An AI app prepares me for my day now – and I’ve never been more organized


Huxe app on a phone

Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNET

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ZDNET’s key takeaways

  • The free Huxe app creates a custom podcast for you each morning.
  • It builds content from your calendar, email, and news interests. 
  • You can easily tailor interests and skip stories.

After spending a week letting a free AI-generated podcast help me get ready for my day, I don’t know why I didn’t start sooner.

Huxe is an app created by former Google NotebookLM developers. It pulls information from your calendar and email, plus news stories related to your interests, and turns it all into a short podcast centered on your day. I’ve mostly been wary of giving much time to any sort of AI-generated content, but I quickly found that Huxe is worth my time.

Also: I used NotebookLM for an entire month – here’s why it really is a game changer

I work from home, and my kids’ school is less than 10 minutes away, so I have maybe 20 minutes of time in the car each morning. Usually, I’ll spend the drive catching up on podcasts or letting my kids pick what they want to listen to, nothing too serious. For the past week, though, I’ve been giving my drive time to a daily Huxe roundup. My kids are less than thrilled, but for someone who struggles to stay organized, it’s been a huge help.

Setting up Huxe

The app takes less than five minutes to set up the first time. I connected my calendar and email for the “Here’s your day” part of the podcast, enabled my location for local news and weather, and then chose from preselected interests. You can add your own if you don’t see what you want, and the app will understand anything you enter.

Also: Want a quick daily podcast based on your interests? Try Google’s latest AI experiment

The app didn’t get my interests exactly right the first time it tried (I’m assuming it based those on emails and calendar events). Out of the five interests it chose, one was wrong, and two weren’t significant enough for me to want to hear about them every morning (but I understand where the AI got them). You can fine-tune these selections as you go, however, so you’ll always hear what you want.

How Huxe helps me stay organized

The news portion is helpful on its own. The conversation between the two AI hosts sounds natural, and you can interrupt a conversation at any time with a question if you want to learn more or skip a story you don’t want to hear. The more I used the app, the more I was able to tailor it to things I specifically wanted to hear, and I found myself sitting in my car more than once after I was home to let things wrap up. 

What I quickly found most useful, though, was the calendar and email updates Huxe provided. I could easily find this information on my own, but once I get distracted by social media or get busy with other tasks, it takes me much longer to focus on what I need to do each day. Huxe isn’t giving me any new information, but it’s reminding me what’s most pressing for my day while I’m taking care of other things.

Also: Half of all US employees use AI at work now – and waste almost 8 hours a week doing it

It will actually read the contents of your email messages for more context, highlight things that are a few days away, and even consider factors like the weather. My calendar has an entry for a tour on the weekend (I lead ghost tours in Uptown Charlotte), and Huxe reminded me about it, noting that it would be unusually warm during the tour, so I probably need to bring some water. 

Huxe has become a simple way for me to stay on top of my day without staring at a screen. I thought it might just be a novelty I used from time to time, but now it’s part of my daily routine. The free app is available for both iOS and Android.





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Recent Reviews


The battle between AMD and NVIDIA rages on eternally, it seems, though it’s rather a one-sided battle in the desktop PC market, where NVIDIA holds something like 95%, and AMD most of what’s left apart from Intel’s (almost) 1%.

But as dominant and popular as NVIDIA is, AMD proponents could always raise the value argument. On a per-dollar basis, you get more value with an AMD card, and even better, you have the benefit of AMD “FineWine” which ensures your card will become even better with time.

What “FineWine” meant—and why it mattered

FineWine was something that AMD fans began to notice during the GCN (Graphics Core Next) architecture. Incidentally, the last AMD dedicated GPU I bought was the R9 390, which was of that lineage. Since then, all my AMD GPUs have been embedded in consoles or handheld PCs, but I digress.

The R9 390 is actually a good example of FineWine. Launched in 2015, like many AMD cards, the R9 390 had a rough start, and I sold mine in exchange for a stopgap card in the form of the RTX 2060, because I wanted to play Cyberpunk 2077 on PC, where it wasn’t broken the way it was on consoles. Even though, on paper, the raw power of the RTX 2060 wasn’t much more than a 390, the AMD card’s performance on my (then) 1080p monitor was a stuttery mess, whereas everything suddenly ran great on my 2060 the minute the AMD GPU was expunged from the system.

But, a decade later, that same game is perfectly playable on this card, as you can see in this TechLabUK video.

A lot of it is because the developers have kept patching and improving the game, but this is something you see across the board for AMD cards on various games. This is FineWine. Years later, with continued driver updates from AMD, the cards go from being a little worse than their NVIDIA equivalent at launch to being as good or even a little better in the long run.

Of course, that’s not super helpful to customers who buy hardware at launch, but it has given some AMD users computers with longer lifespans than you’d think, and made many used AMD cards an even better bargain.

Why AMD’s FineWine era worked

A bit of smoke and mirrors

The PULSE AMD Radeon RX 6800 XT next to an AMD RX 6600 XT Phantom Gaming D. Credit: Ismar Hrnjicevic / How-To Geek

FineWine wasn’t magic, of course. The phenomenon was the result of a mix of factors. AMD’s architectures were in some cases a little too forward-thinking for the APIs of the day. Massively parallel with a focus on compute, they’d only come into their own with DirectX 12 and more modern games. NVIDIA’s cards at the time were better optimized to run current games well. Over time, NVIDIA cards would make similar architectural changes, but with better timing.

The other reason FineWine was a thing came down to driver maturity. As a much smaller company with fewer resources, it seems that AMD had some trouble releasing cards with optimized drivers. So, over time, the card would start performing as intended.

In both cases, you could frame FineWine not as the card getting better, but rather getting “less worse” over time. If you set the bar low at launch, the only way is up. However, there’s a third factor to take into account as well. AMD dominates console gaming. The two major home console series have now run on AMD GPUs for two generations, and so games are developed with that hardware in mind. This also gives newer titles a bit of a leg up, though it’s hard to know exactly by how much.

How AMD moved on from FineWine

It seems worse, but it’s actually better

An AMD RX 9070 XT Gigabyte gaming graphics card. Credit: Ismar Hrnjicevic / How-To Geek

With the shift to RDNA architecture, AMD made a deliberate change in philosophy. Modern Radeon GPUs are designed to perform well right out of the gate. Reviews on day one are much closer to what you could expect years later. There are still decent gains to be had on RDNA cards with game-specific optimizations (Spider-Man on PC is a great example), but the golden age of FineWine seems to be in the past now.

That’s a good thing! Products should put their best foot forward on day one, so let’s not shed a tear for FineWine in that regard. So it’s not so much that AMD doesn’t care about improving the performance and stability of older cards over the years, it’s that the company is now better at its job, and so there’s less room for improvement.

Sapphire NITRO+ AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT GPU

Cooling Method

Air

GPU Speed

2520Mhz

The AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT from Sapphire features 16GB of DDR6 memory, two HDMI and two DisplayPorts, and an overengineered cooling setup that will keep the card cool and whisper quiet no matter the workload.


NVIDIA kept the idea—but changed the formula

It’s all about AI

It’s funny, but these days I think of NVIDIA cards as the ones with major longevity. Take the venerable GTX 1080 and 1080 Ti cards. These cards only lost game-ready driver support in 2025, which doesn’t immediately make them useless, it just means no more optimization for those chips. What an incredible run, getting a decade of relevant game performance from a GPU!

But, that’s not really NVIDIA’s take on FineWine. Instead, the company has taken to adding new and better features to its cards long after they’ve been launched. Starting with the 20-series, the presence of machine-learning hardware means that by improving the AI algorithms for technologies like DLSS, these cards have become more performant with better image quality over time.

While NVIDIA has made some features of its AI technology exclusive to each generation, so far all post 10-series GPUs benefit from every new generation of DLSS. Compare that to AMD which not only offers inferior versions of this new upscaling technology, but has locked the better, more usable versions to later cards, such as the case with FSR Redstone.


FineWine is an ethos, not a brand

In the case of my humble RTX 4060 laptop, the release of DLSS 4.5 has opened new possibilities, notably the ability to target a 4K output resolution, which was certainly not on the table when I first took this computer out of the box. We might not call it “FineWine,” but it sure smells like it to me!



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