Nobody could to be silent about AI ever since OpenAI unleashed ChatGPT on the world in November. But this week, there it was much AI gossip even people who work in this field were Struggling to keep up.
First, Google announce It was dusting AI on Gmail, Google Docs, Sheets, and Slides. When the changes are finally rolled out, you’ll be able to have Google Docs write you a full article, cover letter, sales presentation, job description, or whatever else you want. Gmail will be able to summarize email threads and automatically generate responses for you, and you’ll be able to ask Presenters to create an entire presentation with just a few simple words. Google too I opened Access to a system that allows other companies to use their AI model to build ChatGPT-like tools.
After hours, Anthropic, an artificial intelligence startup in which Google recently invested more than $300 million, announce A new ChatGPT competitor, a chatbot called Claude was available to businesses.
Shortly thereafter, unlock the AI, the 800-pound gorilla in the room, noisily announce GPT-4, the next version of the technology that powers ChatGPT and DALL-E 2, the corporate image generator. OpenAI claims that GPT-4 is much more powerful, more accurate, and smarter than the previous version. The company said GPT-4 is capable of such feats as doing taxes, creating entire websites by simply looking at a rough design written on a piece of paper, and passing a range of standardized tests, including the Uniform Bar Exam.
This was only Tuesday.
On Thursday, Microsoft had a great success advertisement, saying it would infuse boring old Microsoft Office—Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, and Teams—with shiny new AI capabilities thanks to the company’s partnership with OpenAI. Much like Google’s offerings, the new Office will allow you to take the stress out of typing, as well as create PowerPoint presentations in seconds and make complex Excel spreadsheets make sense in response to your questions.
Meanwhile, there were other miscellaneous announcements: Midjourney, a competitor to the DALL-E 2, announced a new version that was said to be “more advanced” and “higher resolution”. Stanford University released its own AI model based on technology developed by Meta, and dozens of companies, large and small, sent out a flurry of press releases announcing that they were joining the AI bandwagon.
“This week is about an AI arms race,” Neil Sahota, a lecturer at the University of California, Irvine, and a UN advisor on artificial intelligence, told BuzzFeed News. “Everyone knows it’s going to be the first one or two companies in the market that will really see competitive advantage, because in probably four or five years, it’s all going to be a commodity. Everyone wants to outpace the competition right now, nobody wants to be left behind.”