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TikTok's BeReal Clone Is Now Available As Standalone App ... - TechCrunch
TikTok over the weekend launched its BeReal clone, TikTok Now, as a standalone mobile app across global markets outside the U.S., largely on iOS. The app offers a similar feature set to the TikTok Now experience being introduced into the U.S. TikTok app, announced last week. But as an independent mobile app, it allows users to opt in to receive the push notifications just for these social check-ins — even if they have their TikTok notifications silenced.
While the company had noted the TikTok Now experience would be offered as its own mobile app in some markets, it hadn't yet launched that app at the time of its announcement on Thursday, September 15, 2022. It also wasn't clear which markets would gain access to the feature within TikTok itself or as a standalone app, or when the app would roll out.
TikTok just launched a BeReal clone called TikTok Now
According to data from mobile intelligence firm Sensor Tower, the TikTok Now app launched globally late on Sunday, September 18, 2022. Despite being a new major offering from one of the world's most popular apps, the TikTok Now app has yet to rank in the Top Overall iPhone apps chart in any market as of the time of writing.
However, it has managed to inch into the top 100 iPhone Social Networking apps in five markets — Madagascar, Mozambique, Kenya, Malta and Singapore — and it's ranked in the Top 500 iPhone Social Networking apps in 38 countries. These include Myanmar, Bulgaria, Pakistan, Cambodia, Thailand, Indonesia, Germany, Qatar, Poland, Belgium, New Zealand, Guatemala, Austria, Bahrain, South Africa, Finland, Ghana, Czech Republic, Vietnam, Greece, Ireland, Azerbaijan, Israel, Nigeria, Spain, Netherlands, Switzerland, Algeria, Malaysia, Sweden, Italy, Morocco, Lebanon, Mexico, Denmark, Egypt, Dominican Republic and Romania.
There's also an Android version of the app live in Bermuda, but it's not ranking in any other markets.
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This global rollout speaks to TikTok's ambitions with this new experience, which is shamelessly copied from top mobile app BeReal. Like BeReal, TikTok Now sends a random push notification every day encouraging users to take a photo or video with their phone's front-facing and outward-facing cameras at the same time. Users have a three-minute window to snap their photos or up to 10-minute long videos to participate. Friends can then view each others' photos in the app's Friends feed or they can view posts from others in an Explore feed.
It seems that TikTok believes it may be able to gain traction for this social format in markets where BeReal has yet to dominate. That could be difficult, however, as BeReal is No. 1 in at least nine markets right now, and in the top five Overall iPhone apps in around 40 countries. Its top markets, however, are the U.S., its home market of France and the U.K., Sensor Tower data indicates. That leaves a large part of the globe ripe for competition. (Plus, it's not hard to rip off a format as basic as this, we should point out.)
TikTok declined to clarify its strategy around TikTok Now, including why it has decided to make TikTok Now a feature in U.S., but its own app nearly everywhere else. Instead, the company would only say that it's "experimenting" with the experience and aims to enhance TikTok Now as it learns how its community embraces the format.
Sarah has worked as a reporter for TechCrunch since August 2011. She joined the company after having previously spent over three years at ReadWriteWeb. Prior to her work as a reporter, Sarah worked in I.T. Across a number of industries, including banking, retail and software.
This Week In Apps: ChatGPT Comes To IPhone, Bing AI ... - TechCrunch
Welcome back to This Week in Apps, the weekly TechCrunch series that recaps the latest in mobile OS news, mobile applications and the overall app economy.
The app economy in 2023 hit a few snags, as consumer spending last year dropped for the first time by 2% to $167 billion, according to data.Ai's "State of Mobile" report. However, downloads are continuing to grow, up 11% year-over-year in 2022 to reach 255 billion. Consumers are also spending more time in mobile apps than ever before. On Android devices alone, hours spent in 2022 grew 9%, reaching 4.1 trillion.
This Week in Apps offers a way to keep up with this fast-moving industry in one place with the latest from the world of apps, including news, updates, startup fundings, mergers and acquisitions, and much more.
Do you want This Week in Apps in your inbox every Saturday? Sign up here: techcrunch.Com/newsletters
ChatGPT comes to the iPhoneChatGPT is going mobile. On Thursday, OpenAI announced the launch of an official iOS app that allows users to access its popular AI chatbot on the go, months after the App Store was filled with dubious, unofficial services. The new ChatGPT app will be free to use, free from ads and will allow for voice input via Whisper, the company says, but will initially be limited to U.S. Users at launch. Support for other markets will be available in the "coming weeks," OpenAI said, without offering further details. An Android version is also promised to come "soon."
Like its desktop counterpart, the new ChatGPT app allows users to interact with an AI chatbot to ask questions without running a traditional web search, plus get advice, find inspiration, learn, research and more. Given the issues with Apple's own voice assistant, Siri, and its own lack of AI progress, the new release could push more users to try ChatGPT on their phones as their main mobile helper. This could potentially impact Google, as well, as the search engine today benefits from being the default search engine in Safari on Apple's iPhone.
Consumer interest in AI has been growing, which led to the top 10 mobile AI apps generating double-digit millions in consumer spending before the first quarter of this year even wrapped, but far too many of today's apps claiming to offer ChatGPT access were effectively scams that tricked users into high-priced subscriptions. Apple doesn't always promptly take down fleeceware like this, despite the harm to consumers. (Some believe it's not incentivized to do so given it benefits financially by leaving scam apps up where it can take a cut of the subscription payments.)
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Now that there's an official (and free!) ChatGPT app on the market, there's little need for consumers to download a paid alternative. If people want more functionality — like faster response times or access to GPT-4 — they can pay OpenAI directly for a ChatGPT Plus subscription.
It remains to be seen how the launch will impact the wider AI chatbot market, or if Apple will begin to quietly pull down some of the more unscrupulous ChatGPT scam apps from the App Store. The app may also shift consumer behavior away from relying on voice assistants like Siri and, later, Google Assistant, as users turn to ChatGPT to answer more of their everyday questions and direct them to new information.
For the time being, the new ChatGPT app is No. 1 on the top free apps chart in the App Store and is also being featured at the top of the App Store's Apps tab, and in a list of "Must-have" apps for iPhone. However, internally at Apple, staff has been banned from accessing ChatGPT over fears of leaked confidential data.
Microsoft expands AI features across its mobile appsOpen AI may have been the big news this week, but Microsoft also rolled out a number of AI updates to its suite of mobile apps as competition with Google and others heats up.
The company announced a number of changes to Bing, including the rollout of several of the features that it had detailed earlier this month. Across desktop and mobile, this included videos, Knowledge Cards, graphs, better formatting and social sharing capabilities in Bing Chat. Chat history is also arriving across desktop and mobile, allowing users to look back and view a list of their recent activity. (Mobile will receive the feature first, Microsoft says.)
Plus, users will now be able to add a Bing Chat widget to their iOS or Android Home Screen, for faster access to Bing Chat. Later, users will be able to also click the Bing app icon to be taken directly to chat or tap a microphone icon to ask a question.
Users will also be able to start a Bing Chat conversation on the desktop and then continue it on their smartphone — a feature that should arrive by next week. The company says it's expanded the country and language support for voice input, as well.
In addition, Microsoft is adding Bing Chat to the mobile version of its Edge browser app, which lets you ask questions related to the mobile website you're viewing, including for it to summarize the article or page. When reading, you'll soon be able to highlight a word or phrase and have it open a conversation with Bing to learn more about the topic.
The updates included other apps, too, like the SwiftKey keyboard app, which gained the ability to compose text for you, based on the parameters you suggest related to the subject matter, tone, format and length. Microsoft suggests this could be used for writing emails, for example. The feature is coming to iOS and Android in a couple of weeks. An AI-powered translator is also being built into the SwiftKey keyboard.
Meanwhile, Skype users can now use Bing in their group chats.
The pace of app updates here is worth noting. Microsoft only debuted Bing Chat 100 days ago, it noted in its announcement on Tuesday, and it has continuously shipped new features since. The latest round of updates follows news from Google's I/O developer event, where it opened up access to its AI chatbot Bard, which is now available without a waitlist.
It should be interesting to see how quickly Google follows to add Bard access across its own suite of mobile apps, as Bing is doing, or integrate Bard into its own home screen widgets. For now, Google is testing AI features through Search Labs, where today it houses a handful of projects, including AI-powered Google search features, AI in Google Workspaces, smart note-taking project Tailwind and generative music maker MusicLM.
What we know about Instagram's Twitter cloneMore details are emerging about Instagram's Twitter clone due out later this summer. The decentralized social app will allow users to authenticate with their existing credentials in order to post short updates, including text, links, photos and videos, to the platform. Their account details, like usernames, profile photos and even block lists are said to carry over to the new experience, which will also interoperate with decentralized apps like Mastodon.
This week, we understand Meta has been reaching out to celebs and high-profile influencers to get them on board as early adopters. Athletes, actors, producers, showrunners and comedians are said to be the early priorities. In addition, one leak involved screenshots of the new app — or at least mock-ups. These show an app that has a very Twitter-like look and feel, with text posts, likes and comments, but in more of a timeline view that's less media-heavy that an Instagram feed.
What do you think about Instagram's Twitter app? Let me know what you're thinking and hearing via email (sarahp@techcrunch.Com) or Signal (415.234.3994)
Everything we know about Instagram's Twitter clone, due this summer
AppleThe NYT launched its own audio app. The launch capitalizes on The Times' acquisition of audio journalism app Audm in 2020, which served as the basis for the new offering. In the newly launched New York Times Audio, the company combines the publication's top podcasts, like "The Daily," "The Ezra Klein Show," "Hard Fork," "Modern Love," "The Run-Up" and others, with those made exclusively for the new platform. Thanks to its $25 million acquisition of the production studio behind "Serial," the app includes content related to that deal, as well, like the namesake show itself, plus new shows from the studio like "The Trojan Horse Affair," "The Coldest Case in Laramie" and others, as well as "This American Life," hosted by Ira Glass. Sports talk from The Athletic is also ne included along with Audm's long-form narrated journalism from non-NYT sources. Audm will now shut down and its subscribers will be moved to NYT Audio. The app arrives following the success of other standalone mobile properties, like NYT Cooking and Games, but it's unclear if it will see similar traction as users tend to enjoy streaming podcasts in a dedicated app that provides access to all their shows.
More in media…
Audio journalism app Curio can now create personalized episodes using AI
Social MediaUber puts family (even teens) at the center of its new products and features
Uber launches private chartered boats in Mykonos
CommerceThe creators of the popular iPhone camera app Halide are out this week with a new creation: Skylight Forecast, an app that predicts when you can see a spectacular sunset. The app uses dozens of atmospheric factors to make its intelligent predictions about whether you'll see a great sunset, an average glow or nothing at all. The app also includes Home Screen and Lock Screen widgets and includes several nice touches. For instance, the app lights up in dynamic colors depending on the quality of the sunset, and the icons are adaptive to the circumstances, changing around based on condition. At launch, the app costs $1.99 per month, or $9.99 per year. Though typically the company offers one-time purchase options, it says it can't do that in this case because of the ongoing costs for weather data.
Carrot Weather (Update: version 5.11)Missing Dark Sky? The updated version of Carrot Weather out this week brings improved rain alerts via server-side push notifications as to when the rain will start and stop. You can also set a minimum delivery interval to receive these updates more or less often. It also added several new data sources for Europe and Japan, including OpenWeather and other regional sources. Plus, you can see monthly averages for any locations in the Location Details scene or time travel up to 80 years in the past or a year in the future, to compare weather trends, among other things. Some of these features are reserved for Premium subscribers, while others require a Premium Ultra subscription.
New IPhone Feature Can Clone Your Voice In Just 15 Minutes - AOL
Other accessibility features include Assistive Access, Live Speech and more (Apple )
Apple has unveiled a new iOS feature that allows iPhone, iPad and Mac users to make a digital clone of their voice in just 15 minutes.
The Personal Voice feature announced on Tuesday is aimed at helping those who are at risk of losing their voice, such as people with an amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) diagnosis or other neurological conditions.
The new feature forms part of a suite of updates announced ahead of Global Accessibility Awareness Day on 18 May, and will likely be rolled out as part of iOS 17 later this year.
The Motor Neurone Disease Association suggests that cloning a voice, known as voice banking, typically takes an average of two hours or longer with current tech, and can cost hundreds of pounds.
The Independent got a first look at the new feature in action, and the Personal Voice sounded remarkably similar to the user's actual voice, albeit with a slightly robotic, synthesised tone.
It can be trained in 15 minutes simply by reading a bunch of randomly generated text prompts, and uses on-device machine learning to ensure your data is kept private and secure.
Personal Voice will be available for use with Apple's new Live Speech feature on iOS, which will let users type what they want to say and have it spoken out loud, during in-person conversations, as well as with phone and FaceTime calls. The feature is said to work with all accents and dialects.
(Apple)
As well as features for speech accessibility, Apple announced a cognitive disability setting for the iPhone and iPad called Assistive Access, which essentially lets you pare your device down to a few core apps of your choosing.
Arranged in a grid or a list, it simplifies the user interface down to large, easily readable buttons, so you can make calls, access an emoji-only keyboard, and a fuss-free camera, without the clutter.
Companies such as Doro and Jitterbug currently have a stranglehold on the "simple phone", offering devices for senior users that strip away the bulk, and deliver a simple user interface with large high-contrast buttons that make it easy to use a phone.
With Apple's new Assistive Access feature, those with cognitive disabilities will be able to take advantage of a mainstream iPhone device and its features without having to opt for an Android device or one designed for their specific need.
(Apple)
In addition, Apple previewed a new feature in the Magnifier app for low vision users called Point and Speak, which makes use of the camera, the LiDAR Scanner and on-device machine learning to read aloud text that a user places their finger on.
Plus, the company announced Mac support for Made for iPhone hearing devices, phonetic suggestions for Voice Control users and the ability for Switch Control users to turn their switches into game controllers on the iPhone and iPad.
Apple has made it a tradition over the years to unveil new accessibility features ahead of WWDC in June, where it usually reveals the next iOS update, emphasising its prioritisation of accessibility within the iOS ecosystem.
While Apple didn't state when exactly the new updates would be coming to its devices later this year, a rollout alongside iOS 17 seems likely, given previous announcements.
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