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Mobile Syrup

Google CEO says conversational AI will ‘absolutely’ come to search

Google CEO Sundar Pichai confirmed in an interview with The Wall Street Journal that the company would add conversational artificial intelligence (AI) to search.

“Will people be able to ask questions to Google and engage with LLMs [large language models] in the context of search? Absolutely,” Pichai told WSJ.

Moreover, Pichai explained that Google views conversational AI as an opportunity to expand rather than as a threat to its business model. It’s worth noting that Google previously said it would add LLMs to search, but it hasn’t specified if there would be conversational features.

Of course, the announcement hardly comes as a surprise, given Microsoft beat Google to the punch on conversational AI in search. Microsoft launched Bing Chat, powered by OpenAI’s GPT-4, back in February. The move reportedly led Google to declare a “code red” and rush its own chatbot, Bard, to market. (The rush apparently frustrated some employees).

Since the Bing Chat launch, Microsoft hasn’t slowed down on rolling out AI-powered features to its apps and software. The Edge browser got a sidebar with access to Bing Chat and other AI features, and the company recently detailed plans to add AI to Office products like Word and PowerPoint via Copilot.

Google’s Bard also had some embarrassing gaffes during the product reveal and subsequent preview, eventually prompting Pichai to promise updates to improve Bard’s capabilities.

You can read the full WSJ interview here.

Source: WSJ Via: Engadget

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Mobile Syrup

Google’s Bard AI falls short of rivals, Pichai promises upgrades to come soon

Recent criticism about Google’s Bard sharing non-factual information and rumours around the use of ChatGPT to train Bard surfacing aren’t painting a good picture for Google, and CEO Sundar Pichai is now in damage control mode.

Pichai has promised that upgrades to Bard are coming in the near future, as stated in an interview on The New York Times’ Hard Fork podcast, (via The Verge). “Pretty soon, perhaps as this  

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goes live, we will be upgrading Bard to some of our more capable PaLM models, which will bring more capabilities; be it in reasoning, coding, it can answer maths questions better. So you will see progress over the course of next week,” he said.

PaLM is a more recent language model that is larger in scale than Bard’s current LaMDA model, and is more capable when dealing with tasks like common-sense reasoning and coding problems

Pichai acknowledged that the way Bard is now, it is failing to match the performance of rivals such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Microsoft’s Bing chatbot, which runs on OpenAI’s GPT-4. He also discussed concerns regarding the fast pace of development in AI models, and the threat it can pose to society.

He also acknowledged the concerns raised in an open letter signed by Elon Musk and top AI researchers calling for a six-month pause on the development of AI systems.

Despite the hurdles, Pichai remains committed to advancing AI capabilities. He emphasized the importance of anticipating and evolving to meet the challenges that AI will present, and understands that these systems are likely to become very capable, regardless of whether they reach the level of artificial general intelligence (AGI).

Check out the full podcast here.

Source: The New York Times, Via: The Verge

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Mobile Syrup

Google’s May 11th and 12th I/O will be free to view online

Google released a Puzzle earlier today, solving which would reveal the date to Google’s upcoming I/O event. Just four hours into it, and it seems like Google CEO Sundar Pichai has waited enough.

Pichai announced the conference via his Twitter account, and it’s scheduled for May 11th and 12th at the Shoreline Amphitheatre in Mountain View, California.

While we aren’t exactly sure if the event will be in-person or virtual like last year, the Tweet’s wording suggests that the conference will most likely be online, with a few Google partners and employees making up the crowd.

Heading to the I/O website currently shows a countdown to the event, which will be absolutely free to attend globally.

At last year’s I/O conference, Google revealed Android’s Material You design, launched the first Android 12 Beta, announced new features to better capture photos of people of colour, revealed that it is working with Samsung on Wear OS and a few privacy updates.

We aren’t sure what Google has up its sleeve for 2022, but a likely contender is Android 13, which had its first developer preview released last month.

Image credit: @sundarpichai

Source: @sundarpichai