![]() ![]() The latter will use Google’s text-to-image diffusion model to generate an image, which again you will be able to use as the phone’s wallpaper. The former will use on-device machine learning to add a 3D dimension to your favorite gallery photos, which can then be used as the wallpaper on the phone. There will also be two visual features, called Cinematic Wallpaper and Generative AI Wallpaper. “Make your messages more concise, professional or even written like Shakespeare himself! Experiment for yourself and try Magic Compose when it rolls out this summer in beta,” says Dave Burke, Vice President of Engineering at Google. The beta version rolls out sometime in the next few weeks. This will generate reply suggestions “based on the context of your messages” with attempts made to make them sound as you may usually do in a text conversation. But we did get a glimpse of the AI infusion expected with Android 14, that’s likely to roll out later this summer.Īndroid’s Messages app will get something called Magic Compose. Uncharacteristically, Android was not the focus for Google at this year’s iteration of the annual developer conference (it usually is, and quite elaborate too) – though there was talk about Android on foldables and tablets, as well as Android TV and smartwatches. ![]() There will be third-party integrations as well, including with Adobe Firefly to help users generate high quality AI images. Google is looking to plug in Bard into its own suite of apps, including Docs, Drive, Gmail and Maps. Bard will soon be able to have a conversation based on an image you may have added to the chat and will also generate search results with more visuals. Languages aren’t the only upcoming additions to look for. “As we further expand, we’ll continue to maintain our high standards for quality and local nuances while also ensuring we adhere to our AI Principles,” she adds. Hsiao confirms they are on track to add support for 40 more languages, in the coming weeks. This means Bard is now available in 180 countries, with support for English, Korean and Japanese. “As we continue to make additional improvements and introduce new features, we want to get Bard into more people’s hands so they can try it out and share their feedback with us,” says Sissie Hsiao, Vice President and General Manager for Google Assistant and Bard. This is the first major expansion of Bard AI’s availability, on a global scale. Till now, Bard was accessible to a very small set of users, in the UK and US. This means you finally complete the troika of chatbots in your life, with Bard joining OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Microsoft’s Bing chatbot.īut it is clear Google is not willing to take any risks with user safety or the chatbot misbehaving (misinformation, bias etc.) when interacting with a user. The biggest announcement is the availability of the Bard chatbot, albeit with limited languages, for everyone who is willing to try it. There is no doubt that Google has kicked off this summer’s developer conference chapter, setting quite a benchmark for the likes of Microsoft, Meta, Amazon and indeed Apple to try and match in the coming weeks. Google Bard Chatbot: Globally available, in limited languages It might have all gone pear shaped, because the tech giant’s focus on AI is so exhaustive, it spans everything from the Bard chatbot, a new search tool to identify AI generated images, a coding bot for Android developers, an AI tool for app developers to help them build Play Store listings and Android’s generative AI dreams for text messages and wallpapers. ![]() It is a good thing you play a game that involved gulping down an alcoholic shot every time AI was muttered at Google I/O 2023 keynote. ![]()
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