Apple closes near session highs after report it’s planning an AI web search tool like ChatGPT – Sherwood News
Shares of Apple closed near session highs, getting an extra jolt near the end of the trading day following a report from Bloomberg that the iPhone maker is planning on launching its own AI-powered search tool next year that will compete with similar ones from OpenAI and Perplexity. The “answer engine,” dubbed World Knowledge Answers, is part of a larger AI overhaul of its Siri assistant that Apple has so far failed to deliver.
Apple reached an agreement with Google to “evaluate and test” the underlying tech behind part of this AI Siri. Bloomberg previously reported that Apple is in talks with Google over using Gemini to power Siri.
The news comes one day after a US court ruling on Google’s monopoly case that left its commercial relationship with Apple little changed.
Apple reached an agreement with Google to “evaluate and test” the underlying tech behind part of this AI Siri. Bloomberg previously reported that Apple is in talks with Google over using Gemini to power Siri.
The news comes one day after a US court ruling on Google’s monopoly case that left its commercial relationship with Apple little changed.
The White House invited a gaggle of top founders and tech executives for an intimate dinner at the White House.
Apple gets a hardware upgrade. Google gets a software overhaul.
Where piracy is concerned, authorities are playing an almost never-ending game of “whack-a-mole.”
Meta has a youth problem that it keeps trying to fix using old stuff. This time it’s trying to bring back “pokes” — a feature from yesteryear the social media company had buried that allows users to digitally nudge others without having to say anything.
To make the feature shiny and new, the company is adding “counts,” along with a dedicated poke button and page, so users can keep track of who they poked or were poked by and how much.
Meta is hoping the updated feature will lead to more usage from young people, who’ve already started to adopt the practice thanks to previous pushes by Meta. Social media companies, like Snapchat and TikTok, have previously gotten into hot water before for similar gamification elements like “streaks” that critics have said are addictive.
The average age of Facebook users has been ticking up for years as the company loses young people to newer services, including Instagram, which Meta bought more than a decade ago, back when it was still called Facebook. According to the latest data from Pew Research Center, released last winter, teens were way less inclined to use Facebook than TikTok, Instagram and Snapchat.
Meta is hoping the updated feature will lead to more usage from young people, who’ve already started to adopt the practice thanks to previous pushes by Meta. Social media companies, like Snapchat and TikTok, have previously gotten into hot water before for similar gamification elements like “streaks” that critics have said are addictive.
The average age of Facebook users has been ticking up for years as the company loses young people to newer services, including Instagram, which Meta bought more than a decade ago, back when it was still called Facebook. According to the latest data from Pew Research Center, released last winter, teens were way less inclined to use Facebook than TikTok, Instagram and Snapchat.
OpenAI has some good news and bad news for workers. The bad news? AI will probably take your job. The good news? The company will offer AI-powered classes to retrain you, and try to help you get a job as a certified AI pro.
The company announced plans for the OpenAI Jobs Platform, in partnership with Walmart, John Deere, and Accenture, to help workers looking to level up their AI skills, and match them with companies seeking such candidates.
In a blog post announcing the plan, the company wrote:
“But AI will also be disruptive. Jobs will look different, companies will have to adapt, and all of us—from shift workers to CEOs—will have to learn how to work in new ways. At OpenAI, we can’t eliminate that disruption. But what we can do is help more people become fluent in AI and connect them with companies that need their skills, to give people more economic opportunities. “
Using AI-powered instruction, users can receive certification for their training, and OpenAI said it is committing to certifying 10 million Americans on its platform by 2030.
The company announced plans for the OpenAI Jobs Platform, in partnership with Walmart, John Deere, and Accenture, to help workers looking to level up their AI skills, and match them with companies seeking such candidates.
In a blog post announcing the plan, the company wrote:
“But AI will also be disruptive. Jobs will look different, companies will have to adapt, and all of us—from shift workers to CEOs—will have to learn how to work in new ways. At OpenAI, we can’t eliminate that disruption. But what we can do is help more people become fluent in AI and connect them with companies that need their skills, to give people more economic opportunities. “
Using AI-powered instruction, users can receive certification for their training, and OpenAI said it is committing to certifying 10 million Americans on its platform by 2030.