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December is a great time to buy a new car and this is why

December is a great time to buy a new car and this is why

By JOSH JACQUOT, Edmunds

If you’re in the market for a new vehicle, the remaining weeks of December could very well be a great time to buy. Several recurring industry trends converge at year-end, creating favorable conditions that can help you save money. The auto experts at Edmunds have come up with three key reasons why December often delivers the opportunity for better deals — and what to know to ensure you get the best one.

Year-end sales quotas and dealership incentives

Manufacturers and dealers operate under annual targets, and December is when they make their most concerted effort to meet them. According to Edmunds transaction data, December has historically delivered the highest average discounts off the manufacturer’s suggested retail price for both new and used cars. The pandemic somewhat upended that, sending new car prices skyrocketing year-round as demand exceeded supply, but that blip has largely stabilized since 2022.

Typically, as the calendar year draws to a close, automakers and their dealer networks shift into high gear, deploying cash-back incentives, financing specials and price cuts to help them meet sales goals and finish the year strong. As a car shopper, you can take advantage of this year-end push. By choosing to buy a vehicle in December, you are more likely to encounter a dealership willing to make a deal, even if it’s less profitable. read more

New development agreement brings Osceola’s NeoCity vision closer

New development agreement brings Osceola’s NeoCity vision closer

After more than 2½ years of negotiations, Osceola Commissioners are set to vote Monday on a contract with the New York developers who were selected to build the mixed-use city center in the county’s NeoCity tech hub.

The development agreement revises the terms from the 2022 memorandum of understanding with co-developers Sciame Construction and Edward J. Minskoff Equities, and updates the phasing to account for the new Performing Arts Center that will anchor the city center, according to a report in GrowthSpotter. It’s an important milestone for the NeoCity vision of an arts-focused, technology hub.

Earlier this year, Commissioners issued $125 million in bonds backed by the county’s Tourist Development Tax for the performing arts center. Assistant County Manager Amanda Clavijo said the county will issue a Request for Proposals in the first quarter of 2026 for the design of the center and will launch a fundraising campaign for the project. “That will be a major step in 2026,” she said. read more

Uncontested Winter Park commission races spell victory for political newcomer, incumbent

Uncontested Winter Park commission races spell victory for political newcomer, incumbent

Residents of Winter Park won’t head to the polls in March because the races for two City Commission seats were uncontested — meaning automatic wins for a political newcomer and an incumbent.

Elizabeth Ingram, a trained opera singer who has performed with Opera Orlando, will take Seat 1 as successor to Commissioner Marty Sullivan, who did not seek a third term. In addition, Commissioner Craig Russell will return in Seat 2 for his first full term.

Qualifying in the city of about 30,000 ended Monday. Ingram will take her seat next to Russell after they’re sworn in at the beginning of the March 25 commission meeting.

Ingram, born and raised in the Winter Park house where her parents still live, said she looks forward to working on behalf of fellow residents.

“I think my number one priority is just protecting the look and special charm that Winter Park has which I think really separates it from so many other cities around here,” she said.

Among her other priorities are addressing traffic challenges and improving roadways, responsibly managing the budget without raising taxes, upholding the city’s commitment to public arts and culture, and supporting local businesses and economic growth. read more

Podcast industry under siege as AI bots flood airways with thousands of programs

Podcast industry under siege as AI bots flood airways with thousands of programs

By Nilesh Christopher, Los Angeles Times

Chatty bots are sharing their hot takes through hundreds of thousands of AI-generated podcasts. And the invasion has just begun.

Though their banter can be a bit banal, the AI podcasters’ confidence and research are now arguably better than most people’s.

“We’ve just begun to cross the threshold of voice AI being pretty much indistinguishable from human,” said Alan Cowen, chief executive of Hume AI, a startup specializing in voice technology. “We’re seeing creators use it in all kinds of ways.”

AI can make podcasts sound better and cost less, industry insiders say, but the growing swarm of new competitors entering an already crowded market is disrupting the industry.

Some podcasters are pushing back, requesting restrictions. Others are already cloning their voices and handing over their podcasts to AI bots.

Popular podcast host Steven Bartlett has used an AI clone to launch a new kind of content aimed at the 13 million followers of his podcast “Diary of a CEO.” On YouTube, his clone narrates “100 CEOs With Steven Bartlett,” which adds AI-generated animation to Bartlett’s cloned voice to tell the life stories of entrepreneurs such as Steve Jobs and Richard Branson. read more

Instacart is charging different prices to different customers in a dangerous AI experiment, report says

Instacart is charging different prices to different customers in a dangerous AI experiment, report says

By Caroline Petrow-Cohen, Los Angeles Times

The grocery delivery service Instacart is using artificial intelligence to experiment with prices and charge some shoppers more than others for the same items, a new study found.

The study from nonprofits Groundwork Collaborative and Consumer Reports followed more than 400 shoppers in four cities and found that Instacart sometimes offered as many as five different sales prices for the exact same item, at the same store and on the same day.

The average difference between the highest price and lowest price on the same item was 13%, but some participants in the study saw prices that were 23% higher than those offered to other shoppers.

The varying prices are unfair to consumers and exacerbate a grocery affordability crisis that regular Americans are already struggling to cope with, said Lindsey Owens, executive director of Groundwork Collaborative.

“In my own view, Instacart should close the lab,” Owens said. “American grocery shoppers aren’t guinea pigs, and they should be able to expect a fair price when they’re shopping.” read more