Samsung is launching new phones this week that will be the most artificially intelligent ever. This is not a guess, although after “ChatGPT is installed” at CES 2024, it will be a simple guess. No, Samsung is telling us in the loudest way possible, including putting it on the Sphere, the 2024 product equivalent of shouting it from the rooftops. But what does artificial intelligence on your phone actually look like? So far, there have been some demonstrations of the technology. This week’s Galaxy Unpacked event is a chance to show us the potential of artificial intelligence on mobile devices. Unlike washing machines that come with ChatGPT pre-installed, artificial intelligence is very useful on our phones.
Artificial intelligence will emerge on a large scale in 2023, but as a tool on our mobile devices, it has not yet appeared. This is the reality of our current technology; the large-scale language models that power chatbots like ChatGPT simply don’t run on our phones. You can download a ChatGPT app that runs queries in the cloud, but it can’t tell you if you just received an important email. Things are slowly changing: The Pixel 8 Pro arrives in October, capable of running Google’s base model on the device, with the promise of some AI-driven updates later. But so far, only a few have arrived, and it’s been somewhat underwhelming.
The December software update added the ability to use AI to summarize Recorder recordings – a feature I immediately took advantage of since I use the Pixel Recorder app. But it can’t handle long recordings; anything over 10 minutes seems off-limits. This rules out most of my recordings. Video Boost comes in the same update and is called Video Night Sight.it is beautiful, But the effect isn’t as dramatic as Night Sight for still photos, and you may have to wait an hour or two to see the footage being processed in the cloud.
Still, there are some more promising things afoot. At the Pixel launch event at the end of last year, Google announced the launch of Assistant with Bard, a ChatGPT-style artificial intelligence chatbot.Bud is not the most most Impressive artificial intelligence is new, but it has been steadily gaining useful capabilities — turning it into an assistant capable of performing more complex tasks than setting a timer would be a step in the right direction. Judging from Samsung’s Unpacked teaser visuals, Bard may have something to do with this week’s announcement.
Will the Galaxy S24 series be available with certain versions of Bard? Where does Bixby fit into all this? Remember Bixby? It might seem unusual for Google to launch an AI showcase on a competitor’s phone, but then again, Samsung sells far more Android phones than Google. The era of artificial intelligence may turn these frenemies into closer collaborators.
Artificial intelligence can clearly do more on our phones, and the clearest vision of this future so far doesn’t come from Google or Samsung. It’s actually not a phone at all, but the Rabbit R1, a hot product at CES 2024. This is a gadget designed by Teenage Engineering that acts as an artificial intelligence assistant for your phone. You give it access to your apps and accounts, then ask it to do things like book a flight or order a pizza. Instead of opening apps and clicking through menus, it is said to do the heavy lifting for you. dream!
It’s compelling, even if it may be swallowed up by the phone itself in the future. But if you want to know whether people are ready to use artificial intelligence to help manage their digital lives, look no further than the tens of thousands of people who pre-ordered the R1 in the first week.
Apparently we’re ready for a break from typing away on our phones all day – will the Galaxy S24 show us what the future holds? Or is this just another tech demo?