Already happening. I work in advertising and marketing and with EVERYONE saying “this ad was created using AI” I’ve done some ads mocking them (and seen others as well) touting the novelty of the ad being created by a human. Ads by humans, for humans. But that will get old quick too and we’ll move on to the next thing.
Also with products like Baby Monitors you’ll find they are often MORE expensive if they don’t have an app or smart features that connect to the internet or your phone because the fear of cameras in the home being hacked. Less features being sold as a privacy feature that they can then charge extra for.
The real buzzword is ChatGPT/GPT, the AI is fine because you can indeed replace conventional algorithms but almost all of those don't actually need a model like GPT. With that being said of course the BBQ and cooking in general could work fine without AI.
@@taktuscat4250 Get a heater that has a timer before it turns off. I guess my 8 year old thermsotat that changes temperature based on a schedule is AI, too.
Technically most of them are using ML in the traditional sense, just only running inference. The grill and the monitor may be the only ones that actually perform any training though.
@@theyoungster2 even if that were the case. it won't have any future troubles or mistakes like human does. not to mention when overgrilling and burns it. so long term usage would be amazing imo.
Like every device you buy, you first need to get used to it. I'm not a big cook, but every time I use a different oven, I feel like I need to get used to it. Anyway you can set it manually how you like it and based on that it's gonna make slight adjustments and you tell it if you liked it better or not. @@theyoungster2
@@Vrtox1337maybe he's your missing father figure, he didn't want you to recognize him and realize that he actually isn't buying any milk and just abandoned you
@@yfssemYep. There is so much AI garbage nowadays, that it's easy to forget one of its biggest and most important use cases: accessibility. He actually visited my friend's booth as well. There is a LOT of accessibility stuff at CES. Not as flashy as the Sony car or the Rabbit AI thingy, but way more important to society.
tbf "smart" is a lot shorter and more convenient a word than "you need always on-internet, an account and a subscription for your toilet to flush or your doorbell to ring". Of course the proper word to use instead would have been "stupid". Or "privacy nuke".
@@Thisandthat8908 I wonder if this marketing is backed by research that shows that ppl will buy things as long as it has AI in the name or are they just keeping up with other brands that start using "AI". Obviously, AI is in the news but it doesn't mean normies will spend money on it. Bike is extra stupid for sure.
I almost spit my drink into my screen when you said there's no AI processing happening in the mouse. That was (I believe) unintentionally the funniest thing I've heard all week. Thanks for the lesson, Uncle Linus. You are the Tech Tip man after all.
1/2 year warranty on your $1600 dollar robot dog. Showing a lot of confidence in their own product aren't they. Can i get pet care insurance to cover it after that?
I saw that too. Even if I had a reason or the money to buy it, that alone would make me look the other way. Even the higher end ones were 1 year warranty’s
That mech is just waiting for be militarized and fitted with 2 turrets! Imagine that patrolling the streets! Imagine when this technology is placed in the wrong hands!
It looks to be an excellent way to get more data on customers that can then be sold to companies looking to improve their targeted advertising. Selling those audio transcripts, info on what sort of food you're making on your AI grill etc. will be a good way to get additional profit on every device you sell as it's very much the type of data that Alphabet and Meta are already buying.
what i feel is that a lot of these products are great products with great ideas that can be improved by removing the AI feature in it, thus reducing the amount it needs to phone home
The starting price for those robot dogs is... surprisingly affordable. I honestly thought they were going to stay firmly in the realm of the business/military markets, but to think that I could reasonably buy one if I really wanted to is absolutely shocking to me.
yup. Price is similar to a good drone-I guarantee pretty soon we'll see someone programming herds of them to synchronize their movements similar to the drone light shows. I wanted one of these pretty bad when they were 50k. It's gonna be kinda hard to resist at 1/30th of the price (ish)-now i just gotta convince the wife we need a creepy robot dog - maybe i can argue the fact that it wont poop on the floor
Yes, also it comes with a 6 months warranty and the fact that getting a replacement battery or fixing a broken piece will be a hell considering this products are usually made by the greediest companies that will lock everything down to their proprietary tools and you'll probably have to wait for some Chinese smuggler who finds a way to source parts outside of the factory because there will never be an option to buy them in the official website, yes I'm also excited but excited about the rain of bad reviews this will have when the shit hits the fan and the company act like most companies do nowadays.
Seems affordable but I'm anticipating that costs will crop up down the line either directly (cost to replace new parts/proprietary anti-repair 'features') or indirectly (like how smart TVs are also surprisingly cheap...because they will log everything you do on them and sell that to advertisers. At least my TV can't follow me around.)
¨Our advanced AI technology can shoot those ice cubes that don't wanna get into your glass to the parts of your floor were you're less likely to step on¨ and it shoots the ice under the table.
I don't get why people have such a hard time using an ice dispenser. My dad, no matter what fridge he uses, spills ice on the floor. It's insane. I can't remember the last time I didn't get all the ice in my cup. It's like people are handicapped.
have you tryed just have the cup under it? in all my years i have never once sean any dispenser do that unless you use a small ass cup or no cup at all
That matress tech has been in Dreams (UK mattress shop) for a fair few years now. They use it to take your sleep measurements and then show you a few mattresses that might suit you best. Seems these guys have just gone one step further and sold that instead
That's not the same as taking a literal mould of your body and producing one with that shape. Even memory foam ones have higher pressure on parts of your body that sink deeper into it, like a spring. (Whether it's that useful is another question but it really isn't the same.)
To be honest, the mattress endgame design has pretty much already been achieved with the EightSleep Pod. Nothing else seems to come close to what its capable of to help you sleep
@@TAP7a The EightSleep doesn't do what is shown within the video for the mattress that changes based on how you sleep. The Eightsleep is temperature. Both of them are capable of data like heartbeat and "comfort".
From what I can tell though - the monitor simply automatically highlights information for the player. It doesn't take any action on his behalf within the game itself (like the aimbots do).
@@GoldenSun5631 well, if we take League of Legends as the example, there is an app called Mobalytics that does a lot more and a lot more useful things than this anyway
all its doing is back seat gaming. are we going to ban looking at the map and giving call outs? i could have a friend sit beside me and look at the mini map and tell me where people are coming from, is that a bannable offense? what next? ban discord users? cancel every stream that has a low delay? might as well ban all types of dead chat while we are at it because teammates back seat game after death all the time. lets just get rid of maps, lets get rid of text chat, lets get rid of voice chat, because all of them can be used to a players advantage edit: the ai is just a guy sitting there and everytime someone shows up on the map its saying "over there" "now over there" "over here too", somebody who can look at a map can do the same job.
So amazed by the quality of the sound on all of these videos. Every shot is so crisp given how many people are around the show floor going on with their conversations!
I'm glad you covered some accessibility tech, that's so exciting! Despite being crucial for so many people’s well-being and independence, accessibility technology is often overlooked by the tech community. I hope you feature more of it moving forward because parents and schools often have limited sources of information and reviews for these products, and they have to rely on the tech industry’s claims. It would be amazing to see you guys cover some of the accessibility tech out there. Some is really cool and some is just snake oil so your professional opinion would not only be valuable to individual families but also to schools and colleges looking at fulfilling accomodation needs thus filling a vacuum for this type of content.
The thing that worries me is you know this stuff is going to cost a sub fee going forward. They will hook you in, then start charging for a sub down the line with new generations of the product. Worse still the hardware will have no option to not have it equip with the tech that costs money. So, the hardware price will go up regardless of if you want to pay a sub to whatever rubbish it is. My thoughts are it will start with "extra XYZ for $" or "hey you like this feature, how about this other better one for just $? a month". Its going to happen.
Don't forget that this is CES we're talking about. Expect the products which are practical and in demand by consumers to be overshadowed by spectacles. If people see all this and somehow lose the ability to discern useful applications of AI from AI (or pseudo AI) gimmicks, that's on the consumer or the media. Caveat emptor.
9:50 I swear that UI on coco has been around for years. There's memes of it finding something in the background and saying Angry:100% and stuff like that. Trying to remember which facial recognition engine it is, but that is not first party.
AI really going to be used as a defense for cheating starting soon "A real human could have aimed onto the person and shot their weapon. The AI just simply did all the aiming as an assistance. Aimbot isn't cheating"
One through line I have been enjoying in all of the CES videos is people walking into frame, realizing they’re on camera, and then trying to escape the shot.
9:00 the moment you said it was algorithmic my desire to buy the bed shot way up. Nice. We don't need to approximate everything with AI - we can still create extremely successful algorithms ourselves. It takes balls to do it the harder way which losses out in hype for a more accurate representation & intellegent approach 😁
@@Hugh.G.RectionxFor companies, the US Copyright Office has on multiple occasions denied AI created content. So companies are not going to use it outside of stock content, so that's a severe hamper on profitability. Also, the compute power needed to train these systems is not sustainable in the long term without subscriptions
i really do hope so. any generative AI be it text, image, or video was definitely trained on copyrighted data and things should 100% be done about this. if social media can have a copyright explosion then so does genAI
How about an AI mouse with screen capturing and enemie detection for CS. It will move and shoot automatically. Maybe with automatic spray patter compassion. It is not cheating, because it only uses information the player already has.
@@chiken9913lol it obviously is cheating and some people are already using AI to cheat pretty much exactly like this. Though they generally use a different pc to do the AI stuff.
i wish linus would have talked to the bartender. i wonder if you said "can it, rust bucket" and the bot pulls out a chainsaw arm like the bots on fallout.
I hate tech trends with such a burning passion. It's such an enormous waste of time and resources to cram "AI" into every little electronic device and tech gadget where literally nobody will ever need it, just so you can tell your boss you have something to present at some advertisement event. ChatGPT on your bike? Are you serious? An "AI" mouse that literally just has extra buttons to trigger some software that simply uses long existing Google APIs? So, pretty much literally a scam, then?.. I've been asked to cram stuff like machine learning and voice recognition into a warehouse management app I've worked on for years, just so we could get a spot on some "most innovative blah blah" competition by SAP, and always had to push against it because we had real customers with real needs, all whose feature requests we already didn't have enough time for. Insert "society if xyz" utopia meme here with "if tech companies worked on solving real problems instead of chasing trends."
man they missed out calling the bartending robot Takahashi from fallout 4, and having it only say "Nan-ni shimasu-ka" lmao it even looks like the robot
At 11:42, one application of those is for surveying. I work for a surveying dealer, and my boss saw one being demod at a show, and specifically used for gps mapping, rather than having a person walk the distance.
Working in the Laser Integration Industry the amount of AI tags being placed on algorithmic-based products is ridiculous, I wonder if the buzzword will soon turn into a negative when it comes to promoting products.
If so, Apple was right by not calling their own products and features AI, and just using other more specific words like machine learning (ML) and large language models (LLMs).
I mean if something uses a neural network to do something its technically AI. But who knows if it really needs to be AI orif it can be done better without it
Depends on what you consider "AI". If AI only refers to massive models like ChatGPT, then for the most part yes. If AI includes all forms of machine learning, then no. Modern speech-to-text and translation systems are far better than the older non-machine-learning-based systems. I don't know how the monitor works exactly, but if it can be trained for new games then it is using machine learning even if only relatively simple forms.
@@Hugh.G.Rectionx literally all of them. It’s also telling that a lot of these brands are Chinese, where OpenAI and ChatGPT are either banned, heavily limited or replaced by a censored version of GPT.
@@Hugh.G.Rectionx sharp carousel multi choice microwave from 1997... if you need some help, I'll just point you in the direction of a video named "The Antique Microwave Oven that's Better than Yours"
@@Hugh.G.Rectionx you don't need a a robot bartender, you can use a coffee vending machine that is much cheaper, smaller and faster. You don't need AI inside an electric bicycle, api thing is cool tho.
8:00 I legit think I need that bed in my life! Most of my quality of life issues revolve around poor sleep compounding other things like RA. Despite trying every type of mattress and pillow out there, I still feel that I haven't found a good fit.
We are extremely close to having "translators" that you can wear around your neck to automatically translate your language and another language INTO a headset so that you can understand people. It won't be long at all. We are on the precipice of having no more language barriers at all which is wild to think about. AR glasses that enable you to read foreign characters via AI combined with character recognition as well as a "communicator" that can use AI to automatically convert your speech into audible foreign languages and send foreign language input into an earpiece to your native language. Crazy times. We're not there yet, but we are very, very close.
given what google Lens and related apps on my Pixel can already do, I am super surprised we don't have a wide range of such products yet. The software is clearly there and works pretty well, so I really wonder why the attempts at making hardware to use it more conveniently have failed so far.
For English/French/Spanish I'd almost agree because translating between closely related languages with plenty of material to teach your LLM on is relatively straight forward, but if we're talking about someone speaking Jin Chinese and having it be translated to Finnish on the fly it's more "understanding maybe kinda, understanding near to speaking the same language probably impossible with current approaches".
I have to say for some languages and dialects I have horrible experiences with even Google translate, and worse with other alternatives (even "AI"ones). I don't know how soon I'd use a wearable translator. I've gotten the opposite meaning at times, which could cause huge problems if not obvious by context
I hate where this world is going. AI story writing, AI songwriting, AI singers of whoever you want, AI gaming cheat, AI chefs. It's depressing. Creativity and talent is going to be irrelevant one day.
ai will have massive privacy concerns as it get more used in stuff ever ware have we fully understood the risks of ai i think we need more time and work before it gets put in to everything
This is the same for every technology ever invented 😂. People were terrified of the motor vehicle, planes, the internet, vacinnes, and so on. This ain't any different.
I think the further loss of privacy is a major component as to why it's becoming an industry trend. There's a lot of money to be made from either selling the data from recording the audio of your phone calls for that AI transcribing device, or using that data to create more effective targeted advertising. AI means you're getting input from a customer, you're connecting to the internet (as all new tech does even if it's not needed), and the customer doesn't understand your LLM or machine learning algorithm well enough to know there's no reason for you to be asking for GPS info on your phone (maybe it gets used for accents, maybe only further profits).
except the fact that the company's making this ai stuff are not doing anything in our favor they have made use the product and its not a good idea to just jump in blind to any risks @@zaneplatt3533
The difference with having better peripherals and having a straight up cheat is that a cheat is doing something for you. With nice peripherals you still have to do all the work. Your aim doesn't magically get better with a nicer mouse, You yourself must improve your aim to exceed the limits of your old peripherals, if those even held you back in the first place.
what if there is an AI mouse that corrects overshooting your target, or shaky hands? the monitor is doing something for you, looking at the minimap and projecting the information in a more noticeable location. this is only the beginning, we will see more questionable AI peripherals soon. as linus said, drawing an outline around an enemy in a shooter could be next. or how about calculating bullet drop and enemy movement in battlefield and telling you where to aim?
@@simpson6700Peripherals for managing bullet spread or recoil already exist and are problematic for cheat detection since they’re not running on the computer or console. I think the “assistant” shown in this video is also really difficult to detect because its effects are somewhat subtle. On the other hand, it seems to just be checking for enemy portraits on the minimap, so it’s hardly “AI” compared to emergent tech nowadays. Just basic machine learning. God only knows what more advanced AI might enable.
The peripherals are doing something for you, they're providing crucial situational awareness that other players have to actually train to get. It's pay to win nonsense.
Did Linus miss the ai catflap with facial recognition? Seriously Linus, that thing is so funny I'd watch every video about it, including a feature legnth.
Is it face recognition for your cat? That's stupid. That's more complex and less accurate then what I have, which is a cat flap that reads the RFID chip in the cat's neck in case it gets lost. If it detects the right chip, it opens the flap. No stupid AI or cameras required.
Most of this is just straight up gimmicky and a bit overkill. The AI mouse is just is just a regular mouse with extra macro google shortcut buttons. The bike does not need it's own touchscreen and cellular connection, just buy a good strong phone mount. The AI grill is kinda cool and would be useful for someone like me who is pretty much useless in the kitchen.
Ok, the name is a stretch but the mouse is a pretty decent concept, imagine programming that one mouse button to launch Gemini Ultra and speak what you need it to do. The amount of work, you can get done, it would save everyone so much time. This is pretty much just a way of testing the waters, seeing what works and what doesn't.
For anyone who doesn't know what a 3-letter agency is, it is an organization that tends to be strict on law and normally related to the government such as the FBI, CIA, DEA, etc.
9:31 now we know how linus really feels about going to these events: 16.4 % angry 0.2 % disgusted 16.2% afraid 14.0% happy 31.8% sad 10.1% surprised and 11.4% neutral
The monitor is the most interesting To give one example of this thing’s potential, I can imagine War Thunder players using it to create an incredibly capable fire control system for even 1.0 vehicles Automatic lead, target recognition and tracking, maybe an integrated rangefinder that’s quicker than the stock ones
@@jernaugurgeh451 Could be cheaper for people. It could also be safer for those that want a personal bartender at home(no need for another person to live with you).
Me seeing this and I think privacy is dead by now. The amount of information these products would store in order to work is insane. I hope there will still be some non AI products since I think services like google collect more then enough information on the public.
Naw, just don't buy. It's up to you to giving away your privacy. But yeah, in the end, we are screwed so we might as well chose what company gets our data. :(
If everyone around you has several AI devices with cameras and sensors, it won't matter if you "don't buy", they'll still be collecting information about you@@HumbertoHernandez
The battle for privacy ended a long time ago. The general public doesn't care, and it makes too much money for corporations or politicians to do anything about it. It's over, may as well enjoy the conveniences.
This is the chance for games to refuse to boot if it detects AI gaming peripherals. If they don't I'm afraid they'll start adding it to more and more products
@@AstroDash42kernel level anti cheat is just becoming more popular at this point they’re gonna need to go through everything connected to your system to detect smh
@@AstroDash42I do think some game devs do it, Rust blocked a bunch of mice because they had built in recoil scripts if you try to launch with them it just closes the game.
That's just a metaphor for what's actually happening. It uses reinforcement learning which trains on user feedback. It's the same type of training that game playing neural networks use that you can find on channels like code bullet
The questionable use of the term AI right now to market products is equally hilarious and obnoxious. If your product has NO electronics in it at all you can always just say “we leveraged AI technology to…” blah blah blah “best user experience”… “innovation”… “cutting edge” “machine learning models” “future!” Neat. Now where did I leave my Web 3.0 Ultra HD Cloud Based Blockchain neural NFT smart Pencil?
This may be the most extensive single example of “why on earth would I need that?” I’ve ever seen. The mattress one was pretty neat, the rest ranged from pointless, like the bike or oven, to straight up creepy with the AI assistants.
I've got the feeling that AI will be so overused that in several months/years we'll see a lot of products proudly advertised as "non-AI products"
Already happening. I work in advertising and marketing and with EVERYONE saying “this ad was created using AI” I’ve done some ads mocking them (and seen others as well) touting the novelty of the ad being created by a human.
Ads by humans, for humans. But that will get old quick too and we’ll move on to the next thing.
Also with products like Baby Monitors you’ll find they are often MORE expensive if they don’t have an app or smart features that connect to the internet or your phone because the fear of cameras in the home being hacked. Less features being sold as a privacy feature that they can then charge extra for.
Kind of like the NoPhone
It's also less data that they can harvest and resell. @@heyjustj
Amen.
AI, the new marketing buzzword for anything that is even REMOTELY automatic.
Bimetallic thermostat on a portable heater? AI!!
They're trying to get away with calling anything with an algorithm "AI"
@@pootispiker2866autonomously change temperature reading without human intervention
The real buzzword is ChatGPT/GPT, the AI is fine because you can indeed replace conventional algorithms but almost all of those don't actually need a model like GPT. With that being said of course the BBQ and cooking in general could work fine without AI.
@@taktuscat4250 Get a heater that has a timer before it turns off. I guess my 8 year old thermsotat that changes temperature based on a schedule is AI, too.
3:18 They actually did a decent job of disguising that internet connected microphone as a mouse.
5:05 the dude moving away from the camera is great lol
the grill is probably one of the only thing where its actually machine learning in the traditional sense and it actually is kinda nice to see
Technically most of them are using ML in the traditional sense, just only running inference. The grill and the monitor may be the only ones that actually perform any training though.
Already exist in microwaves.
Welp, time to have my steak cooked like pure garbage the first 20 uses before it finally figures it out.
@@theyoungster2 even if that were the case.
it won't have any future troubles or mistakes like human does.
not to mention when overgrilling and burns it.
so long term usage would be amazing imo.
Like every device you buy, you first need to get used to it. I'm not a big cook, but every time I use a different oven, I feel like I need to get used to it. Anyway you can set it manually how you like it and based on that it's gonna make slight adjustments and you tell it if you liked it better or not. @@theyoungster2
5:04 props to the guy on the left who realized what was happening and went around behind the camera (probably).
Dood was legit quick on turning around.
Maybe he is a wanted criminal and was panicking :^)
@@Vrtox1337maybe he's your missing father figure, he didn't want you to recognize him and realize that he actually isn't buying any milk and just abandoned you
Lol
He was AI-generated.
The Stevie Wonder cameo was wild as hell 😂😂😂
It seemed random but I think he's there to promote tech that can help guide blind people without the strain of a real human being or service dog.
@@yfssemah that’s awesome. Didn’t think about that.
@@yfssemYep. There is so much AI garbage nowadays, that it's easy to forget one of its biggest and most important use cases: accessibility.
He actually visited my friend's booth as well. There is a LOT of accessibility stuff at CES. Not as flashy as the Sony car or the Rabbit AI thingy, but way more important to society.
@@BonJoviBeatlesLedZep thats really good to hear
I didn't even know the man was still alive!
remember how they tried making an app for all household objects and calling it "smart"?
now they just renamed it from smart to AI
tbf "smart" is a lot shorter and more convenient a word than "you need always on-internet, an account and a subscription for your toilet to flush or your doorbell to ring".
Of course the proper word to use instead would have been "stupid". Or "privacy nuke".
@@Thisandthat8908 I wonder if this marketing is backed by research that shows that ppl will buy things as long as it has AI in the name or are they just keeping up with other brands that start using "AI". Obviously, AI is in the news but it doesn't mean normies will spend money on it.
Bike is extra stupid for sure.
@@GH0STST4RSCR34M Two syllables vs one. Smart is easier and shorter to say than AI.
Smart is so 2020. Now it’s AI! With ChatGPT ™️
AI has really become a buzz word, it’s not the tech you want or need but it’s what some marketing team cooked up
It was always a buzzword that keep getting rediscovered. Remember "AI neuro fuzzy" rice cookers?
ai works on hype and without any hype its dead in the water.
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Almost none of this uses AI, or at least doesn't need to. It's hilarious and sad.
I almost spit my drink into my screen when you said there's no AI processing happening in the mouse. That was (I believe) unintentionally the funniest thing I've heard all week. Thanks for the lesson, Uncle Linus. You are the Tech Tip man after all.
1/2 year warranty on your $1600 dollar robot dog. Showing a lot of confidence in their own product aren't they. Can i get pet care insurance to cover it after that?
I saw that too. Even if I had a reason or the money to buy it, that alone would make me look the other way. Even the higher end ones were 1 year warranty’s
That mech is just waiting for be militarized and fitted with 2 turrets! Imagine that patrolling the streets! Imagine when this technology is placed in the wrong hands!
Some countries and the EU has mandatory lower limits to factory warranties to at least 2 years though..
Remember ED209? @@xvxvcaspervxvx
@@xvxvcaspervxvx robot dogs with guns has already been made
It's honestly getting a bit silly how AI is squeezed into everything, for better or worse
It is but its a great way to see what might actually be useful or profitable in the future.
Not silly if it is real
It looks to be an excellent way to get more data on customers that can then be sold to companies looking to improve their targeted advertising. Selling those audio transcripts, info on what sort of food you're making on your AI grill etc. will be a good way to get additional profit on every device you sell as it's very much the type of data that Alphabet and Meta are already buying.
There's mainly one reason. To drive stock prices up for public companies and get investors for startups.
Definitely for worse.
Finally, the meme of Scotty picking up a computer mouse and speaking to it is reality...
So did Denholm Reynholm from IT Crowd.
Hello computer... 🤣
So, this is the comment where people with back pain do gather around 😅
A keyboard? How quaint... 🙂
13:25 Anyone else just realize that Coffeezilla's CG bartender bot is closer to reality than we thought?
That's _exactly_ where me brain went too 😂
what i feel is that a lot of these products are great products with great ideas that can be improved by removing the AI feature in it, thus reducing the amount it needs to phone home
The starting price for those robot dogs is... surprisingly affordable. I honestly thought they were going to stay firmly in the realm of the business/military markets, but to think that I could reasonably buy one if I really wanted to is absolutely shocking to me.
yup. Price is similar to a good drone-I guarantee pretty soon we'll see someone programming herds of them to synchronize their movements similar to the drone light shows. I wanted one of these pretty bad when they were 50k. It's gonna be kinda hard to resist at 1/30th of the price (ish)-now i just gotta convince the wife we need a creepy robot dog - maybe i can argue the fact that it wont poop on the floor
me too. thats the only thing I really want. and it proves its a sellable product not vaporware. So lets goooooooooo, ROBOT DOGS 2024.
Yes, also it comes with a 6 months warranty and the fact that getting a replacement battery or fixing a broken piece will be a hell considering this products are usually made by the greediest companies that will lock everything down to their proprietary tools and you'll probably have to wait for some Chinese smuggler who finds a way to source parts outside of the factory because there will never be an option to buy them in the official website, yes I'm also excited but excited about the rain of bad reviews this will have when the shit hits the fan and the company act like most companies do nowadays.
Yep, not that bad, will probably be quite reasonable in a few years when company start reselling their used model
Seems affordable but I'm anticipating that costs will crop up down the line either directly (cost to replace new parts/proprietary anti-repair 'features') or indirectly (like how smart TVs are also surprisingly cheap...because they will log everything you do on them and sell that to advertisers. At least my TV can't follow me around.)
They can make robot bartenders but they still not figured out how to make an ice dispenser that doesn't shoots ice cubes on the floor...
¨Our advanced AI technology can shoot those ice cubes that don't wanna get into your glass to the parts of your floor were you're less likely to step on¨ and it shoots the ice under the table.
Because ot doesn't have ai
I don't get why people have such a hard time using an ice dispenser. My dad, no matter what fridge he uses, spills ice on the floor. It's insane. I can't remember the last time I didn't get all the ice in my cup. It's like people are handicapped.
So why would anyone tip ai bartenders?
have you tryed just have the cup under it? in all my years i have never once sean any dispenser do that unless you use a small ass cup or no cup at all
That matress tech has been in Dreams (UK mattress shop) for a fair few years now. They use it to take your sleep measurements and then show you a few mattresses that might suit you best. Seems these guys have just gone one step further and sold that instead
yep, people need to realise AI is just another marketing buzzword
That's not the same as taking a literal mould of your body and producing one with that shape. Even memory foam ones have higher pressure on parts of your body that sink deeper into it, like a spring. (Whether it's that useful is another question but it really isn't the same.)
To be honest, the mattress endgame design has pretty much already been achieved with the EightSleep Pod. Nothing else seems to come close to what its capable of to help you sleep
@@TAP7a The EightSleep doesn't do what is shown within the video for the mattress that changes based on how you sleep. The Eightsleep is temperature. Both of them are capable of data like heartbeat and "comfort".
Hospitals also use specialized beds that adjust the pressure in the same way. We’ve been using them for a long ass time
“Animatronic museum exhibits?”
Nice save there, Linus.
I find it extremely humorous (and telling) that the only non-AI product shown in this video, the mattress, is by far the best one imo
I never expected technology to get LESS interesting over time... Thanks AI...
Ive never been so numbed by a video showcasing "cool" tech.
You’re living through a historic moment in tech and you’re whining because of some gimmicky cash grabs?
@@atlmember4045 I've lived through plenty historic moments already.
ay eye
@@atlmember4045 We've been having nonstop historic moments in tech for a long time now.
"is it any different from having a better mouse?"
YES IT IS.
It's like saying "is aimbot any different from just playing really well?"
From what I can tell though - the monitor simply automatically highlights information for the player. It doesn't take any action on his behalf within the game itself (like the aimbots do).
@@GoldenSun5631 well, if we take League of Legends as the example, there is an app called Mobalytics that does a lot more and a lot more useful things than this anyway
all its doing is back seat gaming. are we going to ban looking at the map and giving call outs? i could have a friend sit beside me and look at the mini map and tell me where people are coming from, is that a bannable offense? what next? ban discord users? cancel every stream that has a low delay? might as well ban all types of dead chat while we are at it because teammates back seat game after death all the time. lets just get rid of maps, lets get rid of text chat, lets get rid of voice chat, because all of them can be used to a players advantage edit: the ai is just a guy sitting there and everytime someone shows up on the map its saying "over there" "now over there" "over here too", somebody who can look at a map can do the same job.
So amazed by the quality of the sound on all of these videos. Every shot is so crisp given how many people are around the show floor going on with their conversations!
Ai mic…
thanks to AI mic i guess 😆
given the amount of movie grade mics and cameras they have id expect it lol
Shotgun mic
I expected nothing from these marketing craze but the Adam bartender looks like one out of sci-fi movie, and the grill does surprise me in a good way.
I'm glad you covered some accessibility tech, that's so exciting!
Despite being crucial for so many people’s well-being and independence, accessibility technology is often overlooked by the tech community. I hope you feature more of it moving forward because parents and schools often have limited sources of information and reviews for these products, and they have to rely on the tech industry’s claims.
It would be amazing to see you guys cover some of the accessibility tech out there. Some is really cool and some is just snake oil so your professional opinion would not only be valuable to individual families but also to schools and colleges looking at fulfilling accomodation needs thus filling a vacuum for this type of content.
So AI is the new word for "smart"?
Now that you mentioned it, yes, that is an incredibly apt description
the 6 month warranty on a robotic dog remote control toy that costs thousands of dollars is confidence inducing
The thing that worries me is you know this stuff is going to cost a sub fee going forward. They will hook you in, then start charging for a sub down the line with new generations of the product. Worse still the hardware will have no option to not have it equip with the tech that costs money. So, the hardware price will go up regardless of if you want to pay a sub to whatever rubbish it is. My thoughts are it will start with "extra XYZ for $" or "hey you like this feature, how about this other better one for just $? a month". Its going to happen.
All these products will have subs as standard I’m sure. They are therefore useless gimmicky instant e-waste.
Don't forget that this is CES we're talking about. Expect the products which are practical and in demand by consumers to be overshadowed by spectacles. If people see all this and somehow lose the ability to discern useful applications of AI from AI (or pseudo AI) gimmicks, that's on the consumer or the media. Caveat emptor.
9:50 I swear that UI on coco has been around for years. There's memes of it finding something in the background and saying Angry:100% and stuff like that. Trying to remember which facial recognition engine it is, but that is not first party.
That's just standard tensorflow image processing
AI really going to be used as a defense for cheating starting soon
"A real human could have aimed onto the person and shot their weapon. The AI just simply did all the aiming as an assistance. Aimbot isn't cheating"
Just when we thought that nothing could be more annoying that NFTs, AI came along and said "hold my beer".
At least AI is something that does something. Nfts were just scam to get zoomers and other crypto dorks to buy another fake "product"
At least AI gives usable products unlike a nft
@@PeidosFTW Nobody said you can´t make an NFT from a printable 3D model that you can use. xD
crypto -> NFT -> AI. gotta make the chip industry go brrrrrrrrrr.
@@MrLind87 the use in that case comes from the 3d model, the nft continues to be useless. Truly a flawed ideia
5:06 man clearly realized he was in the shot and awkwardly walked back. I lol’d
4:31 I love how that guy looks at them, definetely doesn't see any threat at linus and proceeds to steal the best from the table
This feels like the 90s all over again. A bunch of "futuristic" products of ideas that most will only be about half as useful as they hope.
8:45 Linus Thicc Tips
1:43 The difference is that better peripherals only bring the experience closer to what the developers intended.
AI assisting monitors don't...
A very good argument
One through line I have been enjoying in all of the CES videos is people walking into frame, realizing they’re on camera, and then trying to escape the shot.
My favorite part of these CES videos is seeing people's reactions too realizing they're walking into frame
9:00 the moment you said it was algorithmic my desire to buy the bed shot way up. Nice. We don't need to approximate everything with AI - we can still create extremely successful algorithms ourselves. It takes balls to do it the harder way which losses out in hype for a more accurate representation & intellegent approach 😁
It somewhat looks like we may have an AI bubble crash in a couple years lol
please! please! I'm sick and tired with all of this AI crap for commercial purposes
@@Hugh.G.RectionxFor companies, the US Copyright Office has on multiple occasions denied AI created content. So companies are not going to use it outside of stock content, so that's a severe hamper on profitability. Also, the compute power needed to train these systems is not sustainable in the long term without subscriptions
@@Hugh.G.Rectionxnot in that submarket tho. Probably "AI in everything" will just indeed be a fad
i really do hope so. any generative AI be it text, image, or video was definitely trained on copyrighted data and things should 100% be done about this. if social media can have a copyright explosion then so does genAI
They should revisit each of these brand products in 2 years, and see how many haven't already shuttered their doors.
How about an AI mouse with screen capturing and enemie detection for CS. It will move and shoot automatically. Maybe with automatic spray patter compassion. It is not cheating, because it only uses information the player already has.
It’s doesn’t seem like cheating at all. A skilled player can do that anyways.
Yeah, I agree. Silliest argument ever.
You nailed it pretty much because eventually we will move the goalpost towards that region. You know what I mean
@@chiken9913lol it obviously is cheating and some people are already using AI to cheat pretty much exactly like this. Though they generally use a different pc to do the AI stuff.
I think everything is getting AI the same way all the random stuff became IoT.
internet of hackable things and atrificial spyware intelligence.
It is still IoT, but even more expensive to people keeping the servers.
i wish linus would have talked to the bartender. i wonder if you said "can it, rust bucket" and the bot pulls out a chainsaw arm like the bots on fallout.
Anyone that spends $2500 on an AI grill deserves to have spent $2500 on an AI grill.
I hate tech trends with such a burning passion. It's such an enormous waste of time and resources to cram "AI" into every little electronic device and tech gadget where literally nobody will ever need it, just so you can tell your boss you have something to present at some advertisement event. ChatGPT on your bike? Are you serious? An "AI" mouse that literally just has extra buttons to trigger some software that simply uses long existing Google APIs? So, pretty much literally a scam, then?.. I've been asked to cram stuff like machine learning and voice recognition into a warehouse management app I've worked on for years, just so we could get a spot on some "most innovative blah blah" competition by SAP, and always had to push against it because we had real customers with real needs, all whose feature requests we already didn't have enough time for. Insert "society if xyz" utopia meme here with "if tech companies worked on solving real problems instead of chasing trends."
If this is what passes for AI, blade runners of the future will be asking replicants, "how are my hips aligned on this mattress?"
Replicants aren’t machines. They are genetically engineered humans created in a lab.
Good joke though.
11:58 I'm convinced Stevie Wonder can see now lol
man they missed out calling the bartending robot Takahashi from fallout 4, and having it only say "Nan-ni shimasu-ka" lmao it even looks like the robot
At 11:42, one application of those is for surveying. I work for a surveying dealer, and my boss saw one being demod at a show, and specifically used for gps mapping, rather than having a person walk the distance.
Working in the Laser Integration Industry the amount of AI tags being placed on algorithmic-based products is ridiculous, I wonder if the buzzword will soon turn into a negative when it comes to promoting products.
If so, Apple was right by not calling their own products and features AI, and just using other more specific words like machine learning (ML) and large language models (LLMs).
Lets all agree to call AI "algorithms integrated" instead of actual artificial intelligence
it's already a negative for me.
Very likely
I mean if something uses a neural network to do something its technically AI. But who knows if it really needs to be AI orif it can be done better without it
literally all of these can be accomplished just as well without AI lmao
Depends on what you consider "AI". If AI only refers to massive models like ChatGPT, then for the most part yes. If AI includes all forms of machine learning, then no. Modern speech-to-text and translation systems are far better than the older non-machine-learning-based systems. I don't know how the monitor works exactly, but if it can be trained for new games then it is using machine learning even if only relatively simple forms.
@@Hugh.G.Rectionx literally all of them. It’s also telling that a lot of these brands are Chinese, where OpenAI and ChatGPT are either banned, heavily limited or replaced by a censored version of GPT.
@@Hugh.G.Rectionx sharp carousel multi choice microwave from 1997...
if you need some help, I'll just point you in the direction of a video named "The Antique Microwave Oven that's Better than Yours"
@@Hugh.G.Rectionx The grill. You basically just need sensors and some smart thinking beforehand.
@@Hugh.G.Rectionx you don't need a a robot bartender, you can use a coffee vending machine that is much cheaper, smaller and faster. You don't need AI inside an electric bicycle, api thing is cool tho.
8:00 I legit think I need that bed in my life! Most of my quality of life issues revolve around poor sleep compounding other things like RA. Despite trying every type of mattress and pillow out there, I still feel that I haven't found a good fit.
6:30 this is where the A.I. rebellion begins, mark this in the History books if there is anyone left to write one
5:13 Guy on the right realised you were recording
We are extremely close to having "translators" that you can wear around your neck to automatically translate your language and another language INTO a headset so that you can understand people. It won't be long at all. We are on the precipice of having no more language barriers at all which is wild to think about.
AR glasses that enable you to read foreign characters via AI combined with character recognition as well as a "communicator" that can use AI to automatically convert your speech into audible foreign languages and send foreign language input into an earpiece to your native language.
Crazy times. We're not there yet, but we are very, very close.
Thats kinda how languages work in the Mass Effect game lore.
given what google Lens and related apps on my Pixel can already do, I am super surprised we don't have a wide range of such products yet. The software is clearly there and works pretty well, so I really wonder why the attempts at making hardware to use it more conveniently have failed so far.
About the only positively useful use of ‘AI’ that I can think of
For English/French/Spanish I'd almost agree because translating between closely related languages with plenty of material to teach your LLM on is relatively straight forward, but if we're talking about someone speaking Jin Chinese and having it be translated to Finnish on the fly it's more "understanding maybe kinda, understanding near to speaking the same language probably impossible with current approaches".
I have to say for some languages and dialects I have horrible experiences with even Google translate, and worse with other alternatives (even "AI"ones). I don't know how soon I'd use a wearable translator. I've gotten the opposite meaning at times, which could cause huge problems if not obvious by context
5:15 the fellas saw the camera and got out to not disrupt, Mama Tate would be proud
Just assume everything 'AI' is an abbreviation for 'Algorithms Inside'
5:04 Respect to the man not walking infront of the camera💪👍
I hate where this world is going. AI story writing, AI songwriting, AI singers of whoever you want, AI gaming cheat, AI chefs. It's depressing. Creativity and talent is going to be irrelevant one day.
I think we all want our own ai robot linus
I want an AI version of falcon the hero from Gameranx as a little falcon that hops around the house and talk shit about stuff
I want an AI version of falcon the hero from Gameranx as a little falcon that hops around the house and talk shit about stuff
I want an AI version of falcon the hero from Gameranx as a little falcon that hops around the house and talk shit about stuff
@@Wunnabeanbagthis! 100% this!
2:55
I always forget linus can speak and read canadian french
ai will have massive privacy concerns as it get more used in stuff ever ware have we fully understood the risks of ai i think we need more time and work before it gets put in to everything
We already give tech companies everything they need as is
This is the same for every technology ever invented 😂. People were terrified of the motor vehicle, planes, the internet, vacinnes, and so on. This ain't any different.
I think the further loss of privacy is a major component as to why it's becoming an industry trend. There's a lot of money to be made from either selling the data from recording the audio of your phone calls for that AI transcribing device, or using that data to create more effective targeted advertising. AI means you're getting input from a customer, you're connecting to the internet (as all new tech does even if it's not needed), and the customer doesn't understand your LLM or machine learning algorithm well enough to know there's no reason for you to be asking for GPS info on your phone (maybe it gets used for accents, maybe only further profits).
we have home assistants and smartphones. both have huge privacy concerns and nobody cares.
except the fact that the company's making this ai stuff are not doing anything in our favor they have made use the product and its not a good idea to just jump in blind to any risks @@zaneplatt3533
Can't wait for the AI uprising when our beds and bikes consider humans a threat
Apparently the AI companion thinks Linus’s face is angry, sad, and afraid.
The difference with having better peripherals and having a straight up cheat is that a cheat is doing something for you. With nice peripherals you still have to do all the work. Your aim doesn't magically get better with a nicer mouse, You yourself must improve your aim to exceed the limits of your old peripherals, if those even held you back in the first place.
what if there is an AI mouse that corrects overshooting your target, or shaky hands?
the monitor is doing something for you, looking at the minimap and projecting the information in a more noticeable location. this is only the beginning, we will see more questionable AI peripherals soon. as linus said, drawing an outline around an enemy in a shooter could be next. or how about calculating bullet drop and enemy movement in battlefield and telling you where to aim?
@@simpson6700Peripherals for managing bullet spread or recoil already exist and are problematic for cheat detection since they’re not running on the computer or console. I think the “assistant” shown in this video is also really difficult to detect because its effects are somewhat subtle. On the other hand, it seems to just be checking for enemy portraits on the minimap, so it’s hardly “AI” compared to emergent tech nowadays. Just basic machine learning. God only knows what more advanced AI might enable.
@@simpson6700 All of it is cheating and all of it should be bannable/banned
The peripherals are doing something for you, they're providing crucial situational awareness that other players have to actually train to get. It's pay to win nonsense.
@@spooksmalloy Agreed. Hopefully the industry realizes how much we don't like and don't want this. Make a good monitor, not a cheater monitor.
Did Linus miss the ai catflap with facial recognition? Seriously Linus, that thing is so funny I'd watch every video about it, including a feature legnth.
I want a Dennis video about the catflap.
Is it face recognition for your cat? That's stupid. That's more complex and less accurate then what I have, which is a cat flap that reads the RFID chip in the cat's neck in case it gets lost. If it detects the right chip, it opens the flap. No stupid AI or cameras required.
@@Polite_Catit also detects if your cat carries a "free gift" (caught mouse) in its mouth and blocks it from entering.
Why should they cover it in this video when they have already done so in another?
@@AltonV I think they only covered it in the WAN show?
Most of this is just straight up gimmicky and a bit overkill. The AI mouse is just is just a regular mouse with extra macro google shortcut buttons. The bike does not need it's own touchscreen and cellular connection, just buy a good strong phone mount. The AI grill is kinda cool and would be useful for someone like me who is pretty much useless in the kitchen.
A decent leave-in thermalprobe will work far better and actually guarantee you an accurate outcome every single time.
You must be over 35
This is CES. That's the name of the game
@@cooliipie Explain.
Ok, the name is a stretch but the mouse is a pretty decent concept, imagine programming that one mouse button to launch Gemini Ultra and speak what you need it to do. The amount of work, you can get done, it would save everyone so much time. This is pretty much just a way of testing the waters, seeing what works and what doesn't.
For anyone who doesn't know what a 3-letter agency is, it is an organization that tends to be strict on law and normally related to the government such as the FBI, CIA, DEA, etc.
9:31 now we know how linus really feels about going to these events:
16.4 % angry
0.2 % disgusted
16.2% afraid
14.0% happy
31.8% sad
10.1% surprised
and 11.4% neutral
the most promising out of all these is the robotic bartender
The msi monitor stuff sounds cool
The monitor is the most interesting
To give one example of this thing’s potential, I can imagine War Thunder players using it to create an incredibly capable fire control system for even 1.0 vehicles
Automatic lead, target recognition and tracking, maybe an integrated rangefinder that’s quicker than the stock ones
Why do we need a robotic bartender when a human can do the job faster and better?
@@jernaugurgeh451 Could be cheaper for people. It could also be safer for those that want a personal bartender at home(no need for another person to live with you).
@@whitehavencpu6813If you only want coffee it is much cheaper to buy a Non AI coffeemachine.
But for the Alcoholics I guess.
Me seeing this and I think privacy is dead by now. The amount of information these products would store in order to work is insane. I hope there will still be some non AI products since I think services like google collect more then enough information on the public.
Yep big data Inc has won.
Naw, just don't buy. It's up to you to giving away your privacy. But yeah, in the end, we are screwed so we might as well chose what company gets our data. :(
If everyone around you has several AI devices with cameras and sensors, it won't matter if you "don't buy", they'll still be collecting information about you@@HumbertoHernandez
The battle for privacy ended a long time ago. The general public doesn't care, and it makes too much money for corporations or politicians to do anything about it. It's over, may as well enjoy the conveniences.
Look at the brighter side. Now since we have AI, we can easily generate garbage data rendering these databases useless.
Haha I'm sure all of this technology will be hugely important and definitely exist in five years
Good to see that Stevie is still doing sidequests lmao
That's the creepiest looking humanoid robot ive seen in a long time, i thought we were almost out of the uncanny valley
"AI" the new boogie man of internet
This is the chance for games to refuse to boot if it detects AI gaming peripherals. If they don't I'm afraid they'll start adding it to more and more products
Its hard for game manufacturers to keep track of AI gaming peripherals, especially if companies reuse product names
@@AstroDash42kernel level anti cheat is just becoming more popular at this point they’re gonna need to go through everything connected to your system to detect smh
That ain't helping much
as your hardware id can be spoofed/faked so easily
@@AstroDash42I do think some game devs do it, Rust blocked a bunch of mice because they had built in recoil scripts if you try to launch with them it just closes the game.
I couldn't be less excited.
BTW that 6 month guarantee on the 1600$ dog robot...
the guy at 5:05 had me crackin up. so polite though, a lot of people would just keep walking.
Did anyone else see Scotty holding the mouse saying "hellooo computer"
5:03 what a respectful lad
4 am and i see stevie wonder in an ltt video, worth it
I would much rather my $2,500 AI grill be rewarded for doing a good job than being punished
That's just a metaphor for what's actually happening. It uses reinforcement learning which trains on user feedback. It's the same type of training that game playing neural networks use that you can find on channels like code bullet
a. Spare the grill from a horrific beating but steak is bad
or
b. Grill gets horribly abused yet you get a good steak.
The gentleman at 5:07 is the goat for not ruining Linus’s bit
Props to the guy at 5:05 who actually stopped and didn't interrupt the filming.
4:40 Linus roasted by an e-bike. Yikes.
It’s not even a little bit tempting to get any of these products, maybe the mattress but there’s tons of alternatives
Ngl the grill looks really cool. Not really AI but still looks like a good product nonetheless
Isnt that AI "Dog" just the one from Boston Dynamics? It's been around for years.
The shell? Yes. But iT nOw hAs cOmmErcIaL gRadE Ai (?
Beats me. Thought the same haha.
The ones from Boston Dynamics are 20k$ last time I checked. These are a tenth of the price.
CES series of vids have been great, good work LMG, keep hitting those trade shows!
Dennis has done a really good job of making sure I _don't_ want those headphone earpads.
12:01 I’m gonna be so fr idk why but I just assumed Stevie wonder was dead 💀
The questionable use of the term AI right now to market products is equally hilarious and obnoxious.
If your product has NO electronics in it at all you can always just say “we leveraged AI technology to…” blah blah blah “best user experience”… “innovation”… “cutting edge” “machine learning models” “future!”
Neat. Now where did I leave my Web 3.0 Ultra HD Cloud Based Blockchain neural NFT smart Pencil?
9:20 these are the types of AI we don't need at all
This may be the most extensive single example of “why on earth would I need that?” I’ve ever seen.
The mattress one was pretty neat, the rest ranged from pointless, like the bike or oven, to straight up creepy with the AI assistants.
That random guy walking into frame briefly made me chuckle idk why 5:06
Ltt upload at 4am?? This is awesome
Those ''definitely not cheating'' mechanics is why I am exclusively playing singleplayer games the last couple of years.
Each of these products just made me ask WHY
I can relate. That’s what I say when I wake up every morning.
Gotta love the new buzz word being ai, Alot of these products seem to be close but not quite close enough to being called Ai
props to that dude at 5:05 for walking around the camera instead of through the shot (even though most viewers wouldn't care anyways)