October 9, 2025

Web and Technology News

Ring announces Retinal 4K Vision doorbells and Search Party for finding pets

Today Amazon held its annual Devices and Services event, debuting its next generation of products. While Amazon isn't live streaming the event, we're on the floor sharing everything it announces in our live blog, including a slew of new Ring products and features

Take Ring's Retinal Vision, rolling out across its new line of 2K and 4K doorbells and cameras. It offers back-side illumination sensors and 10x zoom for clear vision, even in low light. Ring pairs these features with custom large aperture lenses that it claims will capture more light and maintain sharpness throughout the frame.

Retinal Vision also "optimizes every step of the imaging process with advanced AI tuning," according to Ring. Basically, it will alter your camera's clarity based on its location. Ring will use AI to sample your camera's quality across up to two weeks, multiple times a day. Then, it will do a "final optimization" that should provide the best video for your location. 

Retinal 4K Vision will be available on the all-new Wired Doorbell Pro, Spotlight Cam Pro, Floodlight Cam Pro and Outdoor Cam Pro. There are also three power over Ethernet devices, Power over Ethernet devices: the Spotlight Cam Pro POE, Outdoor Cam Pro POE and Wired Doorbell Elite. Whereas Retinal 2K Vision is coming to the all-new Indoor Cam Plus and Wired Doorbell Plus. These devices are available to pre-order today. 

Beyond 2K and 4K retinal techology, Ring is also introducing Alexa+ Greetings, an intelligent doorbell attendant. It will basically do the hard work of talking to strangers for you. Alexa+ can ask why someone is at your door, give them instructions and manage your deliveries. 

It works hand-in-hand with another new feature called Familiar Faces. This tool allows Ring to recognize your familiar people and let you know exactly who's at your door. It also lets you limit notifications that come from one of their typical routines, separating them from alerts triggered by an unknown person. 

Alexa+ Greeings and Familiar Faces — both available in December —build on AI-generated descriptions of your alerts, introduced in June. Jamie Siminoff, founder and gave the example text, "A person is walking up the steps with a black dog" and said the descriptions will be "intentionally concise." It lets you know exactly who is coming to the door through text, not just that someone's there. The feature is available for Ring Home Premium subscribers, which costs $20 a month or 200 annually.

Then there's Search Party, which makes your outdoor Ring camera into another lookout for lost pets. If one of your nighbors reports their pet missing in the Ring app, your camera can use AI to identify the animal and send you an alert. However, it wont share any images or videos without your permission. It will start working for lost dogs in November, followed by cats and other pets. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/cameras/ring-announces-retinal-4k-vision-and-search-party-for-finding-pets-143314419.html?src=rss
Previous Article

Watch out, shoppers: You can’t hide your Amazon orders anymore – but there’s a workaround

Next Article

Amazon just revealed new Blink security cameras, including the Outdoor 2K+

You might be interested in …

ChatGPT reportedly reached 100 million users in January

ChatGPT has been growing at a rate much, much faster than TikTok or any other popular app or service. According to a new study by analytics firm UBS (via Reuters and CBS), the OpenAI-developed chatbot was on pace to reach over 100 million monthly active users in January. The chatbot only became available to the public on November 30th last year, but its rise to fame has apparently been meteoric. Within its first month of availability, it already boasted 57 million monthly active users, the study said. By January, it was already being visited by around 13 million individual users a day. 

In comparison, it took TikTok nine months after its global debut to reach 100 million monthly users despite its popularity, especially among the younger generation. UBS analyst Lloyd Walmsley also pointed out that Meta’s Instagram had been around for two-and-a-half years before reaching that point. It remains to be seen, however, if the chatbot can maintain this level of interest in the coming months. “The next question is obviously what its staying power will be. There may be an element of people just coming to look,” Walmsley added.

ChatGPT provides users with natural-sounding human-like responses to queries, so much so that educators are concerned that it could be used by students to cheat. While it still has serious accuracy problems — “Models like ChatGPT have a notorious tendency to spew biased, harmful, and factually incorrect content,” MIT’s Tech Review wrote in a piece — there isn’t another public chatbot with comparable capabilities. It has reportedly rattled Google’s execs to the point that they decided to declare “code red” and accelerated the company’s AI development. The tech giant is working on a few potential ChatGPT competitors, including a chatbot for search, and is aiming to showcase 20 AI products this year. 

ChatGPT remains free to use at the moment, and OpenAI doesn’t seem to have any plans to completely lock access to it behind a paywall. However, the startup does intend to start charging for the service and has already started testing a paid ChatGPT plan for $20 per month, which offers faster response times and priority access to new features.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *