Hey yâall, itâs Austin Carr in Boston. This was the year some gadgets started to play nicely together and respect us more. But first⦠Todayâ
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Hey yâall, itâs Austin Carr in Boston. This was the year some gadgets started to play nicely together and respect us more. But first⦠Todayâs must-reads: â¢Â China [tightened](oversight of online education
⢠TSMC [kicked off]( mass production of the next generation of chipsÂ
⢠Elon Musk said changes to Twitterâs [server architechture]( were responsible for service disruptions from New York to Tokyo The year in design At the end of every year, tech publications love to compile best-of lists, often highlighting a whoâs who of influential innovators, blockbuster gadgets and big business deals. I generally find these listicles too abstract, overly focused on Silicon Valley personalities or market-moving news. They never seem to capture aspects of technology that improved my day-to-day life in subtle yet indispensable ways. So, for 2022, Iâve put together a collection of my top five features of the year. Yes, there have been larger and perhaps more inspiring advances, from holy-moly hardware (e.g., [Apple Inc.âs M2 chip]() to disruptive software ([Figma]() and scary-smart artificial intelligence ([OpenAI Inc.âs ChatGPT](). My list is squarely centered on the deceptively simple designs that affect us in such invisible and magical ways that we already take them for granted. They havenât all come about in the last 12 months, but each one cemented its place this year as a feature I canât live without. 1. The new pairing When Alphabet Inc.âs Google introduced a new slate of electronics in October, the company [showed off the latest iteration of Fast Pair](, which enables accessories like earbuds and smartwatches to link instantly with Pixel phones by holding the devices near each other. Critics have rightfully pointed out that itâs a blatant copy of Appleâs system â and from a consumerâs perspective, thatâs a good thing. The way Apple products often work seamlessly together has long been the gold standard. I hope Google can deliver that same experience for non-Apple devices and make it a plain, vanilla standard. 2. Effortless casting I frequently find myself in awe of Spotify Technology SAâs app. Forgive me for highlighting a feature thatâs been [around for nearly a decade](, but since so many other apps still canât get this right, itâs a wonder I can play Spotify on just about any speaker. Switching outputs on my Wi-Fi network is a cinch â and a [vision of life without manufacturer lock-in](. I love switching from an Amazon.com Inc. Echo to the iPhone, Xbox or laptop. This approach could and should be possible in any app but is unfortunately rare in this era of walled gardens. Streaming devices and smart-home products would be so much better if they only worked more like Spotify. 3. Design turned on its side For its novel web browser Arc, the [New York-based startup behind the app]( did something so obvious that it might not appear radical at first: Instead of having tabs arranged horizontally on top, Arc puts them in a vertical sidebar. Arc isnât the first to try this, but it does it right. The interface takes some getting used to, but itâs a reminder that many developers follow conventions instead of challenging them. It turns out the status quo isnât always right. 4. Unhidden privacy Historically, software makers tended to bury privacy options, presumably so users will share more data and help companies make money. But lately, more developers appear to be putting privacy permissions at the forefront, most notably with [Apple forcing apps to make users]( explicitly opt in or out of tracking. Iâve noticed smaller but significant privacy tweaks trickling into my most beloved apps. For instance, on previous versions of Instagram, I sometimes accidentally swiped to the appâs camera mode. This led to a prompt insisting I enable camera and microphone access on a screen thatâs almost impossible to escape. Recently, however, Instagram added a comically simple fix: an X in the top-left corner that takes me safely back to my feed without requiring changes to my privacy settings. It may look ridiculous that Instagram didnât have the X before, but even minor alterations like this represent a big step, placing control back in the hands of users. 5. No-hassle notifications Arenât we all so very tired of incessant notifications? Theyâre the new pop-up ads, often selfishly pushing unwanted content and pointless suggestions, a game of whack-a-mole we forever play with our phones or even with Alexa. Apple has made strides to lighten the unnecessary load with its Focus mode, sort of a customizable version of its original do-not-disturb function. It takes some manual classifying, but filtering out notifications between personal and work timeframes gets us just a little bit closer to something we yearn for at this time of year: silence. Do you disagree with these choices? Have other favorite features? [Shoot me an email](mailto:acarr54@bloomberg.net). Eager to hear your feedback! â[Austin Carr](mailto:acarr54@bloomberg.net)
The big story Enthusiasm for vertical farming is [starting to wilt](, with some companies shutting down, laying off staff or seeing their stock sink. Investors had poured billions into the space, which promises a way to feed growing populations amid climate change. But itâs tough to turn a profit in a complicated and expensive business that requires companies to excel at robotics, software, agricultural science and farm design. Get fully charged Tech founders led a [wipeout]( of billionairesâ fortunes in 2022. The $1.4 trillion drop in the wealth of the richest 500 was partly self-inflicted: witness the implosion of FTX and Elon Muskâs antics at Twitter. Silicon Valley staff are [rushing]( to unload stakes in private companies as valuations sink. The flood of sellers is making it harder to assess the price of many startups. New York became the [first]( US state to sign a right-to-repair bill. As of July 1 consumers will be able to demand manuals and other information from manufacturers so they can fix their own devices. However, producers wonât be required to let people bypass security features, which is sometimes necessary when gear is locked. Programming note: Weâre taking a day off for New Yearâs. See you on Tuesday. Follow Us More from Bloomberg Get Bloomberg Tech weeklies in your inbox: - [Power On]( for Apple scoops, consumer tech news and more, every Sunday
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