Google is testing out an interesting experiment with YouTube.
According to 9to5Google, YouTube is testing out an experimental feature (meaning it rolls out to a select few users before going wide) that would allow Premium users to automatically jump ahead to what they want to see. In other words, it would use machine learning data to determine what is the most interesting part of a video, and prompt users to go straight to said part.
In practical terms, this would work similarly to the double-tap trick you can use on mobile devices to skip ahead by 10 seconds in a video, except you'd be skipping to a predetermined part of the video that YouTube has deemed interesting. Many YouTube videos already have a little "most replayed" graphic to let you know where people are scrubbing to the most, so maybe the data to enable this new feature already exists.
Anyway, I haven't seen this on my devices yet, so who knows when or if this will roll out widely. It wouldbe another nice reason to pay for YouTube Premium, at least.
文章
48
浏览
56231
获赞
56862
The $80,000 Lucid Air: It'll be nice when we can drive it
Lucid they may be, but they're not exactly transparent. The buzzworthy Bay Area car company, which mSalesforce employees protest company's NFT plans
Salesforce is jumping on the NFT train, but its employees aren't along for the ride. So reports ReutAmazon's AWS is wreaking havoc on the internet again
Amazon's AWS is wreaking havoc on the internet again. One of the company's AWS data centers in the UPeople say they're booking Ukrainian Airbnbs to support besieged locals
The internet's found a new use for Airbnb.Scores of people on Twitter and Facebook say they're emploCreepy wooden Melania Trump statue now overlooks her hometown
Melania Trump may have left her Slovenian hometown of Sevnica, but thanks to conceptual artist AlesWatching makeup tutorials made me feel confident wearing less makeup
When we spend so much of our time online, we’re bound to learn something while clicking and scThe harsh history behind the internet's favorite sea shanty
It's easy to see why "Soon May the Wellerman Come" became TikTok's first viral hit of 2021. This jauMeta is tackling revenge porn with their support of StopNCII.org
The spread of non-consensual sharing of intimate images (NCII) has been a battle for survivors and tSamsung, stop trying to make the Galaxy Buds Live happen
Samsung has basically confirmed its new earbuds will be called the Galaxy Buds Live — not, sadOpera's new 'crypto browser' makes collecting NFTs shockingly easy
Opera just installed guard rails on the NFT on-ramp. The company behind the little-used Chromium-basTrump finally emerged to speak at a hilariously tiny desk, and the internet had jokes
In the weeks since he lost the election, Trump has barely made any public appearances or statementsWant Trump off Facebook forever? Here's how to make your voice heard.
The Facebook Oversight Board is reviewing the decision to ban former President Donald Trump from its11 times Jake Gyllenhaal's Instagram game was off the charts
You shouldn't really need a reason to follow Jake Gyllenhaal on Instagram. Don't look at me like thaTwitch's new Suspicious User Detection tool aims to stop ban evasion
Twitch has introduced a new tool designed to detect people who create new accounts to circumvent chaApple 2022 event: How to watch the March 8 'peek performance' livestream
This Tuesday, Apple will host its first event of 2022. First teased last week, the announcement was