, don’t forget to subscribe to The Verge, which includes unlimited access to Command Line and all of our reporting.

As always, I welcome your feedback, especially if you’ve also turned down Zuck. You can respond here or ping me securely on Signal.





Source link

June 21, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Meta tells the Oversight Board it isn't removing the word 'transgenderism' from its hate speech rules
Product Reviews

Meta tells the Oversight Board it isn’t removing the word ‘transgenderism’ from its hate speech rules

by admin June 21, 2025


If anyone was holding out hope that the Oversight Board would provide some kind of check on Meta’s rewritten hate speech policy, Meta has just made it clear exactly where it stands. The company published its formal response to the board’s criticism, and has declined to commit to any substantive steps to change its rules.

The Oversight Board previously criticized Meta’s January policy changes as “hastily announced” and wrote that it was “concerned” about the company’s decision to use the term “transgenderism” in its rewritten community standards. The company’s policy, announced by Mark Zuckerberg in January shortly before President Donald Trump took office, now permits people to claim that LGBTQ people are mentally ill.

“We do allow allegations of mental illness or abnormality when based on gender or sexual orientation, given political and religious discourse about transgenderism and homosexuality and common non-serious usage of words such as ‘weird,'” the policy now states. In a decision related to two videos depicting public harassment of transgender women, the Oversight Board had sided with Meta on its decision to leave the videos up. But the board recommended that Meta remove the word “transgenderism” from its policy. “For its rules to have legitimacy, Meta must seek to frame its content policies neutrally,” the board said.

The word has a long association with discrimination and dehumanization, human rights groups have said. Human Rights Campaign noted that the term is “socially and scientifically invalid” and “often wielded by anti-trans activists to delegitimize transgender people.” GLAAD has likewise noted that “framing a person’s transgender identity as a ‘concept’ or ‘ideology’ reduces a core identity to an opinion that can be debated, and therefore justifies dehumanization, discrimination, and real-world violence against transgender, nonbinary, and gender nonconforming people.”

In its formal response, Meta officials said they were still “assessing feasibility” of removing the word from its policies. The company said it would “consider ways to update the terminology” but added that “achieving clarity and transparency in our public explanations may sometimes require including language considered offensive to some.”

Meta also declined to commit to the board’s three other recommendations in the case. The board had recommended that Meta “identify how the policy and enforcement updates may adversely impact the rights of LGBTQIA+ people, including minors, especially where these populations are at heightened risk,” take steps to mitigate those risks and issue regular reports to the board and the public about its work.

It had also recommended that Meta allow users to designate other individuals who are able to report bullying and harassment on their behalf, and that the company make improvements to reduce errors when people report bullying and harassment. Meta said it was “assessing feasibility” of these suggestions.

Meta’s response raises uncomfortable questions about just how much influence the ostensibly independent Oversight Board can have. Zuckerberg said that Meta created the Oversight Board so that it wouldn’t have to make consequential policy decisions on its own. Previously, the social network has asked the board for help in major decisions, like Donald Trump’s suspension and its rules for celebrities and politicians. But Zuckerberg’s decision to roll back hate speech protections and ditch third-party fact checking took the board by surprise.

Meta has always been free to ignore the Oversight Board’s recommendations, but it has allowed it to influence some of its more controversial policies. That seems like it could be changing, however. Zuckerberg’s decision to roll back hate speech protections and ditch third-party fact checking took the board by surprise. And the company now seems to have little interest in engaging with the board’s criticism of those changes.



Source link

June 21, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Meta and Oakley announce new 'perfomance AI' smart glasses for athletes
Gaming Gear

Meta and Oakley announce new ‘perfomance AI’ smart glasses for athletes

by admin June 20, 2025


Meta is expanding beyond its popular Ray-Ban Meta Smart Glasses with a new lineup of frames created in collaboration with Oakley. The Oakley Meta HSTN (pronounced HOW-stuhn, apparently) will be available in several variants, not unlike Meta’s other smart glasses. Meta first teased that it had a new partnership on the way earlier in June, and rumors that the company was expanding beyond its current frames were reported by Bloomberg back in January.

Despite rumors that the Oakley glasses would feature a camera embedded in the bridge of the frame, these first models keep the lens on one side and an LED privacy light on the other. The ultra-wide 12MP camera can capture footage in 3K, compared with the 1080p video that the Meta Ray-Bans are capable of recording. Along with taking POV video calls, shooting photos and livestreaming what you see, the camera can be used to answer questions about what you’re seeing with the help of Meta AI.

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said on Threads that these frames, which are based on Oakley’s HSTN style, are “built for action.” So they’re perhaps designed to be more durable than Meta’s older models, though they have the same IPX4 water resistance rating. They feature Prizm and Prizm Polarized lens tech from Oakley, which are designed to protect wearers’ eyes from ultraviolet light.

The battery is rated for eight hours of typical use on a single charge (which would be double that of the Meta Ray-Bans) and up to 19 hours on standby. With the included charging case, you should be able to juice up Oakley Meta HSTN glasses from zero to 50 percent of battery capacity in 22 minutes, and to 85 percent in 45 minutes. The case, which is not water-resistant, is said to deliver up to 40 additional hours of on-the-go charging.

The new frames have open-ear Bluetooth speakers, five onboard microphones and speakers for talking to Meta AI and the ability to take calls, send messages and play music from your phone. There are touch controls on the side of the frames where you can adjust volume and so on.

Meta has also been rolling out live translation features for its smart glasses. The company says the Oakley Meta HSTN glasses can help with accessibility too. You’ll be able to send messages and take photos hands-free. Meta notes that its AI will be able to describe what the camera is seeing. In addition, wearers will be able to connect to the Be My Eyes network and receive assistance from sighted volunteers.

Meta/Oakley

Meta and Oakley say these are “Performance AI glasses.” You’ll be able to ask Meta AI for contextual information that might help in the moment, such as the wind speed so you can try to adjust for that while you’re playing golf.

Meta working with Oakley shouldn’t come as too much of a surprise. Oakley is owned by EssilorLuxottica, the same fashion conglomerate that owns Ray-Bans. The companies extended their partnership with a new long-term agreement in September 2024 so that they could “collaborate into the next decade to develop multi-generational smart eyewear products.”

The first, limited-edition Oakley Meta HSTN have gold accents and 24K Prizm Polar lenses. They cost $499 and will be available to preorder starting on July 11 in the US, Canada, UK, Ireland, France, Italy, Spain, Austria, Belgium, Australia, Germany, Sweden, Norway, Finland and Denmark. Meta and Oakley plan to bring the lineup to Mexico, India and the United Arab Emirates later this year.

Other models will arrive later in the summer and start at $399. They’ll be available in the following frame and lens colors:

  • Oakley Meta HSTN Desert with Prizm Ruby Lenses

  • Oakley Meta HSTN Black with PrizmPolar Black Lenses

  • Oakley Meta HSTN Shiny Brown with Prizm Polar Deep-Water Lenses

  • Oakley Meta HSTN Black with Transitions Amethyst Lenses

  • Oakley Meta HSTN Clear with Transitions Grey Lenses



Source link

June 20, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Meta To Hire Ex-Github Ceo Nat Friedman For Ai Team Reports
GameFi Guides

Meta to Hire Ex-GitHub CEO Nat Friedman for AI Team: Reports

by admin June 20, 2025



Meta Platforms, the company behind Facebook, is in discussions to bring on Nat Friedman, the former CEO of GitHub, to strengthen its artificial intelligence (AI) efforts. This news comes from a report by The Information, which spoke to someone familiar with the matter.

Meta is also reportedly talking to Daniel Gross, who is Friedman’s partner in their investment firm NFDG. The company may want both of them to join its growing AI team. The company is considering buying part of the NFDG investment fund. 

These efforts are part of Meta’s bigger push to stay competitive in the AI space. Tech companies around the world are racing to lead in AI, and Meta is investing heavily. Just last week, it announced a $14.8 billion investment in Scale AI,s its second-biggest investment ever.

Meta also brought on Alexandr Wang, the CEO of Scale AI, to help lead a new team focused on “superintelligence.” Friedman is not new to Meta. He is already part of the company’s external Advisory Group, which gives input on technology and product development. So far, Meta hasn’t officially commented on the talks.

Also Read: WhatsApp Now Supports Bitcoin with Sati Wallet



Source link

June 20, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Dune Awakening’s early meta is an unbalanced, helicopter-infested nightmare, and I never want it to end
Game Reviews

Dune Awakening’s early meta is an unbalanced, helicopter-infested nightmare, and I never want it to end

by admin June 19, 2025


The Dune: Awakening community is torn right now. In the Deep Desert, roaming hordes of orniphopters (the Dune equivilent of a plane or helicopter) are dominating the end game and making an already dangerous area even more perilous. The thing is, I don’t think this is a bad thing. In fact, I think it’s good for the game in the long run.

For those who aren’t familiar, the Deep Desert is a no-holds-barred open world PvP area that makes up the majority of Dune: Awakening’s end game. It’s a vast, mostly barren, landscape where the best materials can be found. It’s also a place where any player can kill you and snatch any money or materials you have on you.

So the stakes are high. At the moment, the Deep Desert is being patrolled by Assault Orniphopters. They may not be able to crush you to death anymore, but they’re still armed with missiles, allowing pilots to shoot down other orniphopters with relative ease. One can be evaded easily enough, but when eight of them fly towards you, you’re done for.

Check out our video retrospective on Dune games here!Watch on YouTube

As you can imagine, there are numerous complaints about these flocks of orniphopters dotted around social media and Dune: Awakening community hubs. Take this Reddit post conveying the sadness tied to the Deep Desert compared to Hagga Basin. Or this one, in which user nowheels64 makes a plea for the lock-on missile launchers that appear in the recent Dune movies. The frustration is real. It’s palpable.

Those annoyed by the Deep Desert all have valid opinions. It is undoubtedly frustrating when you’re on your own, mining materials, and get blown to pieces from some unseen threat on high. Losing all your things is a bummer, there’s no two ways about it.

But I’m going to make an argument that the scurge of orniphopters isn’t inherently a bad thing for the Dune: Awakening end game. The Deep Desert, the Landsraad – it’s all about collaboration with your fellows within the faction you have chosen. Player guilds are attached by the hip to the Landsraad, and objectives assigned each week are so lofty as to practically require group effort. Could one person theoretically farm up 1,000 Adept swords and hand them in on their own? Sure. Is that the intention? Obviously not.

So where does this leave the player, fresh from Hagga Basin? Well, they’re outnumbered and unable to make a real dent in the Landsraad. The only option is to join a guild, to dive headfirst into the social pool of a very community-focused end game.

Dune: Awakening doesn’t force you to do this, to be a social animal, but it’s so obviously the point that the only other thing Funcom could do to emphasise it further is to build a big neon sign that says “join a guild” in the small PvE slice of the Deep Desert.

Flying out alone, like this, is perilous. That’s kind of the point! | Image credit: Eurogamer

I appreciate that this isn’t everyone’s bag. In fact, history has taught us it’s not the majority of people’s preferred way to play. Throne and Liberty lost a lot of players who didn’t want to touch the guild zone control mechanics, no matter how cool sieges looked. Dark Fall Online was incredibly PvP focused, and incredibly niche as a result. In World of Warcraft, if you do a War Mode world quest and see another player PvP tagged, a lot of folks will just /wave and go on with their business.

But with a game like Dune: Awakening, the conflict between the factions is so integral to the mechanics, and even the narrative. You’re on Arrakis during the war of assassins, Landsraad bonuses are faction-wide. It’s Atreides vs Harkonnen baby, all the way down into the mud. To shy away from that would be to separate from the source material in a way I’m not convinced Funcom wants to do.

I’m not going to sit here and tell people they’re playing the game wrong: you play the game you pay for however you want. There’s nothing wrong with popping back to Dune: Awakening when a new faction or major story update happens. But in terms of the Deep Desert, I hope this spirit of danger remains. It can be aggravating, yet it’s also a necessary force to push players into the wider faction conflict. And isn’t that what Dune is really all about?



Source link

June 19, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3

Categories

  • Crypto Trends (996)
  • Esports (750)
  • Game Reviews (692)
  • Game Updates (875)
  • GameFi Guides (987)
  • Gaming Gear (942)
  • NFT Gaming (970)
  • Product Reviews (932)
  • Uncategorized (1)

Recent Posts

  • Shiba Inu price nears big move as whale activity dries
  • Custodia CEO Flags TradFi Vulnerability in Crypto Bear Market
  • The first premium handheld from Ayaneo’s budget brand arrives in September
  • SHIB Price Prediction for August 24
  • Best 360 Cameras (2025), Tested and Reviewed

Recent Posts

  • Shiba Inu price nears big move as whale activity dries

    August 24, 2025
  • Custodia CEO Flags TradFi Vulnerability in Crypto Bear Market

    August 24, 2025
  • The first premium handheld from Ayaneo’s budget brand arrives in September

    August 24, 2025
  • SHIB Price Prediction for August 24

    August 24, 2025
  • Best 360 Cameras (2025), Tested and Reviewed

    August 24, 2025

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

About me

Welcome to Laughinghyena.io, your ultimate destination for the latest in blockchain gaming and gaming products. We’re passionate about the future of gaming, where decentralized technology empowers players to own, trade, and thrive in virtual worlds.

Recent Posts

  • Shiba Inu price nears big move as whale activity dries

    August 24, 2025
  • Custodia CEO Flags TradFi Vulnerability in Crypto Bear Market

    August 24, 2025

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

@2025 laughinghyena- All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by Pro


Back To Top
Laughing Hyena
  • Home
  • Hyena Games
  • Esports
  • NFT Gaming
  • Crypto Trends
  • Game Reviews
  • Game Updates
  • GameFi Guides
  • Shop

Shopping Cart

Close

No products in the cart.

Close