Artificially smarter
By Shaan Bajaj
Picture this: I wake up reluctantly and step out of bed to check my phone. The screen lights up and seamlessly scans my face to unlock my device. With a few words to my smart assistant on my smart phone or smart home device, I can ask for today's weather forecast, global news headlines, or a background soundtrack for my morning. Once I am ready, I open Google Maps to check on Bangkok's notorious traffic before deciding what route to take and when would be the best time to step out. During my commute, I scroll through social media while also checking my emails.
By 10am, I have used Artificial Intelligence (AI) in a number of ways. AI-powered functions have: recognised my face; collected and analysed data to provide me with real-time insight into the news, traffic, and weather; all while social media algorithm shave curated a feed based on my personal likes and dislikes. Oh, and Gmail has already started to draft possible responses as soon as I hit the reply button.
The scenarios mentioned above are examples of Narrow Artificial Intelligence (NAI),sometimes referred to as weak AI, that are built to solve a single function under a plethora of constraints and limitations that they are trained with. Recently however, the industry has seen the rise of a smarter type of Artificial Intelligence. A new AI chatbot called ChatGPT (Generative Pre-trained Transformer)has been developed by OpenAI, and it has the capability to answer with human-like responses that are coherent and easy to understand.
For example, if you ask the bot what its mission is, it provides a comprehensive explanation and ends with, "overall, ChatGPT is intended to help humanity by improving the usability and effectiveness of AI." Currently launched as a prototype, the chatbot was built through supervised learning and reinforcement learning, and its knowledge halts at 2021. Although it is not connected to the internet, the possibilities of what it's capable of are endless: users have been able to instruct the bot to write code, poems, essays, and song lyrics; and create diet plans, budgets and more. Microsoft has recently announced a multi-billion dollar investment into OpenAI, planning to make AI a priority moving forward.
So how does it work and how can it change your life?
The chatbot is free to use in limited capacity (although Microsoft has recently introduced a paid version as well). Follow the five steps below to try it yourself:
Here are three different examples of how you could use it:
The examples listed above are just three ways in which you can use it to save time. I asked ChatGPT to list some of the ways it can be used, and it provided me with another 20 options including:
Once the bot becomes more advanced and is up to date with today's events, it will entirely transform how we interact with computers. Instead of having to endlessly research pages on Google and scour the depths of social media, the information will be available in easy-to-digest language in just a matter of seconds. Although ChatGPT seems to be receiving all the hype, there are a few other new AI advancements to take note of as well. These include DALL·E 2 (https://openai.com/dall-e-2/) and Midjourney (www.midjourney.com/). They both generate AI images from the text descriptions that you provide. However, the use case scenario is much less impressive than ChatGPT, but can be very helpful in creative fields.
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