Engadget says: "This one has been coming for a long time, dear readers, and we're all incredibly thrilled to unleash upon you the latest look of Engadget -- but don't call it a redesign. Our amazing developers and designers have been hard at work for the better part of a year re-thinking and re-writing the site from the ground up to create something that's cleaner and simpler looking on the outside but faster and far more advanced on the inside, something that looks as amazing on your smartphone as it does on your desktop, something that brings a taste of our amazing tablet magazine, Distro, to your browsers.
I humbly invite you to join me after the break for an exploration of what's changed and what's to come in this, the new Engadget."
Engadget editors have strong feelings about the pioneering smartwatch maker.
Engadget
Neural networks are a type of machine learning that loosely mimic the way the brain processes information. By design, they're extremely adept at identifying and analyzing patterns, and in recent years companies have rolled out solutions based on deep neural networks behind the scenes. (The "deep" there, in case you're wondering, essentially refers to an increased number of layers of processing within the network.) You've almost certainly felt the benefit of their power -- they're part of what makes Google and Amazon's speech recognition work so well, and, although Apple doesn't like to let us peer behind the magic curtain, it's highly likely one is powering Siri as well.
I was recently at Engadget's Expand show in New York this past weekend. Here's some of my favorite products that were there.