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Thursday, September 29, 2022

How AI is helping birth digital humans that look and sound just like us - MIT Technology Review

Digital twins capture the physical look and expressions of real humans. Increasingly these replicas are showing up in the entertainment industry and beyond. It gives rise to some interesting opportunities as well as thorny questions. 

We speak to:

Greg Cross, CEO and co-founder of Soul Machines

Sounds from:

  • 2PAC HOLOGRAM | LIVE Coachella Recording | High Quality - via YouTube
  • I'm Miquela, A Real-Life Robot Mess - via YouTube
  • Capitol Records signs AI, or 'virtual', rapper ... then drops the artist after pushback - via YouTube
  • FN Meka Voice Glad Capitol Killed the Contract, Hitmaka Agrees | TMZ - via YouTube 
  • Black Mirror: You, me and Ashley Too - via Netflix
  • FN Meka - Moonwalkin’ - via YouTube
  • Capitol Records Drops Virtual Rapper FN Meka After Backlash Over Racist Stereotypes | Billboard News - via YouTube 
  • Kyle the Hooligan, the Black Rapper Behind FN Meka Says He's Suing | TMZ - via YouTube
  • Future of digital humans – Mao Lin Liao - via YouTube

Credits:

This episode was produced by Anthony Green with help from Emma Cillekens. It was edited by Jennifer Strong and Mat Honan, mixed by Garret Lang, with original music from Jacob Gorski. It's hosted by Jennifer Strong.

Full transcript:

 [TR ID]

[music and applause swells] 

Jennifer: It’s the closing night of 20-12 Coachella music festival... And Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg are joined on stage by a surprise guest: Tupac… despite the fact that the hip-hop legend died more than 15 years earlier.

Tupac hologram: Yeah! You know what the **** this is!

[crowd cheers]

Tupac hologram: What up Dre!

Dr. Dre: I’m chilling, what’s up Pac?

Tupac hologram: What the **** is up Coachella?!

[fade out] 

[scoring in]

Jennifer: A holographic-like image of the late rapper appeared alongside the real-life Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg… bantering with them…and addressing the crowd. 

This illusion took over a year to create, and was accomplished by piecing together audio, physical characteristics and movements from performances recorded before the rapper's death.

To festival-goers and audiences streaming live, the effect was stunning… and a bit unsettling. 

These days, digital humans are taking on the jobs of entertainers in increasingly nuanced ways.

Miquela: I was programmed to believe that I was a 19 year old, half brazilian, half spanish girl named Miquela.

Jennifer: This digital influencer and model is a project that began as a CGI instagram profile… but has gone on to release music and collaborate with luxury brands, such as Calvin Klein and Prada… amassing millions of followers along the way. 

Miquela: Don’t worry y'all. I am a robot but I’m not here to, like, hack your venmo or leak your private browser history. 

Jennifer: For next-gen systems… AI is the core creation tool. With it comes interactive, human-like experiences… as well as some familiar, thorny questions about ownership.

WFAA News Anchor: I mean you got all these real people that want to get into this industry but yall choose to sign a virtual person? 

Hitmaka: If this would've went under the radar, they would've been making hundreds of millions of dollars from this. And nobody would've said nothing. 

Jennifer: I’m Jennifer Strong and this episode, we explore the real task of building these not real digital humans. 

[TITLES]

OC: ...You have reached your destination.

[MUSIC IN] 

Greg Cross: You know, the art of creating digital characters and digital personalities, I mean, that's been finely honed in the movie industry and what makes us fall in love with these avatars and these CGI characters is that they do express emotion in a very human-like way.

Greg Cross: Hi, I'm Greg Cross. I'm CEO and co-founder of Soul Machines. Soul machines is an artificial intelligence company. We make avatars and we bring them to life using a completely new paradigm in the world of animation. Something we call autonomous animation. So autonomous animation is what we are doing in this conversation. So my brain is animating me. It brings me to life. It chooses my words. The way I express them. And that just happens autonomously. And your brain at the same time as I'm talking is animating you. You're hearing my words, you're deciding what to think of them, how to feel about them. And so if we think about high quality CGI or avatar type animation, it's all human acted content. So human actors play the role of the avatars. They get captured by these incredibly specialized cameras. The data gets processed and then. The data is used to bring the avatar to life.  

Jennifer: It’s the process used to create Gollum in the Lord of the Rings and it transformed the entire cast of the 2009 blockbuster, Avatar.

But the approach at Soul Machines relies on AI.

Greg Cross: Artificial intelligence has become a big part of the way in which we think about autonomous animation and the way it enables us to make machines more like us. We can interact with them in a more human-like way. So our digital people, our avatars are being rendered in the cloud and literally they're being broadcast as a video stream from the cloud into the device. So it's just like a zoom call, except you're talking to a digital person rather than a real person. 

Jennifer: And it’s becoming popular within the entertainment industry. 

Greg Cross: Celebrities are looking for new ways to engage with their fans. So, social media started this trend where celebrities could create a direct connection with fan bases. This takes it to the next level. 

Jennifer: And he says celebrities are choosing to have digital twins for a whole range of reasons.

Greg Cross: We recently started working with Jack Nicklaus, you know, Jack's 82 in real life. And for him, this is a legacy project. How does he make his legacy relevant to kids taking up golf for the first time today? So, we've announced that we are going to be reimagining Marilyn Monroe. For the 21st century working with the folk at Authentic Brands Group who own the digital rights to Marilyn. So, you know, this is a project where, you know, this huge amount of interest, I mean, in Marilyn today. So this is another way that we can tell her story. K-pop, uh, Mark Tuan, one of the biggest K-pop stars in the world. Mark is just one of these people who's incredibly time-poor. You know, he never has enough time to interact with his fans in the way that he wants to be able to interact with his fans. So this becomes a way in which he can do that without him having to always be there. 

Jennifer: This might sound familiar to fans of the tv show, Black Mirror… where a popstar, portrayed by real-life singer Miley Cyrus, uses AI to create a digital version of her personality.

Announcer: Now you can be best friends with your favorite pop star! 

Young girl: Ashley, wake up. 

Ashley Too: Hey, there I'm Ashley Too!

Announcer: An all new intelligent companion based on Ashley O's actual personality.

Jennifer: Soul Machines captures the physical look and expressions of someone they’re digitizing… then, the real work begins. 

Greg Cross: In the case of synthetic voices, we work with partners to recreate these voices and, and these voices can be trained based on existing audio content with, uh, Carmello Anthony, Camelo recently released a book. He recorded the  audio book op version of the book. So we use the audio book version to create his synthetic voice. But here's the thing. We just don't create a synthetic voice in English, you know, in his natural voice, we can create a synthetic voice in Japanese and Mandarin and Korean, you know, Carmello can now speak any one of 15 languages in his own natural voice.

Jennifer: And despite being called a digital twin… which in every other industry means an exact copy of something… these digital celebrities aren’t necessarily the same as their human counterparts. For example, celebrities might choose to create a less anxious or more chatty version of themselves for fans.

Greg Cross: One of the things that we're exploring particularly with Carmello is, I mean, Jack wants digital Jack to be a representation of who he was at that age. Carmello actually wants his digital twin to have a different personality so that they can play off each other and they can interact with each other and have fun with each other. One of the things you don't want to do is you don't want to connect a celebrity to the internet because you know, you do that and you're going to end up with TikTok videos where the content is not appropriate or not consistent with their brand or their image. So content in the digital realm has to be curated, you know, in the same way that celebrities curate their content in social media, they have to do the same with their digital twins as well.  

Jennifer: Though, some companies do hand that curation off to an algorithm.

FN Meka: Big sticks like I’m marching band. (Boom, boom!)

Too deep like clowns in minivan (Clown)

50 said it best. It ain’t many men (many men)

When you steppin’ on me, come get me, man (Grrah)

Jennifer: This is a song partly composed by FN Meka, an AI created by the company Factory New… which describes itself as a record label specializing in virtual artists. 

The system analyzes popular songs from specific genres and generates the building blocks of new songs… such as melody, and tempo… with vocals performed by a real human. 

FN Meka was designed and marketed to represent a kind of digital rapper… His TikTok videos—showing him in designer clothes and luxury cars with an edgy haircut and plenty of attitude—they generated… more than a billion views on the platform. 

In August, it was announced that the digital human had been signed to one of the most powerful music labels in the world: Capitol Records—which retains rights to the works of artists like ABBA and Katy Perry. 

Then… this happened

Billboard News Anchor: From stepping into the virtual future to back on the proverbial streets, the AI rapper everybody has been talking about has been dropped from his label. 

Jennifer: In addition to his virtual jewels and custom Tesla cybertruck, FN Meka is depicted as a black man… something its human creators are not. 

The system was soon called into question by the group “Industry Blackout”… an organization representing black people in the music industry. 

WFAA News Anchor: In a statement on Twitter the group said the rapper is “an offensive caricature and a direct insult to the black community and our culture.” 

Jennifer: In the hours following the statement, Capitol Records severed ties with the AI and issued an apology to the black community. FN Meka’s music was quickly removed from streaming services and as for his viral TikTok content… it’s pretty much vanished. 

And Kyle the Hooligan—the black rapper whose real voice was used for the system—is taking legal action against the company.

Kyle the Hooligan: Basically, my lawyer's been reaching out to them and their attorneys, but we haven't heard back as of yet. Well, at the time… like, I was young, you know what I'm saying? I had no representation. So… and they didn't really have the money behind it as of yet. So they promised me equity. It basically was like a collaboration. So we could do this together and just like build it up instead of like upfront money and stuff like that. 

Jennifer: But he says that didn’t happen. 

Kyle the Hooligan: So I wanna kind of shed light on that and show that it's not cool just to use the culture and just ghost people and not compensate them. Cause this, I know it's… this industry that happens a lot. So that's basically what I would like to happen. Be compensated and shine light on the situation. 

Hitmaka: I think it's a disservice to the culture. Like it's, it's some of the most disrespectful stuff I've seen in a long time.

Jennifer: This is Grammy nominated rapper and producer Hitmaka, in an interview with TMZ. 

Hitmaka: You know, how many layers and contracts and things that had to happen to get to this point. So the legal department, the A and R team, the high level execs, everybody agreed with this. If this would've went under the radar, they would've been making hundreds of millions of dollars from this. And nobody would've said nothing. So it's just ridiculous, man, for real.

[MUSIC]

Jennifer: You can find links to our reporting in the show notes... and you can support our journalism by going to tech review dot com slash subscribe.

We’ll be back… right after this.

[MIDROLL]

[scoring in]

Jennifer: It’s not just celebrities looking to use digital replicas… 

This technology is being trialed in everything from customer service to law enforcement… 

Mao Lin Liao: So, this project is about a virtual girl that has been used to attract pedophiles online

Jennifer: This is Mao Lin Liao, speaking at a conference. He’s the CEO of REBLIKA—a designer of digital humans.

Mao Lin Liao: And this whole story was very, uh, important for us because it was helping the world become a safer place. 

Jennifer: The project was codenamed Sweetie. It’s a computer model created to look and move like a real girl. Sweetie was deployed across a number of online chat rooms where she appears to be sitting in front of a webcam in the Philippines. In reality, a team of sleuths were operating the system from a warehouse in Amsterdam.  

Sweetie AI: My name is Sweetie. I'm 10 years old. I live in the Philippines. Every day I have to sit in front of the webcam and talk to men, just like tens of thousands of other kids. The men ask me to take off my clothes. But what they don't know, I'm not real. I'm a computer model made piece by piece to track down this man who do this. 

Jennifer: In just 10 weeks, the team identified a thousand predators from 71-different countries… thanks in no small part to the system's ability to replicate the subtle, physical nuances that come with talking to a real person. 

It’s those same nuances, like a shifting gaze or returned smile, that underpins the realism of digital humans created by Soul Machines.  

Digital Jack: Hi, how are you?

Greg Cross: I'm good thanks, Jack. 

Digital Jack: I'm glad to hear it. I'm Jack Nicholas coming to you circa 1978. I'm here to tell you about my life as a professional golfer. Where should we begin? 

Greg Cross: So I've just muted Jack at this point. So you can see Jack's on the screen. He's looking at me. You know, if you look up close, you can see my hand reflection going across.  

Jennifer: That’s CEO Greg Cross giving a demo of golfer Jack Nicklaus’ digital twin… The system uses the computer’s microphone and webcam to seemingly hear and see the real human on the other end. And it has the contextual awareness to know it's supposed to be chatting as if on a video call.  

Jennifer Strong: When you say his name, he smiles a little bit. 

Greg Cross: Yeah, of course and if I smile at him.

Greg Cross: He'll smile back. I mean, that's a natural.. that's the natural reaction. So how this works is, if I smile at you, your eyes are seeing the smile and your brain then, or the limbic system in your brain, which is our emotional connection system that secretes dopamine and serotonin, the happy drugs, sends electrical signals from your brain to your facial muscles, through your nervous system and you smile back. And that's the natural human reaction to a smile. And so Jack's digital brain is actually working in exactly the same way. So if you know, you get concerned or worried.

Jennifer Strong: I see. 

Greg Cross: He will respond by looking a little bit more empathetic. You know, so these are some of the ways in which we are, you know, using Jack's digital brain to bring him to life in, in real time. 

Greg Cross: Can you tell us about the 1978 British open 

Digital Jack: In 1978, the British open returned to its most traditional location. The old course of St. I fell in love with St. Andrews on my first visit in 1964. And from there, my attachment only group. Have you ever been to Scotland?

Greg Cross: Yes, I have.

Digital Jack: It's truly something. The birthplace of golf and so much more. Needless to say, playing St. Andrews again in 1978 was a dream, but the months prior to the term were anything but ideal. Have you ever tried to deal with a problem only to watch it grow? The more you try to fix it?

Greg Cross: No, I don't have any problems, Jack. 

Digital Jack: Really, you're pretty darn lucky then.  

Greg Cross: In time, we might end up building a number of different versions of digital Jack. I mean, Jack selected that age. He wanted to be 38. He considered himself to be playing the finest golf of his career at that age, so that's why he chose it. But we might do, you know, in 1962, I mean, Jack was a, you know, a very handsome young golfer with movie star looks. So we might do that version of Jack or, you know, we might even do a current, you know, um, Jack as he was, when he was in his seventies as well. So these are all different ways in which we can develop the concept as we move forward.

Jennifer: And the team has also been exploring how these digital twins can be useful beyond the 2D world of a video conference. 

Greg Cross: I guess the.. the big, you know, shift that's coming right at the moment is the move from the 2D world of the internet, into the 3D world of the metaverse. So, I mean, and that, and that's something we've always thought about and we've always been preparing for, I mean, Jack exists in full 3D, um, You know, Jack exists as a full body. So I mean, Jack can, you know, today we have, you know, we're building augmented reality, prototypes of Jack walking around on a golf course. And, you know, we can go and ask Jack, how, how should we play this hole? Um, so these are some of the things that we are starting to imagine in terms of the way in which digital people, the way in which digital celebrities. Interact with us as we move into the 3D world.

Jennifer: And he thinks this technology can go a lot further.

Greg Cross: Healthcare and education are two amazing applications of this type of technology. And it's amazing because we don't have enough real people to deliver healthcare and education in the real world. So, I mean, so you can, you know, you can imagine how you can use a digital workforce to augment. And, and extend the skills and capability, not replace, but extend the skills and, and capabilities of real people. 

Jennifer: This episode was produced by Anthony Green with help from Emma Cillekens. It was edited by me and Mat Honan, mixed by Garret Lang… with original music from Jacob Gorski.   

If you have an idea for a story or something you’d like to hear, please drop a note to podcasts at technology review dot com.

Thanks for listening… I’m Jennifer Strong.

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How AI is helping birth digital humans that look and sound just like us - MIT Technology Review
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Does the perfect sound exist? Vinyl records rebound in digital music age - Washington Post - The Washington Post

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Does the perfect sound exist? Vinyl records rebound in digital music age - Washington Post  The Washington Post

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Meet Ken Fisher, Associate Director of that Solid Gold Sound - The UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music - UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music

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Meet Ken Fisher, Associate Director of that Solid Gold Sound - The UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music  UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music

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Wednesday, September 28, 2022

Former KC Chiefs players sound off about Eric Bieniemy - Arrowhead Addict

In the days following Eric Bieniemy’s perceived on-field dust-up with Patrick Mahomes, former Chiefs players sound off on social media.

You had to know the social media storm was coming after Sunday’s loss, particularly since CBS cameras caught Kansas City Chiefs offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy and franchise quarterback Patrick Mahomes having what appeared to be a pretty spirited discussion about the direction the team went to end the first half.

What you may not have expected was multiple former Chiefs players publicly weighing in on the topic.

The social media town hall started on Monday with LeSean McCoy, who had a cup of coffee with the Chiefs, appearing in 13 games in 2019. McCoy’s preferred method of speaking out? The comment section of a Bleacher Report Grid Iron post on Instagram:

Shady’s stance was pretty clear: he does not appear to be a fan of Eric Bieniemy. This should not come as a shock to anyone who has misused their time listening to McCoy rant about his lackluster time in Kansas City. In May, on the I Am Athlete podcast, McCoy had this to say about the Chiefs offensive coordinator, who again failed to land a head coaching position this past offseason:

“There’s a reason why every year they hype him up to get a job and then when the time comes, nobody hires him because they know the type of coach he really is,”

This prompted a response from Chiefs head coach Andy Reid- someone who McCoy has historically been very fond of. Reid drafted McCoy in 2009 as the head coach of the Philadelphia Eagles and coached him for four seasons before being fired and taking the Kansas City Chiefs head coaching job in 2013. While Reid was one of McCoy’s favorite coaches in Philly and the reason he came to Kansas City on a 1-year deal after being cut by Buffalo, Reid was a bit more direct when it came to Shady’s abilities at the end of his career:

“Sometimes, it’s hard on a veteran player that maybe their performance level isn’t what it used to be, and it’s hard to take sometimes,” Reid said. “But he [Bieniemy] is going to push you and maximize what you’ve got. That’s one of his strengths … sometimes you want to hear it, and sometimes you don’t. I’m a big LeSean fan. In my eyes, he’s a future Hall of Fame running back. If you look at [it] statistically, he was tremendous. But he wasn’t the youngest pup in the kennel here. He was on the back side [of his career], and sometimes that’s hard to take.”

Without a doubt tough for McCoy to hear, but Andy wasn’t wrong. McCoy had just 465 yards in 13 games with the Chiefs, 4 touchdowns, and 3 fumbles. Do you know who fared a bit better in the backfield as a Chief under the tutelage of Eric Bieiemy? Future Ring of Honor member Jamaal Charles. Charles chimed in on Twitter on to compare the outburst of Bills offensive coordinator Ken Dorsey’s press box tirade after their 21-19 loss to Miami.

Naturally, a player who played for the guy chiming in on social media will attract folks who are certain they know more than him to also chime in. Here’s how Jamaal handled a fan who thought it would be appropriate to tell him he was wrong about a guy who he worked with for multiple seasons.

In a stunning turn of events, Charles was not having the “Players talk, that’s why EB isn’t a head coach” argument that’s been permeating on social media since the attempted expose detailing locker room conversations and “insider” information from a crack group of internet detectives was dropped as an attempted hit piece on Bieniemy in February of this year. I would link the article for you, but the authors took it down within 24 hours of posting it.

Charles was not the only former Chiefs player to come to EB’s defense. Former Chiefs offensive lineman and good samaritan Jeff Allen agreed with Charles in backing Bieniemy while simultaneously discrediting and somewhat dragging McCoy for his lashing out. Allen might’ve given McCoy a little too much credit, as 7 months sounds generous for his tenure in K.C., but I’ve already spent enough time thinking about McCoy today and don’t care to check the receipts on his time as a Chief.

Another former Chief who didn’t play for Bieniemy, but knows a thing or two about hard coaching and the relationship between coaches and players in the NFL—former Chiefs tight end Jason Dunn—also sounded off on the interaction on his Chief Concerns podcast this week. His determination? No big deal.

When asked about the “altercation” postgame, Mahomes was pretty straightforward with his insight into the situation. I know it’s hard to grasp for some, but we have to remember that Mahomes was actually there, and was one of the two parties involved in the conversation. Tough pill to swallow for the body language experts and hundreds of Chiefs Insiders on social media.

“I pretty much just said, ‘Let me have a chance at it.’ And then [Bieniemy] was just like, ‘Let’s get back in our locker room, and we’ll get some going for the next half,’” Mahomes said. “I don’t know if that’s an altercation, but that was the end of the conversation.”

Look, if you want to remain skeptical about the Chiefs’ offensive decision-making, I can’t knock you for that. But I think it’s time that fans and those who aren’t inside the walls stop fabricating reasons for a coach who has experienced nothing but nearly unparalleled success as an offensive coordinator in the NFL to lose his job. Will Eric Bieniemy be back in the same capacity with the Kansas City Chiefs next year? I don’t know. But neither do the loudmouth Twitter trolls who claim to have insider info and think they know what’s going on inside the walls of the Chiefs facilities.

The bottom line is this: football is a game played and coached by highly competitive, driven grown men. There are going to be disagreements, and sometimes those will get heated. It’s the nature of the business. We as fans, like the Chiefs, need to turn our attention to the Week 4 matchup with Tampa Bay.

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The Amazing Sound At Red Rocks Is 300 Million Years In The Making - DISCOVER Magazine

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Andor Episode 3 Perfectly Builds Tension and Panic With Sound - Collider

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Take 12% Off a Bluetooth Speaker From Sound Experts at Marshall - The Inventory

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Tuesday, September 27, 2022

What Makes Audio Tech Good Sound? - Dealerscope

person using audio technology

True wireless sound (TWS) technologies are joining forces with the digital audio market to deliver premium music listening experiences to consumers globally. Now that new Bluetooth codecs have made it possible to process and reliably stream HD audio wirelessly, the rest of the earphone design is evolving to complete the listening experience with more range, personalization, and comfort than ever before.  

Knowles TWS in ear design

New and renowned manufacturers alike are developing products to enrapture a broad range of listeners from bargain seekers to the most discerning audiophiles. The latest earphone designs are more complex than ever, and OEMs are drawing from a range of advanced features to differentiate their products in the competitive market. For consumers, however, it’s often tricky to choose earphones that will deliver the best performance. What should consumers look for in earphones to enjoy an HD audio experience? 

Understanding HD Audio  

The definition of HD audio varies, but it typically refers to digital music that can be streamed at the same mastering quality as CD playback. HD audio tracks use lossless compression to preserve the sound quality of the original recording, a serious upgrade from familiar MP3 files, which are compressed into a small file format to accommodate storage constraints. While HD audio was once a stamp of excellence touted by high-end wired headphone brands and audiophile communities, it’s now embraced by household music streaming brands like Tidal, Amazon and Apple. MP3 and AAC codecs have been at the root of digital music streaming since its inception, and now, there are high-data rate and lossless music streaming codecs that do not compromise on sound quality. 

Not all wireless earphone models can accommodate high-performance, lossless streaming. Many manufacturers have yet to enter the market with compatible designs due to the difficulty of designing for HD audio. 

Qualcomm reports that while sound quality is the top priority for most consumers, they also want their earphones to offer functionalities and designs that deliver comfort, convenience and personalization. In working with several leading brands in the commercial audio and hearing health spaces, I’ve discovered that satisfactory TWS purchases are determined by several benchmarks, including active noise canceling (often referred to as ANC by manufacturers), rich sound range, comfortable fit and other advanced features. 

A Crash Course in Advanced Features  

Hearing personalization is pretty much what it sounds like: After performing a hearing response check via the earphones, the playback is personalized to match the listener’s unique hearing abilities and preferences. This often involves amplifying higher ranges to compensate for a reduced ability to hear treble, which often comes with age. Simply put, hearing personalization makes high-quality listening accessible to more consumers.  

Many software companies are developing algorithms that enable additional advanced features for leading brands to offer additional personalized listening experiences and use cases for TWS earphones. Features such as conversation enhancement, voice call and context-aware transparency modes to hear surrounding sounds can support a variety of unique challenges and use cases for listeners. 

ANC is another feature for consumers to consider when selecting high-performance TWS earbuds. ANC in loud environments requires the headphones to support high bass output, but with minimal distortion as to not mar the listening experience. But simultaneously, HD audio performance and hearing personalization require high treble output for full-range, rich sound.  

Comfort and performance also determine customer satisfaction; nobody wants their ears to hurt halfway through their favorite album or podcast. And, since TWS earphones often double as work-from-home tools for videoconferencing, webinars and more, all-day comfort is especially important. Acoustic components need to be small enough to maintain sufficient headroom for the addition of sensors for spatial awareness, monitoring health parameters, longer battery life, and more. 

The Pieces of the Premium Sound Puzzle 

There’s a lot that modern TWS design can offer, and consumers shouldn’t have to settle. For a listening experience that meets these requirements, consumers should seek TWS devices with a hybrid driver. Often noted in the specifications of a product, a hybrid driver incorporates a dynamic speaker and balanced armature tweeter to enable sound performance and support these advanced features. A dynamic woofer delivers rich, clear bass, while a balanced armature tweeter achieves the crisp mid-range and high-frequency treble performance required for HD audio and hearing personalization.  

The full-range sound performance provided by this hybrid driver design makes a significant difference to listeners. In a recent blind listening test performed by Knowles, consumers listened to a selection of sound clips derived from 200 Billboard Hot 100 songs. The participants report a preference for music listening with an extended treble response, noting a more satisfactory experience with a detailed sound range. In addition, the small balanced armature tweeter in the hybrid driver design supports comfortable wear and preserves space for product designers, so there is ample headroom to add components for advanced functionalities. The dynamic woofer and BA tweeter work together to deliver the clarity and balance required for ANC performance and hearing personalization. 

The TWS market is evolving rapidly to meet the demands of consumers and the rapid pace of HD audio evolution. The components that make up today’s earphones play a major role in the performance, range and capabilities of the hardware. To listen to music as the artists intended, prospective TWS buyers should look beyond just familiar brands and seek out hybrid driver designs that prioritize treble performance and clear, impactful bass to experience sound at a new level of precision. 

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Republicans sound alarm over Chinese government-linked farmland purchase near North Dakota air base - Fox News

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FIRST ON FOX: Fifty-one Republican lawmakers are sending a letter to three of President Biden’s Cabinet secretaries warning that national security is threatened by a Chinese Communist Party (CCP)-linked company's efforts to buy farmland near an Air Force base in North Dakota.

Rep. Carlos Gimenez, R-Fla., led the letter with 50 of his colleagues to Secretaries Lloyd Austin, Janet Yelle, and Tom Vilsack about the land acquisitions near North Dakota’s Grand Forks Air Force Base by Chinese manufacturer the Fufeng Group.

The letter, exclusively obtained by Fox News Digital, will be sent to the three secretaries and warns of the "alarming development" for U.S. national security by allowing the Fufeng Group to purchase the land so close to the base. 

"According to the United States-China Economic and Security Review Commission, the Grand Forks Air Force Base has exceptional intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance capabilities, making the recently purchased land the ideal location to closely monitor and intercept military activity," the lawmakers wrote.

"The presence of a CCP-affiliated corporation near a military installation potentially undermines the integrity of our high-capability military bases, jeopardizing our strategic interests," they warned.

Gimenez and his Republican colleagues warned that the CCP-linked firm "will have potential advantageous opportunities to perpetrate espionage, including actions and activities carried out under commercial cover or auspices."

NORTH DAKOTA COMMUNITY FIGHTS TO STOP CHINESE COMPANY FUFENG FROM OPENING CORN MILL NEAR US AIR FORCE BASE

Rep. Carlos A. Gimenez, R-Fla., led 50 of his GOP colleagues in a letter to three Biden administration Cabinet secretaries about a Chinese Communist Party (CCP)-linked firm purchasing farmland near a North Dakota Air Force base.

Rep. Carlos A. Gimenez, R-Fla., led 50 of his GOP colleagues in a letter to three Biden administration Cabinet secretaries about a Chinese Communist Party (CCP)-linked firm purchasing farmland near a North Dakota Air Force base. (Getty Images)

Heritage Action vice president Garrett Bess told Fox News Digital the "threat from the Chinese Communist Party is the most critical and consequential international threat that the U.S. faces, and CCP acquisition of land, particularly near U.S. military installations, is an immediate risk to America’s national security."

"Eliminating this risk requires an aggressive plan to prevent and punish malicious land use that threatens U.S. interests," Bess said. "We applaud Representative Gimenez for asking the Biden administration tough questions and pushing them to adopt a more aggressive posture against the CCP."

The 

The  (Greg Palkot)

The Republicans also said they "are concerned about the precedent this land purchase will set and its ability to serve as the model for our adversaries to encroach on American security, particularly through purchases of farmland in our congressional districts housing several military installations," such as Homestead Air Reserve Base (HARB) in Gimenez’s Sunshine State district.

"At a time when the United States is engaged in great power competition with China, we must utilize every tool at our disposal to protect and defend the integrity of our military and national security, maintain military dominance, and maximize our global military readiness," the letter reads.

The lawmakers also warned that acquisitions "of this magnitude" also "pose a threat" to America’s "food security," not just national security.

"According to the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), at the beginning of 2021 foreign investors held a stake in approximately 37.6 million acres of U.S. agricultural land," they wrote. "This trend is expected to increase over the next few years, raising concerns about the negative potential implications it will have on domestic food production and national food security." 

"This, coupled with USDA's absence from permanent membership on the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), is concerning, as the Department should have some jurisdiction over the review of agricultural land acquisitions that raise national security concerns."

Gimenez and his colleagues called on the department heads to "take effective action in addressing the potential national security risks that appear to arise" from the acquisition.

The billionaire owner of the Chinese company behind a recent attempted land acquisition in Texas near the Laughlin Air Force Base served in the Chinese military and has deep ties to the CCP.

The billionaire owner of the Chinese company behind a recent attempted land acquisition in Texas near the Laughlin Air Force Base served in the Chinese military and has deep ties to the CCP. (Associated Press)

They also sent several questions to the department heads, including on what "actions are being taken by the DoD in cooperation with the U.S. military services and military base commands to understand and assess potential risks with foreign investments in close proximity to U.S. military bases and other facilities."

Gimenez is joined on the letter by a multitude of Republican lawmakers, including Reps. Jeff Van Drew of New Jersey, Mariannette Miller-Meeks of Iowa, Scott Franklin of Florida and Lisa McClain of Michigan.

The CCP-linked farmland acquisition is far from the first land buy by the Chinese government and the purchases have been heavily scrutinized for the national security risks presented as they have been approved under both the Biden and Trump administrations.

A wind energy farm project near Del Rio, Texas, was reportedly nixed by the Texas government after it was revealed the 130,000 acre — around the size of Tulsa, Oklahoma — was only miles away from the Laughlin Air Force Base where pilots are trained.

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It was also revealed the Chinese billionaire who owns the company behind, GH America Energy, formerly served in the Chinese military and has deep ties to the CCP.

The purchases have raised red flags in Washington, with Texas Republican Rep. Tony Gonzales, who represents Del Rio, introducing a bill to curb foreign adversaries purchasing land anywhere near U.S. military installations.

The Fufeng Group paid $2.3 million to purchase the 300 acres of land just 12 miles away from the Grand Forks Air Force Base. The company plans to invest $700 million to open the mill.

A spokesperson for the Pentagon told Fox News Digital Austin will be responding to the authors of the letter, as usual with his correspondence. The USDA and Treasury Department did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's requests for comment.

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Monday, September 26, 2022

Sound on Sound responds to social media criticism - CT Insider

The avalanche of criticisms over the Sound on Sound festival seemed to slow on Day 2. After organizers made changes after the first day, attendees noticed an improvement in overcrowding and long lines. 

Social media users who attended the first day expressed frustration for the overcrowding and waiting hours in line for food and drinks, while others mentioned audio issues, traffic congestion and poor Internet connection. One Twitter user said her husband overheated from the large crowds and started fainting before audience members made room for him to sit down.

In a statement Sunday at midnight, festival organizers promised a better Day 2, which will include walkaways in the performance field, larger "No Chair Zones," more vendors and better sound quality. 

"We are learning and refining the experience in real time," the statement said.

People on social media reported notably smaller crowds on Day 2, making it easier to walk around the field and spending significantly less time waiting in line for concessions. Many praised performances from the Dave Matthews Band, Noah Kahan Brandi Carlile and other headliners. 

"Today’s experience at the festival & yesterday’s were like night & day! Thanks for all the efforts to make improvements for us!" one Facebook user commented. 

The sound quality had mixed reviews among social media users, with many requesting staffers turn up the sound and others noticing an improvement.

Sound on Sound made its first appearance in Bridgeport's Seaside Park on Sept. 24 and 25. The first day saw 30,000 attendees and performances from Stevie Nicks, The Lumineers and other artists. 

Country singer Zach Bryan experienced technical difficulties for the first 15 minutes of his set and walked off the stage multiple times. The singer only played 20 minutes of the 55-minute set. 

In a recently deleted tweet, the singer called the first 15 minutes of the set "..the most embarrassing moments I have ever felt playing music through the entire last year of my life.." and retweeted a user's complaint about him playing only three songs. During the ordeal, audience members showed signs of impatience and chanted "We want Zach."  

Before the band Caamp performed, promoter Jimmy Koplik told the crowd to move their lawn chairs because too many people brought them and they took up a lot of space. 

"You should be ashamed of how your ticket holders were treated, and how grossly oversold this event was," one Facebook user commented under one of the festival's posts. 

Sound on Sound addressed the backlash in a statement just after midnight on Sunday:

"Our team is working overnight to expand and reconfigure the viewing area to accommodate more space for all fans, and defining walkaways across the performance field for crowd movement. We are also expanding the No Chair Zones in the viewing area and will be more actively enforcing the policy to keep the space in front of the stages open for fans to stand and enjoy the show. Please help us by respecting the No Chair Zone signs in the field tomorrow."

Festival organizers also posted a weather warning Sunday morning advising that attendees dress for rainy weather and allowing the use of small umbrellas. A thunderstorm occurred during Dave and Tim's performance Sunday night, according to one Twitter user. 

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Sunday, September 25, 2022

49ers news - 3 Keys to Victory: The 49ers have to play sound defense - Niners Nation

The 49ers travel to Empower Field at Mile High Sunday night to face off against a hungry Denver Broncos. Head coach Kyle Shanahan gears up for his first primetime matchup of the season, where he faces a rookie head coach in Nathaniel Hackett. Denver is equipped with a win-now roster and will put up a strong fight against the 49ers. We take a look at three keys to a 49er victory below.

The 49er defense slows down Denver’s rushing attack

Javonte Williams had a strong rookie season last year and has not lost a step in 2022. The former North Carolina Tar heel showcased his receiving ability with ELEVEN catches in Week 1. Williams also helped control the time of possession vs. the Houston Texans with 15 rushes for 75 yards last week.

Melvin Gordon played well last year and is keeping the same tune this season with 4.8 yards per carry. Gordon has a similar rushing style to Williams and will be a thorn in the 49ers’ side if San Francisco does not wrap up to tackle.

San Francisco’s defensive identity is stopping the run, getting to the quarterback, and now forcing interceptions. Arik Armstead and Javon Kinlaw are a Great Wall of China in run defense, so let’s hope Armstead can suit up to slow this rushing attack down. We could see DeMeco Ryans bring out the Bear front to slow down this dynamic duo. Additionally, it will be essential for linebackers and defensive backs to be gap sound because both running backs have home run-hitting potential. Both running backs were top-15 in percent of tackles broken tackles last season, with Gordon 15th and Williams leading the NFL with 17.2.

Rely on sound defense, not Russell Wilson’s slump

While Russell Wilson leads an underperforming Broncos offense that is bottom five in yards per game, Wilson has been able to turn it up against San Francisco as the 10-year veteran is 17-4 against the 49ers. Sound defense is the only answer for a quarterback who can extend the play, throw deep with accuracy, and take off for a significant gain.

(Wilson’s Week 1 passing chart)

Ryans will likely use more split safety coverages versus one-high looks. Wilson tends to stay away from the middle of the field as he would rather target the deep sidelines for explosive plays. Running split safety coverages will give the corners more support as opposed to providing the Broncos receivers one-on-one matchups with a post safety. The cornerbacks put up a strong showing against Seattle despite Tyler Lockett gaining over 100 yards through the air. Denver has two banged-up receivers, Jerry Jeudy and KJ Hamler, but I would not underestimate their ability to create explosive plays on Sunday night. The focus will be on the Broncos’ leading receiver Courtland Sutton. Sutton can win on all three levels of the field and is an expert at winning on routes that travel 15+ yards down the field.

Garoppolo and the 49er pass-catchers NEED to make plays

I wanted to make this headline ‘Jimmy Garoppolo attacks Denver’s secondary,’ but aggressiveness is not in his nature. Broncos defensive coordinator and first-year defensive play-caller Ejiro Evero is without All-Pro safety Justin Simmons and has limited talent at the linebacker position. Patrick Surtain II could miss the matchup with a shoulder injury, but all signs point to him playing as he practiced in full capacity on Thursday. Ronald Darby, former 49er K’Waun Williams, and Kareem Jackson are other notable names in the Broncos secondary. Darby is coming off a red-hot game against the Texans where he limited receivers to two catches for 24 yards on six targets. Williams is stout against the run but struggles in man coverage. Shanahan should think about giving slot fade opportunities to Danny Gray against Williams.

Garoppolo must take shots against Denver’s linebackers in coverage. George Kittle is making his season debut, and it would be a shame if he gets anything under seven targets. Kittle is a significant factor in the run game, but I want to see his receiving skills on display. He is too talented not to have a more substantial impact on the 49ers’ passing game week in and week out.

Sunday is a big game for the 49ers’ wide receivers. Denver’s secondary is one the best they will see all season, so they must avoid dropping targets, bleeding up field on routes, and getting penalized. It may sound simple, but talented DBs can easily knock a receiver off his game.

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Sound on Sound Music Festival sees record attendance - Eyewitness News 3

BRIDGEPORT, Conn. (WFSB) - Today, Bridgeport held it’s first ever Sound on Sound music festival.

Fans of Stevie Nicks poured into Seaside Park in Bridgeport all day.

Event management says 30,000 came today, and they expect another 30,000 tomorrow.

“It’s unbelievable. We never expected this sort of turnout. With great weather we are having the largest Music festival ever in Connecticut and it’s quite an honor,” said Howard Saffan, Owner of Sound on Sound.

“Fleetwood was big when I was growing up. I’ve read her biography so we are excited to see her today,” said Nicole Glor, Greenwich.

Tickets and publicity for this festival began in February.

The interest has been steady ever since.

“I’m pretty impressed by what the have done here. For this being the first year. I first wanted to come because Dave Mathew’s is performing tomorrow night, I’m a big fan,” said Dorothy Cascerceri Simone, Greenwich.

The Sound on Sound Festival was not the only one to take place.

The Durham Fair had a jampacked Saturday.

“It’s the one thing I have to do at the end of the year. It finishes off my year the people are nice it’s fun. I like the food you can’t beat it,” said Al Dias.

The Durham fair and sound on sound continue all day Sunday.

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J.J. McCarthy, Jim Harbaugh sound off on QB’s performance against Maryland - Maize n Brew

After three weeks of near-total domination, the Michigan Wolverines had their first taste of adversity Saturday — grinding out a 34-27 victory against the Maryland Terrapins.

Though it was by no means a bad performance — 220 yards and two touchdowns with a 69% completion rate — quarterback J.J McCarthy struggled to hit the long pass for a majority of the game, only snapping the cold streak deep into the fourth quarter.

Following the game, McCarthy acknowledged these missed opportunities but praised his team’s grit in the win.

“I’d probably say that it definitely wasn’t my best performance and I want some things back,” McCarthy said. “But I was happy with the way we moved the ball in times we needed to respond. That was a good team out there, Marylands got a great defense and a great offense and I was just happy with the way we responded when adversity creeped in.”

When asked specifically about his near-chances with Andrel Anthony, McCarthy placed no blame on the reciever.

“I don’t think (timing between him and Anthony)’s the issue at all,” McCarthy emphasized. “I take full responsibility for all those throws that I missed on him. My arm was feeling like a 110% today and it’s been a while since it felt like that, so being able to go through the practices this week and being able to adjust and dial it back a little bit more is gonna be huge.”

In contrast to McCarthy’s comments, Michigan head coach Jim Harbaugh took a more complementary approach when assessing his quarterback’s play.

“You know I think he did a lot of great things,” Harbaugh said. “The game on the line throws to Roman, to Ronnie Bell, just to name a couple. I thought he worked the ball to (Luke Schoonmaker), and just kinda settled into good, fundamental football.”

No quarterback is immune to mixed-bag performances, and with McCarthy facing his first true formidable competition this week, it was perhaps obvious in hindsight there would be growing pains. With the Wolverines facing a stalwart Iowa defense next week, however, it will be a point of intrigue to see how fast the sophomore can apply the lessons from this weekend.

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Saturday, September 24, 2022

First phase of eelgrass restoration project completed in Long Island Sound - The Suffolk Times - Suffolk Times

In early August, Emma DeLoughry of Save the Sound and Rob Vasiluth of SAVE Environmental dove into Long Island Sound off of Fishers Island and collected eelgrass seed pods, completing phase one of a major eelgrass restoration project for the Sound.

“It should matter to all people that live along the water or have an income from the water,” Mr. Vasiluth said. “When you restore eelgrass, it rapidly brings back fish stocks which is good for recreational fishermen, commercial fishermen and for the species of fish that it’s helping.”

Mr. Vasliuth is an operating engineer and the founder of SAVE Environmental. He founded the company three years ago and has a patent on growing eelgrass with shellfish by attaching eelgrass seeds to them. Ms. DeLoughry has been Save the Sound’s Soundkeeper Associate since June and worked with them last summer as part of their Melissa J Schlag Intern for Justice and the Environment program.

Eelgrass is submerged aquatic vegetation. According to The Nature Conservancy, there is only 10%, or 2,000 acres, of eelgrass left in the Sound. There is a myriad of benefits to restoring it in Long Islands waters.

According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Eelgrass provides numerous important ecosystem functions, including foraging areas and shelter to young fish and invertebrates, food for migratory waterfowl and sea turtles, and spawning surfaces for species such as the Pacific herring. Eelgrass beds also help reduce coastal erosion by trapping sediment, stabilizing the substrate, and reducing the force of wave energy. 

Emma DeLoughry of Save the Sound and Rob Vasiluth of SAVE Environmental. (Courtesy photo)

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration  says the plant also improves water quality by filtering polluted runoff, absorbs excess nutrients and stores greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide.

“It’s a really critical species in the Sound for helping our wildlife and just for the sound health in general,” Ms. DeLoughry said.

According to Save the Sound, Fishers Island’s eelgrass meadows make up nearly 25% of the seagrass that remains in the entirety of the Long Island Sound.

The first phase of the project was the collection, Ms. DeLoughry and Mr. Vasiluth dove three times over the summer, once on July 28, and twice on August 3. They collected adult stalks of eelgrass from the eelgrass meadows. According to Save the Sound, their haul collected over 80,000 seeds from the stalks. They are being preserved at Cornell Cooperative Extension in Southold.

Mr. Vasiltuh said that they went to Fishers Island because it has the best production of eelgrass seeds anywhere in New York.

“The viability of those seeds is around 20% whereas seeds taken from the South Shore, they’re about 10% viability,” he said. “It takes a lot longer to collect that amount of seeds by far because the plants on the South Shore don’t produce as many seeds as what we get out of Fishers Island.”

The next phase of the project is to literally glue those seeds to clamshells. Five seeds will be glued to each clamshell between 18 and 30 millimeters in size, according to Save the Sound. Mr. Vasiluth will be getting around 20,000 hatchery clams from the Great South Bay Shellfish Cultivation Facility in Islip. Phase three would be deploying the clams across a two-acre area of Smithtown Bay.

“We’re hopeful that the clams will burrow themselves in the sand, and then that way to plant the eelgrass seeds,” Ms. DeLoughry said.

Rob Vasiluth of SAVE Environmental on a recent dive into Long Island Sound off of Fishers Island to collect eelgrass seed pods. (Courtesy photo)

The goal is to have up to 20,000 plants take root. Then two years later when the surviving plants are expected to reach maturity, they expect the new plants will produce 100-200 blades of grass and then produce its own seeds.

This project has been a favorite of Ms. DeLoughry because of its hands-on nature.

“It has the potential to be somewhat revolutionary in the way that, worldwide, we can be replanting eelgrass meadows, so I think it’s got really strong potential and it’s a great project.”

According to Ms. DeLoughry, they received a grant from the 11th hour project, to film the process. The 11th hour project, also known as The Schmidt Family foundation, established in 2006, supports qualifed 501(c)(3) organizations and social enterprises through grantmaking, impact investing and complementary resources according to their website.Save the Sound has a video on their website which documents their journey completing phase one. There will be more to come as they embark on the following phases of the restoration project.

Mr. Vasiluth said he plans to start gluing seeds to clams at the end of this month.

Mr. Vasiluth has been going to various school districts across the island and showing students his method of regrowing eelgrass which he really enjoys.

He said the biggest challenge with this project has been funding and he’s open to receiving volunteers. If you’d like to donate or volunteer, you can contact Mr. Vasiluth at [email protected].

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