At the start of this year, after YouTube inexplicably decided that I was not, in fact, a proud resident of Argentina, it shunted [[link]] me off my alarmingly cheap YouTube Premium package back into its [[link]] regular, un-premium offering. It's terribly disruptive, which I imagine is the point: ads before I start a video, during a video, next to video previews, as far as the eye can see. No, I don't want to use Grammarly, thank you.
So imagine my delight on learning, via , that YouTube's top brains have cracked how to make the whole experience even worse for the end user, thanks to the infinite power of Google's Gemini AI. At this week's (a big networking and presentation carnival for the platform's advertisers), YouTube gleefully announced "Peak Points." That's its name for a new system that lets Gemini identify the "most meaningful, or 'peak,' moments within YouTube’s popular content."
So far, so acceptable (though I don't know how that's markedly different from YouTube's already-existing "most replayed" feature), but then comes the sucker punch—advertisers can take advantage of Gemini's Peak Points feature to "place your brand where audiences are the most engaged".
But, frankly, I wonder if it's even about any of that, so much as it's about giving Google an opportunity to say 'AI' on a stage and trigger the Pavlovian response that has the world's executive class handing over wads and wads of cash. Call me a terribly cynical Luddite (and, hey, the , thank you), but this feels like another mark in the ledger for AI being a technology that has investors and capitalists incredibly excited, but that offers very little to humble proles like you and me except a worse, more frustrating world.
BetMaster67
Some games take a while to load on mobile, but once they start, the gameplay is smooth and exciting. I hope future updates improve mobile performance, but I still enjoy playing several hours a day.