"OpenAI is aiming to build on the
popularity of its chatbot with a smartphone app that responds to voice prompts.
Since ChatGPT debuted in November,
hundreds of millions of people have experimented with the online chatbot, which can answer
questions, write poetry, draft emails and riff on almost any topic from inside
a web browser.
On Thursday, OpenAI, the San Francisco
artificial intelligence lab behind ChatGPT, unveiled a new version of the
chatbot for the iPhone, hoping to build on its enormous popularity.
Unlike the browser-based version of
ChatGPT, the smartphone app responds to voice commands, operating a bit like
Apple’s Siri digital assistant or Amazon’s Alexa. The app does not answer with
voice, but generates responses in text.
In a blog post, OpenAI
said the app was part of its effort to transform its A.I. research into “useful
tools that empower people, while continuously making them more accessible.” It
declined to comment further.
In offering its flagship technology
to billions of iPhone users, OpenAI is solidifying its position among the
giants of the tech industry.
ChatGPT is the most prominent example of what is called
generative A.I., technology that can generate text, images and other media
based on short prompts.
Google, Microsoft and various
start-ups have released similar bots and have begun to roll such technology
into a wide range of online services.
The result of more than a decade of
research at companies like Google and OpenAI, these chatbots are poised to
remake everything from internet search engines like Google Search and Bing to
email programs like Gmail and Outlook.
They can generate digital text that
can be used in almost any context, including for students to write term papers
and businesspeople to create email messages and other marketing materials.
The technology is not perfect. Because these chatbots learn
by analyzing vast amounts of digital text culled from across the internet, they
cannot distinguish between fact and fiction. And the computer code they
generate is often flawed.
Today, the technology tends to complement human workers
rather than replace their skills outright.
OpenAI is not the first to introduce
technology that lets people use ChatGPT with voice; some small companies and
independent developers have already done so.
Microsoft also offers a version of its Bing chatbot that
responds to voice commands.
The new iPhone app is free. Subscribers of ChatGPT Plus —
available for $20 a month — can use a more powerful version of the chatbot
based on a technology called GPT-4.
OpenAI began rolling out the app in
the United States on Thursday and will expand into other countries in the
coming weeks. A version of the app for Android phones is also in the works.”
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