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How to watch the 2024 MotoGP Australian Grand Prix online for free

Mashable - Wed, 10/16/2024 - 00:00

TL;DR: Watch the 2024 MotoGP Australian Grand Prix for free on ServusTV. Access this free streaming platform from anywhere in the world with ExpressVPN.

This season of MotoGP has kept fans guessing, and we're still not sure which rider will come out on top of the standings when everything is said and done. Jorge Martín and Francesco Bagnaia continue to battle it out at the top of the standings, and Bastianini and Márquez aren't too far behind.

If you're interested in watching the 2024 MotoGP Australian Grand Prix for free from anywhere in the world, we've got all the information you need.

When is the 2024 MotoGP Australian Grand Prix?

The MotoGP Australian Grand Prix takes place at Phillip Island. The 2024 MotoGP Australian Grand Prix race starts at 11 p.m. ET on Oct. 19.

How to watch the 2024 MotoGP Australian Grand Prix for free

Every MotoGP 2024 race is available to live stream for free on ServusTV.

ServusTV is geo-restricted to Austria, but anyone can access this free streaming platform with a VPN. These tools can hide your real IP address (digital location) and connect you to a secure server in Austria, meaning you can bypass geo-restrictions to access ServusTV from anywhere in the world.

Unblock ServusTV by following this simple process:

  1. Sign up for a VPN (like ExpressVPN)

  2. Download the app to your device of choice (the best VPNs have apps for Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Linux, and more)

  3. Open up the app and connect to a server in Austria

  4. Connect to ServusTV

  5. Watch MotoGP for free from anywhere in the world

Opens in a new window Credit: ExpressVPN ExpressVPN (1-Year Subscription + 3 Months Free) $99.95 at ExpressVPN (with money-back guarantee) Get Deal

The best VPNs for streaming are not free, but they do tend to offer free-trial periods or money-back guarantees. By leveraging these offers, you can access MotoGP live streams without fully committing with your cash. This clearly isn't a long-term solution, but it does mean you can watch the 2024 MotoGP Australian Grand Prix before recovering your investment.

What is the best VPN for MotoGP?

ExpressVPN is the top choice for unblocking ServusTV, for a number of reasons:

  • Servers in 105 countries including Austria

  • Easy-to-use app available on all major devices including iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac, and more

  • Strict no-logging policy so your data is protected

  • Fast streaming speeds free from throttling

  • Up to eight simultaneous connections

  • 30-day money-back guarantee

A one-year subscription to ExpressVPN is on sale for $99.95 and includes an extra three months for free — 49% off for a limited time. This plan also includes a year of free unlimited cloud backup and a 30-day money-back guarantee.

Watch the 2024 MotoGP Australian Grand Prix for free with ExpressVPN.

Fake tech demos, a brief history

Mashable - Tue, 10/15/2024 - 22:55

Elon Musk has been called out for a spate of strange fibs lately (and if anything, he should have been called out for many more). Here's the latest: At Tesla's We, Robot event this week, the Optimus robot that served attendees drinks were not as autonomous as Musk was claiming. According to multiple reports, the Tesla robots were operated by humans using remote controls.

But if it seems like Musk is plumbing new depths in his bid to make Tesla look like it has its finger on the future's pulse (rather than having a Cybertruck-shaped millstone around its neck), think again. Fake product demos — and in particular, fake autonomous machines — date back to at least the Napoleonic age.

Musk is simply repeating a trick so old, Benjamin Franklin fell for it.

Here are a few of the more well-known examples, starting with the not-so-remote-controlled:

Mechanical Turk, the Optimus of its day 19th century vaporware: From a book called 'Cabinet of Curiosities' (1836). Credit: Florilegius/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

This mechanical chess player with arms and a cabinet — with an actual chess master hidden inside — was the hit product launch of the brass and wood era.

The Turk's fakery was kept hidden for more than 80 years, and even then it inspired knock-off models. One of them, Mephisto, had a chess master operating it by (you guessed it) remote control.

The original Turk's creator, Wolfgang von Kempelen, was a genuine inventor, a steampunk type who labored 20 years to successfully create a speech synthesizer. But he wasn't above expending brain power on this straight-up hoax, with elaborate shifting cabinets of fake machinery hiding the human.

Kempelen tried to avoid doing many product demos, but relented when it became a moneyspinner. After he died, a musician bought the Turk and made the hiding part even more elaborate.

The second owner even had the brass appendages to pit his creation against Napoleon Bonaparte — and have it correct the European tyrant's illegal chess moves. Later robot "inventors" took note: The more brazen the fake, the more people seemed to believe it.

Tweet may have been deleted Steve Jobs's iPhone fakery Steve Jobs and one of the demo iPhones. Credit: David Paul Morris/Getty Images

Speaking of tyrants, the Apple co-founder and guru was famously said to have created a "reality distortion field" around products. And on what became the most important demo day of his life, the iPhone unveiling in January 2007, Jobs wasn't above faking a detail or two.

This was six months before the launch of what some fans were already calling the Jesus phone, and the prototype models were not ready for primetime. To avoid crashes and freezes during his demo, Jobs used multiple prototypes and a little sleight of hand.

Each of those iPhones was designed to follow what his engineers called a "golden path," a very specific sequence of actions, while giving the impression that Jobs was freestyling his way around the device. They also had what you might call a cellular distortion field: the bars at the top of their screens claimed full service no matter what.

Google's voice assistant calling ... who?

These days, the Silicon Valley search giant likes to point out it was deeply involved in AI before AI became cool. That's true — but Google also appears to have been doing fake AI demos before they were cool.

At Google I/O 2018, CEO Sundar Pichai demonstrated an AI-powered voice assistant that allegedly called a local hair salon and a local restaurant, live, to make reservations. Both businesses apparently picked up the phone and said, "How can I help you?"

Axios quickly ascertained that none of the salons and restaurants in the Mountain View area answered the phone that way. No subsequent questions about this to Google spokespeople were ever answered.

Gemini AI ain't that fast Tweet may have been deleted

What is a fake product demo, anyway? If deceptive video editing is included in the description, then a Google demonstration of its AI, Gemini, from December 2023 certainly counts.

Many viewers did not realize that the video in question was sped up and had voice prompts dubbed in. Google claimed that this still made the demo "real," but as one user noted: "real but shortened isn't a thing."

Tesla's self-driving deception

Also not a thing: Fully Self-Driving (FSD) Teslas. At least, not as seen in a 2016 video that a Tesla engineer later testified was staged. The video claimed that the driver in it was only there for legal reasons.

But the Model X in question followed a predetermined route, the Tesla engineer said when questioned in a lawsuit over an Apple engineer's death in a crash last year. The video showed capabilities that the car's software did not then have, he added, such as stopping at a red light or accelerating at a green. There were multiple takes edited together, and the human driver often intervened.

That was far from the only outlandish claim Musk made about self-driving technology. At time of writing, there are more than a dozen lawsuits pending that claim customers were duped into believing their Teslas could drive themselves, leading to injuries and deaths. Three will go to trial in 2025, including the case of the Apple engineer. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and Justice Department have launched their own autopilot investigations.

Given all that, Musk can count himself lucky that the worst Tesla's remote-controlled Optimus did was dance and pour drinks.

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