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Google looks set to unveil how it plans to rival the wildly successful ChatGPT AI, possibly within days.
The technology giant has scheduled a 40-minute event for Wednesday 8 February, when it will reveal how it is “reimagining how people search for, explore and interact with information”.
“Join us to learn how we’re opening up greater access to information for people everywhere, through Search, Maps, and beyond,” the company says.
It’s not clear whether the event will be AI-focused, but it comes days comes after Google‘s chief Sundar Pichai announced that the firm will make its chatbot technology available publicly in the coming weeks.
Speaking on a call with investors in parent company Alphabet on Thursday, Mr Pichai said people will be able to “engage directly” with Google’s conversational AI – starting with one called LaMDA, which has been in testing.
Mr Pichai said: “Our long-term investments in deep computer science makes us extremely well-positioned as AI reaches an inflection point, and I’m excited by the AI-driven leaps we’re about to unveil in search and beyond.”
Read more:
We put Google’s new chatbot through its paces
Google has reportedly been fast-tracking its plans for so-called large language models since ChatGPT‘s launch.
ChatGPT itself is one such model – an AI chatbot trained on a huge amount of text data, which it leverages to help generate answers and carry out realistic conversations.
Released by research firm OpenAI late last year, it threatened to upend how people prepare for job interviews, journalists write stories, and children do homework.
The New York Times reports Google founders, Larry Page and Sergei Brin, have been brought back to help add ChatGPT-like features to the search engine they launched more…
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