Go

Latest

  • Lifestyle image of the Roland Go: Mixer Pro-X

    Roland's new mobile mixer has better support for Android and headset mics

    by 
    Daniel Cooper
    Daniel Cooper
    06.22.2021

    The Pro-X offers small, but useful, improvements on the Pro.

  • Oculus Quest

    'Tetris Effect' is now available on Oculus Quest

    by 
    Rachel England
    Rachel England
    05.18.2020

    Oculus Quest is one year old and it's getting a bunch of updates to celebrate.

  • OTG

    Amazon's 'Just Walk Out' tech is coming to airport stores in March

    by 
    Igor Bonifacic
    Igor Bonifacic
    03.11.2020

    That didn't take long. One of the first stores in the US to feature Amazon's Just Walk Out checkout-free technology will open on March 16th, one week after the company announced it was licensing the platform to retailers. You'll find the store, a CIBO Express Gourmet Market, at Newark Liberty International Airport Terminal C, with more locations to follow. When you visit the store, you'll be able to buy food and drinks without interacting with a cashier.

  • Lindsey Wasson / Reuters

    Amazon's checkout-free tech is heading to other retailers

    by 
    Rachel England
    Rachel England
    03.09.2020

    Checkout-free, cashless supermarkets -- a novelty shopping experience or the future of bricks and mortar retail? According to Amazon -- which turned the concept into a 10,400-square-foot reality -- it's the latter. After announcing its plans to license its automated checkout technology to other retailers, the company has revealed it has "several" signed deals with customers, and has launched a new website inviting inquiries from others interested in the "Just Walk Out" experience.

  • Lindsey Wasson / Reuters

    Amazon's first big 'Go' grocery store opens in Seattle with 5,000 products

    by 
    Rachel England
    Rachel England
    02.25.2020

    Amazon's checkout-free Go concept has officially morphed into a supermarket. Amazon Go Grocery opens in Seattle today, with 5,000 items for sale across the 10,400-square-foot premises. Using a range of cameras, shelf sensors and software, shoppers can pick up the items they want and simply walk out the door -- their accounts are charged via a smartphone app as they leave.

  • Engadget, Richard Lai

    Insta360’s tiny wearable sports cam has video stabilization

    by 
    Richard Lai
    Richard Lai
    08.28.2019

    Insta360 -- as the name implies -- is usually known for its 360-degree cameras, but this time, it's braving sports cam territory with a little surprise, literally. The Insta360 Go is apparently the "world's smallest stabilized camera" -- so small that you can almost hide it behind your thumb, and it also only weighs 18.3 grams. Better yet, the device has a magnetic backside, which lets you snap it onto one of the bundled accessories. Those include a pendant for wearing the camera on your chest, an "easy clip" for your headband, or a pivot stand which can be screwed onto a sticky base or any selfie stick. When done, just throw the Go back into its charging case, then you can plug the assembly into either an iPhone or Android device for file transfer.

  • Kirill_Savenko via Getty Images

    Microsoft is shutting down its internet board and card games

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    07.14.2019

    Microsoft has already given users of older Windows versions some not-so-subtle hints that it's time to move on. Now, it's giving them more of a push by removing things dear to their hearts: their board and card games. The software giant is shutting down several Internet Games for people using Windows 7 and earlier, including Backgammon, Checkers, Hearts, Reversi, Spades and MSN Go. Just when you'll lose access will depend on your version of Windows.

  • Joe Scarnici via Getty Images

    AIs are better gamers than us, but that’s OK

    by 
    Jamie Rigg
    Jamie Rigg
    03.20.2019

    We're only just beginning to scratch the surface of what artificial intelligence is capable of, from medical advancements to movie recommendations. Despite AI being a potential goldmine of help to humanity, even the greatest minds are partial to the odd spout of fear-mongering. The robots are coming to take our jobs, overthrow humanity, enslave us and the like. Skynet is but a dystopian dream at this point in time, but in some ways, AI is already winning. It's beating us at some of our favorite games, from Go to StarCraft II. Machine has begun to best man, but that's a good thing.

  • Niantic Labs

    Niantic details this year's 'Pokémon Go' events

    by 
    Daniel Cooper
    Daniel Cooper
    05.07.2018

    Last year, Niantic hosted a day-long Pokémon Go festival in Chicago with 20,000 diehard fans of the smash hit mobile game. Unfortunately, it was a disaster, with both the local data networks, and the game's servers, unable to cope with that many players at once. It recovered from that initially bumpy (and expensive) start to host events in Japan, Korea and Europe, and now it's hoping to maintain that streak this year.

  • AOL

    Google gives Gmail the Android Go treatment to save data and storage

    by 
    Rob LeFebvre
    Rob LeFebvre
    02.15.2018

    Last December, Google launched Android Go, a lightweight operating system for less capable phones typically used in places like India and Indonesia. The company has also been creating apps for these less-capable phones, too, including YouTube Go and a Go-enabled Assistant. Now Google has Gmail Go, a Gmail client made to use less data and storage space for lower end Android phones.

  • Bloomberg via Getty Images

    Amazon’s convenience store of the future makes me nervous

    by 
    Daniel Cooper
    Daniel Cooper
    01.22.2018

    Half a decade in the making, and after a year of intensive testing, Amazon's cashier-free convenience store is opening to the public. Amazon Go, located at the base of the company's Seattle HQ, is the first of its kind: a convenience store with no checkouts, no lines and no stress. Simply walk in, select your purchases and walk out -- a seamless, frictionless, fast way to grab a sandwich for lunch. At least that's the story Amazon wants you to know.

  • AFP/Getty Images

    Human Go champion backtracks on vow to never face an AI opponent again

    by 
    Swapna Krishna
    Swapna Krishna
    12.27.2017

    Back in May, AlphaGo from Google, an AI algorithm that is part of DeepMind, defeated the human world champion Ke Jie in a three-part match. After it was over, Jie vowed never to play a computer again. But apparently something has changed his mind because Chinese news sources report that Jie will once again play an artificial intelligence at an AI tournament to be held in China in April 2018.

  • Oculus

    Oculus Go is a $199 VR headset that doesn't require a phone

    by 
    Nicole Lee
    Nicole Lee
    10.11.2017

    While Oculus has pioneered the modern consumer VR industry with the Oculus Rift and Samsung's Gear VR, it's been working hard on a truly wireless VR solution as well. Last year, Oculus teased that it was planning on a powerful standalone VR headset called "Project Santa Cruz," and earlier this year, there was news that Oculus was working on yet another tether-free headset codenamed "Pacific." Now, the company is finally ready to unveil its first standalone headset, that's a little more accessible than the Santa Cruz. This is the Oculus Go.

  • Google

    Google's AlphaGo retires from competition

    by 
    Mariella Moon
    Mariella Moon
    05.27.2017

    To say that AlphaGo had a great run in the competitive Go scene would be an understatement: it has just defeated the world's number 1 Go player, Ke Jie, in a three-part match. Now that it has nothing left to prove, the AI is hanging up its boots and leaving the world of competitive Go behind. AlphaGo's developers from Google-owned DeepMind will now focus on creating advanced general algorithms to help scientists find elusive cures for diseases, conjure up a way to dramatically reduce energy consumption and invent new revolutionary materials.

  • Google

    Google's AlphaGo is the best Go player in the world

    by 
    Matt Brian
    Matt Brian
    05.25.2017

    In the latest round of man versus machine, machine has come out on top. Google's AlphaGo beat Go world champion Ke Jie for a second time in as many days, taking an unassailable lead in the three-part series. By rights, Deepmind's AI can now be considered the world's best Go player, having beaten the game's two biggest names in a little under a year.

  • Deepmind

    Google's AI will take on the world's top Go player next month

    by 
    Matt Brian
    Matt Brian
    04.10.2017

    It's been a busy year for Google Deepmind. You might remember AlphaGo resoundingly beating Go grandmaster Lee Sedol by four games to one and secretly schooling some of the world's best Go players online, but the team has also found time to help Britain's national health service treat patients and arm its computer with new tricks to help it learn faster and "remember" previous knowledge. AlphaGo can now justifiably be considered one of the world's best Go players, but the Deepmind team can't make a bonafide claim until its AI has beaten the world number one: 19-year-old Chinese player Ke Jie. Deepmind co-founder and CEO Demis Hassabis has now confirmed that after months of speculation, the match is on.

  • Google / Getty

    Korean Go body to ban smartphones thanks to Google's AI

    by 
    Jamie Rigg
    Jamie Rigg
    01.20.2017

    South Korean Go players will be banned from using smartphones during official tournaments in the future, and it's all thanks to Google's AlphaGo AI. The Korea Times reports that the Korea Baduk Association -- baduk being the local name for Go -- is currently drafting new rules that will outlaw smartphone use in matches. While the organization is fully aware you can't carry AlphaGo around in your pocket at the moment, it's preempting a time when certain AI tools that can give players a competitive edge do become available on smartphones.

  • JUNG YEON-JE/AFP/Getty Images

    Google's DeepMind AI has been secretly schooling online Go players

    by 
    Andrew Dalton
    Andrew Dalton
    01.04.2017

    Over the past year, Google's DeepMind AlphaGo AI has taken on (and defeated) worldwide Go masters in a series of high-profile matches. But in a sly move similar to a game-playing Turing test, DeepMind recently unleashed AlphaGo on some unsuspecting online Go players, thoroughly trouncing them in the process.

  • 'Pokémon Go' offering spooky bonuses for Halloween

    by 
    Daniel Cooper
    Daniel Cooper
    10.24.2016

    If there's one thing our (fictional) mom always told us, it's that we shouldn't go out walking at night with our smartphone on show. The folks at Niantic Labs feel differently, and think that poorly lit Fall nights around Halloween are the perfect time for everyone to catch some pocket monsters. The company is launching its first "global in-game event" to encourage Pokémon Go players to go out and catch some spooky 'mons.

  • JUNG YEON-JE/AFP/Getty Images

    Google's Deepmind AI will play Go against the world number one

    by 
    Matt Brian
    Matt Brian
    06.06.2016

    After it beat Korean grandmaster Lee Sedol by four games to one earlier this year, Google's AlphaGo has become the Go player to beat. Even while the series was still being played, 18-year-old Chinese Go champion Ke Jie remarked that he could beat Google's Deepmind computer. Now he has his chance. At the 37th World Amateur Go Championship in Chinese city of Wuxi this weekend, a spokesman for the Chinese Go Association revealed that representatives have been in contact with the team behind AlphaGo and will set up a match before the end of the year.