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    How I use Android’s hidden custom modes when I need to focus

    Jack Wallen / Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNETDistractions are terrible. It seems like just when I’m getting into a flow, something pulls me out of it. The stoppage of said flow lasts as long as the distraction and the ramp-up time to get back into the flow — or (worse) the loss of an idea. It happens to me a lot, especially when I’m writing, which requires a high level of concentration. Fortunately, there are ways to avoid distraction, especially if you use Android as your OS. One such way is through Modes. Modes let Android block distractions during important periods. Out of the box, you’ll find modes for Do Not Disturb, Bedtime, and Driving. You can, however, create custom modes that are specific to your needs. Also: My 5 favorite AI apps on Android right now – and how I use themFor example, I created a Writing mode that shuts off notifications from everything and everyone (except certain contacts) and even disables all apps (including alarms) from interrupting. By doing this, I can have a totally distraction-free writing period. When that period is over, the floodgates open and the distractions hit me with full force. But how do you create such a custom mode? It’s actually quite simple. How to create a custom mode on Android What you’ll need: The custom mode feature was added to Android 15 QPR2 (Quarterly Platform Release 2), so you’ll need a device running at least that version. I’m demonstrating on my Pixel. If you have a Samsung or other device, it may look a little different but you should still have the same basic options. That’s it. Let’s make some magic. More

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    ServiceNow and Nvidia’s new reasoning AI model raises the bar for enterprise AI agents

    Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNETMany have dubbed this year “the year of AI agents,” as these AI systems that can carry out tasks for users are especially useful for optimizing enterprise workflows. At ServiceNow’s annual Knowledge 2025 conference, the company unveiled a new model in partnership with Nvidia to advance AI agents.Apriel Nemotron 15BOn Tuesday, ServiceNow and Nvidia launched Apriel Nemotron 15B, a new, open-source reasoning language model (LLM) built to deliver lower latency, lower inference costs, and agentic AI. According to the release, the model was trained on Nvidia Nemo, the Nvidia Llama Nemotron Post-Training Dataset, and ServiceNow’s domain-specific data. Also: Nvidia’s 70+ projects at ICLR show how raw chip power is central to AI’s accelerationThe biggest takeaway of the model is that it packages advanced reasoning capabilities in a smaller size. This makes the model cheaper and faster to run on Nvidia GPU infrastructure as an Nvidia NIM microservice while still delivering the enterprise-grade intelligence companies are looking for. The company shares that Apriel Nemotron 15B shows promising results for its model category in benchmark testing, confirming that the model could be a good fit for supporting agentic AI workflows. Also: Will synthetic data derail generative AI’s momentum or be the breakthrough we need?Reasoning capabilities are especially important when using agentic AI because, in these automated experiences, AI performs tasks for the end user in various settings. Since it is performing tasks without human direction, it needs to do some processing or reasoning of its own to determine how to proceed best. More

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    I’ve used dozens of distros as a Linux power user, but this one feels truly different

    <!–> ZDNET’s key takeaways NixOS is an open-source operating system that is available to install and use for free. It offers several desktop environments to choose from, is as rock-solid as any OS on the market, and performs quite well. However, there’s a fairly steep learning curve for installing non-free software. –> Before we get […] More