Bridging the Gap: 7 AI Insights for Professionals
Discover the Latest Innovations: 7 Fascinating Features Unveiled for BARD at Google I/O 2
It’s the AI arms race, and Google has been playing catch-up for too long. ChatGPT was released in November 2022, and Microsoft followed up shortly with a controlled roll-out of Bing AI, a worthy competitor, just months later.
Bard AI, Google’s ChatGPT alternative, has yet to impress despite Google’s massive investment in artificial intelligence and a reputation for innovation. Fortunately, at Google I/O 2023, Google announced numerous new features that have the potential to supercharge Bard AI. We’ve compiled the most exciting Bard AI news announced at Google I/O 2023.
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1. No More Waitlist for Bard AI
While this isn’t entirely a new feature per se, it’s refreshing to know that Google has dropped the waitlist for using Bard and opened the chatbot to all. So, if you’ve been sneaking onto the Bard website using a VPN, it’s time to drop the mask. Bard is now open to over 180 countries and territories.
2. Dark Theme
Dark mode is the new cool, and Google has finally listened to the request of Bard AI users by adding the dark mode feature to the Bard website. To toggle on dark mode, toggleUse dark theme in the bottom left corner of the Bard web interface. If you are accessing Bard from your mobile browser, you’ll need to tap the menu icon in the top right corner of the Bard website to reveal theUse dark theme button in the bottom left corner.
3. Integration With Google Products and Third-Party Plugins
This is one of the most significant Bard AI announcements since the chatbot itself was announced. Let’s face it; Bard AI isn’t as good as its competitors. We did a bit of aChatGPT vs. Bing AI vs. Bard AI test , and Bard didn’t impress. There are a lot of shortfalls we could talk about, but that’s a discussion for another day. The good news, however, is that a bulk of those shortfalls could be fixed by opening up Bard to third-party services and other Google products.
We saw a glimpse of what could be possible. A future where Bard AI integrates with Google Maps, Sheets, and a range of exciting services from third-party developers. This has the potential to be genuinely game-changing. Well, that is if Google doesn’t under-deliver, of course.
4. Image Prompting
Image Credit:Google
OpenAI promised us image prompting withthe release of the highly anticipated GPT-4 . Unfortunately, as of 10th May 2023, even ChatGPT plus users are still fiddling their fingers, waiting to try out the feature. If you’ve been disappointed, don’t be anymore. Image prompting is coming to Bard AI. The feature will be powered by Google Lens, a technology that Google has developed for several years.
In other words, instead of just text prompts, you’ll be able to upload images as prompts alongside text. For example, you could upload a picture of a dog and ask Bard which dog breed it is. The specifics of the feature are still a mystery, but if it is well crafted, some compelling use cases could pop up.
5. Image Generation With Adobe Firefly
Image Credit:Adobe
If you can’tgenerate images with Midjourney’s free tier anymore (or more like being force-fed the paid tier), there’s hope yet. Bard AI will soon be able to generate images from the Bard AI interface courtesy of Adobe Firefly. If you’re unfamiliar with Adobe Firefly, here’s a quickexplainer on Adobe Firefly and what you can do with it .
Although we aren’t exactly sure how deeply integrated Bard AI will be with Abode Firefly, the demo at Google I/O gave a sneak peek at something exciting.
6. Tools for Exporting Generated Content
One thing missing from mostAI chatbots like ChatGPT and Bing AI is a way to export generated content that preserves its formatting. If you generated a table with ChatGPT, for instance, copying over that table to a word processor with style intact is challenging.
Google is solving this by making content generated by Bard AI cross-compatible with some of its workspace tools like Google Sheets and Docs. So, if you generate data in a tabular format on Bard, you can export it to Sheets, where you can invite your family, friends, or colleagues to collaborate.
7. Improved Code Generation
At launch, Bard AI couldn’t write code—an embarrassing pitfall considering coding was one of the big hype surrounding the emergence of AI chatbots. However, Bard AI competitors likeChatGPT have been helping people code since its debut. Google has now significantly ramped up Bard’s coding abilities—so much so that a lot of precious presentation time was dedicated to discussing it at its Google I/O 2023 event.
Bard AI can now generate code in several programming languages. It can also explain code snippets, debug code, and sometimes point to the origin of the code to give credit to whoever created the original codebase that was used to answer your question.
Google’s AI Endgame Is Gemini
Bard AI currently runs on PaLM 2 (the latest iteration of its PaLM large language model) and relies on different Google products and services to offer most of the features announced at Google I/O 2023. Meanwhile, Sundar Pichai, the CEO of Google, briefly discussed Gemini—a new large language model currently being developed from the ground up to power future iterations of Bard AI.
According to Sundar Pichai, Gemini will be a multi-modal LLM, which means it will likely replace Google’s use of third-party services like Adobe Firefly or its products like Google Lens within the Bard AI ecosystem. Information about Gemini is still limited, but Google is investing in building a completely different LLM for Bard AI, and it will be worth paying attention to. It’s game on for generative AI.
- Title: Bridging the Gap: 7 AI Insights for Professionals
- Author: Jeffrey
- Created at : 2024-08-16 11:57:38
- Updated at : 2024-08-17 11:57:38
- Link: https://tech-haven.techidaily.com/bridging-the-gap-7-ai-insights-for-professionals/
- License: This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.