The Most Controversial Tech Review Happened…

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SomeOrdinaryGamers

Joined: May 2024
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The Most Controversial Tech Review Happened…


Hello guys and gals, it’s me Mutahar again! This time we take a look at what appears to be Marques Brownlee who recently reviewed a product known as the Humane AI Pin and while he was honest, it raises a question as to how much impact a review can have on the health of a company. Thanks for watching!
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35 Comments

  1. I'm pretty sure that AI pin device is actually breaching people's privacy too, I wouldn't feel comfartable with people talking to me while that monitoring device is on them.

  2. This guy could have given the Ford Edsel an honest review in the 1960s and the corpo simps would be screeching about how he was single-handedly destroying Ford motor company.

    Surf Wisely.

  3. Didn't watch his review of this one but another one of this gadgets, where he biefly mentions it, and am of the same opinion, that they are useless when most people carry a phone around anyways and these devices also needing internet access. Then you can also run apps or even browser applications offering the same features directly on your phone. Especially when this crap costs more than twice as much as my nice and fast Samsung smartphone…

    Who are these idiots that believe we need dedicated "AI companion" devices in this day and age where we already carry smartphones around? Also even 50 bucks would be too much as the 70€ (new price) smartphone I once had would be able to do this.

    Btw, I can use ChatGPT for free via AdacemicCloud and I don't think there is a limit of how often I can use it within a given time frame.

    As soon as something adds "AI" to it's name, investors seem to disable their remaining functioning brain cells. AI might pop like the dot-com bubble.

  4. Companies nowadays feel like they can solve these problems by throwing money at the marketing team, sometimes it doesn't work
    ( specially when there are people like Brownlee being honest and with huge platform, but even without that )
    But I propose a solution; Throw more money at the design/engineering/developing team

  5. If that was a SamApple product, pretty sure he wouldn't be as harsh and be like the tech is new lets give it a chance, the potential is there, its innovative just new and unpolished, etc. Or in short, its SamApple, it'll be good later.

  6. Fisker isn't something you should bet on. They only recently came out of being "defunct". They did have a pretty nice Electric car model prior to Tesla but nobody bought it and its a bit of an automotive oddity now. I seen one parked at a dealership a few years ago and I had never even heard of the brand before then. It was waiting for parts because obviously, production was no longer ongoing. Looked it up the car was called the "Karma". Bankruptcy in 2014, a whole lot of "mergers and acquistions" type of moving around to keep alive.

  7. Still using my iPhone 11. I love it, see no use in upgrading until Apple decides to brick it with a future IOS update to force my hand

  8. Don't say you and him are on the same level with "clickbaiting." This title is literally false, nothing is actually controversial about his video people are just saying that, but that product was literally the worst he's reviewed. Keep crying Muta

  9. Internet discovers that snakeoil technology is being sold in snakeoil ways by snakeoil salesmen.
    Also I generally don't think that this type of generative machine learning technology is going to get put into smartphones for long if at all. You set yourself up for a massive liability and risk if even just one singular time your product gives someone extremely dangerous or misleading information that leads to their injury or death. It has to ride such a fine line of not saying anything as to not risk saying something that nobody utilizes these features as you glean less from it than a Google search, yet the cost of maintaining and licensing this technology is immense.

    I think this sentiment of 'not every start-up with money needs to succeed' needs to be applied more broadly to machine learning ai as a concept. In most use cases in order for it to succeed, the world and every market it's implanted into needs to change to rotate and move around it. And if that's the baseline you're working from, that's nothing. I could be the CEO of the most successful company in the world if the precedent is that everyone needs to make room and work in service of my needs.

  10. This whole controversy is so ridiculous.
    How can something be controversial if literally everyone agrees?
    That literally goes against the definition of controversial!
    I've yet to find a single review of either product that differs from MKBHD.

    Bad reviews don't kill companies.
    Bad products spawn bad reviews, for then the product is the actual direct cause.

  11. That company could easily bounce back if they just advertise for blind people and have features tailored to making people who cant see, lives easier.

  12. Dude, while it's possible that I, Robot 2 will at some point come out, I can 100% guarantee that it's gonna suck. Why? Because I, Robot is so good because it's an adaptation of the book of the same name written by no other than Isaac Asimov. And they did it from start to end – there's no material left they can turn into another movie, so they would have to come up with a sequel themselves. Guess how likely it is that they will come up with something that rivals Asimov's writing.