Tag: microsoft ai chatbot

5 things about AI you may have missed today: LimeChat unveils AI chatbot, Mahindra scraps AI influencer, and more
Technology

5 things about AI you may have missed today: LimeChat unveils AI chatbot, Mahindra scraps AI influencer, and more

[ad_1] AI Roundup: Several notable developments took place in the field of artificial intelligence (AI) today, January 11. Mahindra scrapped plans for Ava, its AI influencer, just a day after unveiling it. The company faced backlash on social media platforms. Meanwhile, Nvidia VP emphasized the need for infrastructure for sovereign AI in India during his address in Gujarat. LimeChat introduced an AI-powered chatbot in partnership with Microsoft.All this, and more in today's AI roundup. 1. LimeChat partners with Microsoft to launch AI chatbotLimeChat, in collaboration with Microsoft, today announced the release of an advanced AI-powered chatbot. Bolstering support solutions, the AI chatbot aims to provide an enhanced, efficient, secure, and personalized customer service experience, accor...
Microsoft 365 Copilot LAUNCHED for enterprise, business users, but it will cost you
Technology

Microsoft 365 Copilot LAUNCHED for enterprise, business users, but it will cost you

[ad_1] In recent years, Microsoft has been taking big steps towards bringing artificial intelligence (AI) to its suite of products. At the Build 2023 event, the tech giant announced that it was bringing the Microsoft 365 Copilot, an AI assistant developed for Microsoft 365 applications and services, to Microsoft Teams. At its Inspire conference in July, the company also unveiled the Bing Chat Enterprise, a business-oriented version of its AI chatbot with GPT-4 capabilities. Now, Microsoft has announced that it is finally launching the 365 Copilot for businesses and enterprise customers. Let us take a closer look.Microsoft 365 CopilotUp until now, Microsoft had only rolled out the 365 Copilot in the preview phase for a handful of businesses and enterprise customers. But now, it is being ...
Microsoft and Google rivalry could supercharge development of AI
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Microsoft and Google rivalry could supercharge development of AI

[ad_1] Microsoft and Google have recently made big investments in two of the most valuable companies in artificial intelligence (AI).OpenAI, which developed ChatGPT, has received a staggering investment of USD 10 billion (£7.8 billion) from Microsoft, while Google has invested USD 300 million in Anthropic. The companies' financial support for AI has pushed an ongoing rivalry into the public spotlight. Google's struggle for dominance with Microsoft is increasingly at the forefront of discussions about AI's future success. Google has made enormous contributions to the field of AI development, including the invention of transformers – a particular form of machine learning, where an algorithm improves at tasks as it is “trained” on data – the advancement of techniques for automating the tra...
Germany’s biggest publisher warns AI could ‘replace’ journalism
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Germany’s biggest publisher warns AI could ‘replace’ journalism

[ad_1] German media giant Axel Springer warned on Tuesday that journalists risked being made obsolete by artificial intelligence. "Artificial intelligence (AI) has the potential to make independent journalism better than it ever was -- or simply replace it," Axel Springer CEO Mathias Doepfner said in an internal letter to employees seen by AFP. Computers using AI would soon be better at the "aggregation of information" than human journalists, Doepfner predicted. He said media outlets must focus on generating exclusive news or original commentary and features if they want to survive. Investigative journalism, personality driven features and entertainment coverage were becoming "increasingly important" for the media business, Doepfner said. And divining the "true motives" behin...
EU Eyes a New Tech Champion, But It’s No ChatGPT
Technology

EU Eyes a New Tech Champion, But It’s No ChatGPT

[ad_1] Europe is where ChatGPT gets regulated, not invented. That's something to regret. As unhinged as the initial results of the artificial-intelligence arms race may be, they're also another reminder of how far the European Union lags behind the US and China when it comes to tech. How did the land that birthed Nokia Oyj and Ericsson AB become the land that tech forgot? Some blame the acronyms synonymous with Brussels red tape — GDPR, DMA, DSA — even though the Googles of this world look far more spooked by ChatGPT than any EU fine. Tech lobbyists are fuming at EU Commissioner Thierry Breton, who wants incoming AI rules toughened to rein in a new breed of chatbots. But maybe Breton's old company, Atos SE, is a better example of the deeper malaise plaguing European tech. Aerospac...