Explainer: Understanding AI PCs and the underlying technology powering them

Explainer: Understanding AI PCs and the underlying technology powering them


The PC just got an AI makeover, raising hopes that the buzzy technology would help revive industry.


The PC just got an AI makeover, raising hopes that the buzzy technology would help revive an industry that has been on a steady decline over the last few years.

 


Here’s everything we know about AI PCs:

 


What does “AI PCs” mean?

 


Manufacturers say these devices process data more swiftly than traditional PCs and can handle a greater volume of AI tasks directly on the device, including chatbots. That means they do not have to rely on cloud data centers that currently power most AI applications, including OpenAI’s ChatGPT.

 


Some models can even support the training of AI models, a task that requires significant computing power and is typically performed on servers.

 


PC makers are hoping such features will help draw in buyers as more people lean on generative AI for everything from sending emails to planning vacations.

 


Research firm Canalys estimates AI PC shipments will surpass 100 million in 2025, constituting 40% of all PCs shipped.

 


What technology is used in AI PCs?

 


AI PCs come with specialized processors called neural processing units (NPUs) that handle the majority of on-device AI workloads.

 


These NPUs work in tandem with central processing units and graphics processors to manage complex tasks, deliver enhanced processing speeds and power applications such as AI assistants.

 

What are some of the AI PCs available on the market?

Brands including Dell, HP, Samsung Electronics , Lenovo, Asus and Acer have unveiled new computers under Microsoft’s Copilot+ branding, which was announced on Monday.

 


Among these, Microsoft’s refreshed Surface Laptop and Surface Pro tablet are some of the most affordable Copilot+ devices, starting at $999.

 


Lenovo ThinkPad T14s Gen 6, expected to start at $1,699, stands as the priciest option based on the pricing disclosed by some manufacturers.

 


Are there any concerns?




A new flagship feature from Microsoft called “recall” has raised some privacy concerns. The Windows maker’s Copilot+ PCs “recall” capability within the AI assistant allows it to search and retrieve information on any past activity on the computer.

 


The recall feature tracks every action performed on the laptop from voice chats to web browsing, and creates a detailed history stored on the device. The user can then search this repository and go through past actions.

 


Some social media users have expressed fears that the feature could enable spying, while billionaire technologist Elon Musk compared it to “Black Mirror,” the Netflix series that explores the harmful effects of advanced technology.

 


The main concern with the feature is whether the data is stored on the device or centrally, International Data Corp analyst Ryan O’Leary said, adding that there would be “significant privacy risk” if Microsoft stored the data.

 


On the other hand, some experts say that managing more AI-related tasks directly on the device offers greater privacy.

Research from Forrester showed AI PCs could help avoid the use of personal data to train AI systems, as well as copyright and patent violations, making them preferable for enterprise use.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: May 22 2024 | 11:53 AM IST



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Motorola Edge 50 Fusion goes on sale with introductory offers: Know details

Motorola Edge 50 Fusion goes on sale with introductory offers: Know details


Motorola Edge 50 Fusion (Marshmallow Blue colour)

Motorola Edge 50 Fusion smartphone is set to go on sale in India today, on May 22. Launched in the country on May 16, the Motorola Edge 50 Fusion will be available for purchase in the maiden sale period starting at 12 pm on May 22. The smartphone will be available on e-commerce platform Flipkart with introductory offers.


Powered by Qualcomm Snapdragon 7s Gen 2, the Motorola Edge 50 Fusion will be available in three  Pantone curated colours – Forest Blue, Marshmallow Blue and Hot Pink. The Marshmallow Blue and Hot Pink coloured variants feature vegan leather covers at the back while the Forest Blue colour variant has a PMMA finish.


Motorola Edge 50 Fusion: Price and variants


  • 8GB RAM + 128GB storage: Rs 22,999

  • 12GB RAM + 256GB storage: Rs 24,999


Motorola Edge 50 Fusion: Availability and offers


Open sale for the Motorola Edge 50 Fusion smartphone starts at 12 PM on May 22. The smartphone will be available on the e-commerce platform Flipkart with an introductory bank discount of Rs 2,000 on ICICI Bank Credit card, Debit card and EMI transaction.


Motorola Edge 50 Fusion: Specifications


The Motorola Edge 50 Fusion features a 6.7-inch pOLED 3D curved display of 144Hz refresh rate and comes with a peak brightness level of 1600 nits. The smartphone’s display is protected by Gorilla Glass 5 while it is also rated IP68 for resistance against dust and water. Imaging on the Motorola Edge 50 Fusion is covered by a 50-megapixel primary sensor (Sony LYTIA 700C) and a 13MP ultra-wide-angle camera sensor at the back. The smartphone sports a 32MP front-facing camera in a display punch-hole design.


The smartphone is powered by Qualcomm Snapdragon 7s Gen 2, paired with up to 12GB RAM and up to 256GB onboard storage. It is powered by a 5,000mAh battery, which is supported by a 68W wired charging.


The Motorola Edge 50 Fusion boots Android 14 operating system with the company’s own Hello UI layered on top. Motorola said that it will provide three years of OS update and four years of security patches to the smartphone.


  • Display: 6.7-inch pOLED 3D curved, 144Hz refresh rate, 600 nits peak brightness

  • Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 7s Gen 2

  • RAM: 8GB and 12GB

  • Storage: 128GB and 256GB

  • Rear Camera: 50MP (Sony LYTIA 700C) + 13MP ultra-wide

  • Front Camera: 32MP

  • Battery: 5000mAh

  • Charging: 68W wired

  • OS: Android 14

  • Protection: Corning Gorilla Glass 5, IP68

First Published: May 22 2024 | 10:55 AM IST



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Microsoft Build highlights: Phi-3-vision, Team Copilot, and more announced

Microsoft Build highlights: Phi-3-vision, Team Copilot, and more announced


Microsoft Chairman and CEO Satya Nadella at Build 2024

A day after announcing Copilot+ PCs platform and artificial intelligence-powered Windows on Arm, Microsoft unveiled an array of new products and features at its Build 2024 event. While most of the announcements at the event were directed towards developers, there were a few that can bring new experiences to Windows for consumers. These include a new multimodal version of Microsoft’s small language model (SLM) Phi-3 and more AI integration into the Microsoft Edge browser. Here are the details:


Phi-3-Vision


Microsoft introduced a new multimodal AI model within its range of small scaled Phi-3 models. The Phi-3-vision SLM, Microsoft said, has the ability to process texts and images while its responses are limited to texts. Being a small scaled model, the Phi-3-vision is capable of processing data locally on-device. The latest multimodal SLM model has a parameter range of 4.2 billion. During the launch, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadela said that the model has a hybrid nature – it can be deployed on-device when the hardware required for it is available and falls back to cloud when not.


The Phi-3-Vision model is available as a preview in Azure AI Playground and Azure AI Studio for developers.


Team Copilot


Microsoft said that the new Team Copilot is an expansion of the AI-powered chatbot for Microsoft 365. Similar to how Google’s new Gemini Teammate integrates with its Workspace apps, Team Copilot works across Microsoft productivity apps such as Teams, Loop, Planner, and more. The AI agent for Microsoft 365 can handle automated tasks such as facilitating meetings, managing agenda, tracking time and taking notes. The AI chatbot can also surface in chats without any prompt and surface  important information, tracking action items and addressing unresolved issues.


The company said that the Team Copilot will be available for preview later this year with more features.




Real-time video translation in Edge


Microsoft Edge browser is set to get an AI-powered video translation feature, which will be able to translate videos from YouTube, LinkedIn, Reuters, and Coursera in real time. According to a report by The Verge, the feature works with only select languages, offering translation from English to Hindi, German, Spanish, Italian, and Russian. As per the report, the feature will be available soon and will get support for more languages and video-streaming platforms in the future. 

First Published: May 22 2024 | 10:50 AM IST



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Realme GT 6T India launch today at 12 pm: Where to watch and what to expect

Realme GT 6T India launch today at 12 pm: Where to watch and what to expect


Chinese smartphone brand Realme is set to launch the Realme GT 6T smartphone in India on May 22. The smartphone will revive the GT series, which was left unattended by the brand for the last two years. Alongside the smartphone, Realme will launch the Buds Air 6 wireless earbuds on May 22. The Realme GT 6T and Buds Air 6 launch event will kick off at 12 pm on May 22. Though an in-person event held in Delhi, the launch will be livestreamed on Realme official channel on YouTube and live updates from the event will be available on Realme’s official social media handles.


Realme GT 6T: What to expect


The Qualcomm Snapdragon 7+ Gen 3 processor will power the Realme GT 3. The smartphone is set to debut an AMOLED display of up to 6,000 nits peak brightness. The performance-focused smartphone is expected to be powered by a 5,500 mAH battery with support for 120W fast wired charging. The smartphone is anticipated to come with up to 12GB LPDDR5x RAM and 512GB UFS 4.0 storage. Other expected features include vapour cooling system for thermals, 50-megapixel based dual-camera system on the rear, and Android 14 operating system-based Realme UI.


Realme GT 6T: Expected Specifications


Display: AMOLED, 600o nits brightness


Battery: 5,500 mAh


Charging: 120W wired


Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 7+ Gen 3


Realme Buds Air 6 : Details


The Realme Buds Air 6 are expected to feature dual audio drivers with support for Hi-Res audio, supported by LHDCC 5.0 codec. The wireless earbuds are anticipated to feature multi-point connectivity, fast charging, and adaptive active noise cancellation.


Realme GT 6T launch event: Watch livestream here

 

First Published: May 22 2024 | 10:39 AM IST



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Second global AI summit secures safety commitments from companies

Second global AI summit secures safety commitments from companies


Amazon, IBM, and Samsung to not develop AI models if risks cannot be mitigated


Sixteen companies at the forefront of developing Artificial Intelligence pledged on Tuesday at a global meeting to develop the technology safely at a time when regulators are scrambling to keep up with rapid innovation and emerging risks.

 


The companies included U.S. leaders Google, Meta, Microsoft and OpenAI, as well as firms from China, South Korea and the United Arab Emirates.

 


They were backed by a broader declaration from the Group of Seven (G7) major economies, the EU, Singapore, Australia and South Korea at a virtual meeting hosted by British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol.


South Korea’s presidential office said nations had agreed to prioritise AI safety, innovation and inclusivity.

 


“We must ensure the safety of AI to … protect the wellbeing and democracy of our society,” Yoon said, noting concerns over risks such as deepfake.

 

Participants noted the importance of interoperability between governance frameworks, plans for a network of safety institutes, and engagement with international bodies to build on agreement at a first meeting to better address risks.


Companies also committing to safety included Zhipu.ai, – backed by China’s Alibaba, Tencent, Meituan and Xiaomi – UAE’s Technology Innovation Institute, Amazon, IBM and Samsung Electronics .

 


They committed to publishing safety frameworks for measuring risks, to avoid models where risks could not be sufficiently mitigated, and to ensure governance and transparency.




“It’s vital to get international agreement on the ‘red lines’ where AI development would become unacceptably dangerous to public safety,” said Beth Barnes, founder of METR, a group promoting AI model safety, in response to the declaration.




Computer scientist Yoshua Bengio, known as a “godfather of AI”, welcomed the commitments but noted that voluntary commitments would have to be accompanied by regulation.




Since November, discussion on AI regulation has shifted from longer-term doomsday scenarios to more practical concerns such as how to use AI in areas like medicine or finance, said Aidan Gomez, co-founder of large language model firm Cohere on the sidelines of the summit.




China, which co-signed the “Bletchley Agreement” on collectively managing AI risks during the first November meeting, did not attend Tuesday’s session but will attend an in-person ministerial session on Wednesday, a South Korean presidential official said.




Tesla’s Elon Musk, former CEO of Google Eric Schmidt, Samsung Electronics’ Chairman Jay Y. Lee and other AI industry leaders participated in the meeting.




The next meeting is to be in France, officials said.

First Published: May 21 2024 | 10:05 PM IST



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Europe sets benchmark for rest of the world with landmark AI laws

Europe sets benchmark for rest of the world with landmark AI laws


Illustration: Binay Sinha


Europe’s landmark rules on artificial intelligence will enter into force next month after EU countries endorsed on Tuesday a political deal reached in December, setting a potential global benchmark for a technology used in business and everyday life.


The European Union’s AI Act is more comprehensive than the United States’ light-touch voluntary compliance approach while China’s approach aims to maintain social stability and state control.




The vote by EU countries came two months after EU lawmakers backed the AI legislation drafted by the European Commission in 2021 after making a number of key changes.




Concerns about AI contributing to misinformation, fake news and copyrighted material have intensified globally in recent months amid the growing popularity of generative AI systems such as Microsoft-backed OpenAI’s ChatGPT, and Google’s chatbot Gemini.


“This landmark law, the first of its kind in the world, addresses a global technological challenge that also creates opportunities for our societies and economies,” Belgian digitisation minister Mathieu Michel said in a statement.




“With the AI Act, Europe emphasizes the importance of trust, transparency and accountability when dealing with new technologies while at the same time ensuring this fast-changing technology can flourish and boost European innovation,” he said.




The AI Act imposes strict transparency obligations on high-risk AI systems while such requirements for general-purpose AI models will be lighter.




It restricts governments’ use of real-time biometric surveillance in public spaces to cases of certain crimes, prevention of terrorist attacks and searches for people suspected of the most serious crimes.




The new legislation will have an impact beyond the 27-country bloc, said Patrick van Eecke at law firm Cooley.




“The Act will have global reach. Companies outside the EU who use EU customer data in their AI platforms will need to comply. Other countries and regions are likely to use the AI Act as a blueprint, just as they did with the GDPR,” he said, referring to EU privacy rules.




While the new legislation will apply in 2026, bans on the use of artificial intelligence in social scoring, predictive policing and untargeted scraping of facial images from the internet or CCTV footage will kick in in six months once the new regulation enters into force.




Obligations for general purpose AI models will apply after 12 months and rules for AI systems embedded into regulated products in 36 months.


Fines for violations range from 7.5 million euros ($8.2 million) or 1.5% of turnover to 35 million euros or 7% of global turnover depending on the type of violations.


SETTING THE COURSE




> High-risk AI systems will now have to undergo obligations to gain access to the EU markets




> Use of real-time remote biometric identification systems in public spaces would be limited




> This would only be allowed to help identify victims of kidnapping, human trafficking, and sexual exploitation




> AI systems that manipulate human behaviour to circumvent their free will would be prohibited




> Violations would attract fines starting from 7.5 mn euros ($8 mn) 

 

First Published: May 21 2024 | 10:01 PM IST



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