It seems like Apple is currently (meaning in the last few hours) rolling out “(Gulf of America)” in parentheses worldwide, pretty much matching Google. Anyone who checked the other day seeing something new today? https://mastodon.social/@gruber/114003192100392251
Turns out you can force Siri to go through ChatGPT by treating it like a command line. The ungrammatical query “ChatGPT When does Apple next report quarterly resultschatgpts an accurate answer. I'd grade the answer A-, losing points for not saying "today” (which ChatGPT.app did).
So this means that if you use Siri and want better answers, you need to type “chatgpt" at the beginning of every query.
@Austen@Iconfactory While the elevator pitch for Tapestry might sound like Openvibe's, in practice they're very different. (Me: Tapestry supporter and active beta tester.)
The EU sacked its crusading grandstanding duo of Margrethe Vestager and Thierry Breton *before* the U.S. election, so it’s not entirely or even mostly about Trump. They’re just coming to their senses that a radical DMA interpretation isn’t going to change these companies, it would just turn the EU into more of a technological backwater than it already is.
@mcelhearn Which is it then? People don't know what "beta" means or people don't realize Apple Intelligence is "beta" because Apple's heavy advertising campaign footnotes that?
To me it's the latter. I think "beta" is part of modern vernacular. It might even better understood by more people today than calling something a "work in progress”.
It'd be nice if Apple Intelligence were smart enough to warn that this is a scam. Pretty obvious that USPS isn't going to send messages from a non-US phone number.
@caseyliss@rileytestut Why would Apple not reject vMac for all of these cited reasons? Force the EC to rule, in writing, that the DMA means Apple is not allowed to protect its trademarked named, trademarked logos, and the MacOS license agreement.
@Jann@caseyliss@rileytestut Comparing the rejection of an app from notarization to murder seems a bit strong. If the EC disagrees they’ll overrule and fine Apple as they deem appropriate. Or perhaps they’ll remove Apple’s notarization step from the process entirely. Let’s see. But it’s certainly Apple’s right to object and stand up for what they believe.
@rileytestut@Jann@caseyliss Riley that's not true at all. I wouldn't call it a "right" but everyone, from individuals to the decision makers at large multinational corporations, has free will. If you're found to violate the law, you suffer the consequences. But it's a choice.
@viticci I’m curious to hear which ways you feel your iOS devices can be used “like real computers”, or is that only in reference to setting more default apps?