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Then there's a massive £50 off the Oral-B Pro 3 Electric Toothbrush dropping it to just £39.99 (was £89.99), a 43-inch JVC Fire TV Edition 4K Smart TV for £299 (was 379), and a 25% discount on the Ninja Foodi Health Grill and Air Fryer making it £149.99 (was £199.99). Other highlights include a high-end Asus ZenBook 14 laptop for £699.99 (was £999.99), featuring an Intel i5 processor, 16GB RAM, and a 512GB SSD specs that make it a powerful all-around machine. When you're saving £50 off the price of the new version with this deal, it's easier to see these as relatively minor differences. The main differences between the old and new versions are a slightly smaller 6-inch screen, thicker bezels, and a six-week battery life (as opposed to ten weeks). This is the cheapest price we've seen for the Amazon e-reader - coming just as the latest generation model has been released.
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All you need to do is enter the promo code ' ECHODOT2FOR1' to get this deal.Įlsewhere in the early Amazon Black Friday deals, you can pick up a Kindle Paperwhite for £79.99 (was £149.99). That matches a record low price we haven't seen since last year's Amazon Prime Day sale.
You can now buy two for the price of one, effectively making each Echo Dot just £18.99. Let's start with the headline deal in the sale, which is on the Echo Dot (3rd Gen).
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View the full early Amazon Black Friday sale.
Now up for grabs until November 16, included are some lowest prices yet on a couple of popular Amazon devices as well as savings of up to 40% on select products from Sony, Bosch, Shark, Oral B, and many more. it's exactly the same.Not content with waiting around any longer, a vast number of early Black Friday deals are now available at Amazon UK. In this method, editing captions is not much different from editing an essay in a document.
I want to share a Ninja way to speed this process up a bit. But using it for longer videos can be tedious. I love that interface for really short (<2 min) videos. YouTube provides a caption interface that allows you to do this. Starting with ASR captions is a great strategy, but it's important to go back and correct what needs correction. ASR, as a form of artificial intelligence, has really been improving dramatically over the past decade, but it still has a ways to go.
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YouTube, like other video hosting platforms now can use automatic speech-to-text software to automatically generate captions for me! So, that's that, huh?Īnother But! Automatic captions use a technology called "Automatic Speech Recognition" (ASR). I can just *hear* my grandpa drilling this words of truth into my head from years ago.īut! What Grandpa didn't anticipate was YouTube. But for many of us, if we want some thing done, we've gotta be ready to do it ourselves. When you have a budget to hire third party companies to do the captioning for you, that's really nice. Not only does it greatly enhance access those who are deaf or hard of hearing, but it improves attention to, retention of, and comprehension for the video for everyone (Check out Gernsbacher's wonderful meta analysis from 2015). Captioning videos is a really valuable strategy.