According to the CEO of big tech, the tool should be available in the coming weeks
In a relatively quick ‘response’ from Microsoft, Google announced that it has already started the closed testing period for its chatbot, called Bard. In a statement released by big tech, CEO Sundar Pichai said the tool should be available in the coming weeks.
Bard, as Google itself wrote, is a conversation service that uses artificial intelligence. With this, the tool that competes with ChatGPT will be able to answer questions from users in the search, in addition to chatting.
Google also said that the chatbot will help explain, for example, the new discoveries of NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope, to a 9-year-old child.
All this is possible because of the tool called LaMDA, similar to GPT language models. The difference, however, is that it manages to obtain more up-to-date information from the Internet, while Microsoft’s OpenAI is limited to 2021.
ChatGPT
ChatGPT was created by Open AI and introduced late last year. It is an algorithm based on artificial intelligence. The chatbot had its architecture based on a neural network called Transformer, designed to work with texts.
In less than a month after its launch, at the end of 2022, GPT Chat has already received an investment of US$ 10 billion from Microsoft. And also funds. There are already signs that ChatGPT will enter phase 4 in the second half of this year.
PROPMARK recently heard from experts to find out how ChatGPT and other AI platforms could affect communication work as a whole. In the article, Alex Winetzki, CEO of Woopi and director of R&D at the Stefanini Group, said that ChatGPT intends to imitate human intelligence, but it has something that robots cannot contemplate: consciousness.
Generative AI already shows how it will change the world. It advances into the territory that we always thought was beyond the frontier of machines: human creativity. Dall-e, Stable Difusion, ChatGPT and many other technologies that came to light in the last months of 2022 show that robots now know how to create as well or better than most humans, ponders the Woopi executive, who continues.
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