Platforms like Quinn and Dipsea are enlisting celebrities to narrate audio erotica stories. Stars including Christopher ...
It’s no secret that we’re living in the age of New Vinyl. Kids are digging record players out of their parents’ attics, tween-y retailers like Urban Outfitters have dozens of turntables to choose from ...
This article is part of Kotaku Deals, produced separately from the editorial team. We may earn a commission when you buy through links on the site. Budget soundbars that cost between $100 and $200 ...
Google is rolling out native call recording to older Pixel phones that don’t have the AI-powered Call Notes feature. The feature is now available to the Pixel 6 series and later through the Google ...
Music artists and their production teams spend countless hours writing, recording, and mixing songs, meticulously shaping every note and texture so each track sounds just right. Yet when that same ...
It’s no secret that here at Hackaday we’ve at times been tempted to poke fun at the world of audiophiles, a place where engineering sometimes takes second place to outright silliness. But when a high ...
With iOS 26, Apple has expanded its native call recording feature with transcripts, Live Translation, summaries and tighter integration with Notes. It’s a more polished and useful tool than before, ...
After coming out of nowhere, a viral new app that pays people to record their phone calls for the purpose of training AI has been yanked offline after a security flaw allegedly exposed user data. Neon ...
Neon will pay you to share your phone calls. The app sells recordings of your calls to AI companies for training. You can earn as much as $30 a day. A new app is promising to give you hundreds or even ...
Carolina Sound, a music and record exposition happening in Gastonia, is exactly the kind of event local record store owner Jason Shaut would have wanted to attend when he was still just a collector.
A new app is paying users to record their phone calls for AI training purposes. Credit: Neon Mobile Get paid to record your phone calls and hand them over to third parties? It may seem a bit dystopian ...