Realme GT 6 with AI features set to launch on Jun 20: Here's what to expect

Realme GT 6 with AI features set to launch on Jun 20: Here's what to expect


Chinese smartphone maker Realme has scheduled the global launch of its next flagship, the Realme GT 6, for June 20. Realme is calling the smartphone as the “AI Flagship Killer”, suggesting that the smartphone will feature artificial intelligence-powered tools and features. The company said that the Realme GT 6 smartphone will “harness the power of AI” for image upscaling and to improve productivity on the smartphone.


Realme GT 6: What to expect


According to a report by consumer technology news platform 91mobiles, the upcoming Realme GT 6 smartphone will feature multiple AI tools for imaging and editing such as “AI Night Vision” for improving low light photography and “AI Smart Removal” for eliminating unnecessary objects from images. For productivity, the Realme GT 6 smartphone is said to come with a “Smart Loop” feature for text generation and summarisation. Additionally, it could also feature a Google’s Circle to Search-like “AI Smart Search” feature.


On the hardware front, the Realme GT 6 could be powered by the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8s Gen 3 chip and could be offered in up to a 12GB RAM configuration. The smartphone would likely be powered by a 5,500mAh battery, supported by 120W wired charger.


On the imaging front, the Realme GT 6 smartphone could sport a 50MP Sony IMX882 primary sensor with OIS and an 8MP Sony IMX355 ultra-wide camera. The smartphone’s front camera could likely be a 32MP sensor.


  • Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8s Gen 3

  • RAM: up to 12GB

  • Display: 6.78-inch AMOLED, 120Hz

  • Rear camera: 50MP (Sony IMX882) primary with OIS + 8MP (Sony IMX355) ultra-wide

  • Front camera: 32MP

  • Battery: 5,500mAh

  • Charging: 120W wired charging

First Published: Jun 03 2024 | 11:48 AM IST



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Nvidia says its next-generation AI chip platform to be rolled out in 2026

Nvidia says its next-generation AI chip platform to be rolled out in 2026


Nvidia (Photo: Bloomberg)


Nvidia Chief Executive Jensen Huang said on Sunday that the company’s next-generation artificial intelligence (AI) chip platform was called Rubin and would be rolled out in 2026.


The Rubin family of chips will include new graphics (GPU) and central processors (CPU) as well as networking chips, Huang said at National Taiwan University in Taipei as part of the Computex trade show.


However, Huang offered few details.


The new CPU will be called Versa and the new graphics chips that are used to power AI applications will bundle next generation high-bandwidth memory that is made by the likes of SK Hynix, Micron and Samsung.


Huang said the company now plans to release a new family of AI chips every year, accelerating its prior release schedule of roughly every two years.


Dominating roughly 80% of the market for AI chips, Nvidia stands in a unique position as both the largest enabler as well as beneficiary of surging AI development.

First Published: Jun 03 2024 | 11:20 AM IST



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AMD announces Ryzen AI 300 series processors for next-gen AI PCs: Details

AMD announces Ryzen AI 300 series processors for next-gen AI PCs: Details


AMD Ryzen AI 300 series chip


US-based chip maker AMD has announced Ryzen AI 300 series processors for next-generation AI PCs, including those based on Copilot+ PC platform. The new AMD Ryzen AI 300 series chips feature new neural processing unit (NPU) that is capable of executing 50 trillion operations per second (TOPS), said AMD while announcing the chips. In addition to the new AI chips, AMD also unveiled its next-generation Ryzen 9000 series desktop processors aimed at heavy gaming and computational workloads.


AMD Ryzen AI 300 series: Details


The AMD Ryzen AI 300 series encompasses two chips, AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 and AMD Ryzen AI 9 365. Both these chips feature high performance cores based on the company’s new Zen 5 architecture. While the Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 features 12 high performance cores and 24 threads, the Ryzen AI 9 365 gets 10 high performance cores and 20 threads. Both the chips operate at 2.0GHz base frequency but the HX 370 gets a higher boost frequency at 5.1GHz while the later operates at 5.0GHz. The Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 chip also gets a bigger cache memory of 36MB compared to 34MB on the Ryzen AI 9 365.


Both these chips get the same NPU based on AMD’s XDNA 2 architecture, capable of executing 50 TOPS. With such capability of handling AI workloads, AMD said that the AI engine (NPU) on these chips are “designed for efficient processing of local AI workloads”.


Additionally, the AMD Ryzen AI 300 series comes with built-in Radeon 800M series graphic processing units (GPUs) based on AMD RDNA 3.5 graphics architecture for gaming, graphic upscaling, and more.


AMD has confirmed that brands such as Acer, ASUS, HP, Lenovo and MSI are currently working on AI PCs powered by the new Ryzen AI 300 series processors.


AMD Ryzen 9000 Series: Details


Along with dedicated chips for AI PCs, AMD announced its heavyweight Ryzen 9000 series desktop processors targeted towards gamers and creative professionals. The company said that these processors are capable of offering smooth gameplay experience on AAA gaming titles at high frame rate. Additionally, it offers improved single-threaded and multi-threaded performance for faster rendering speed for creators. Here are the details:


AMD Ryzen 9 9950X


  • Cores: 16

  • Threads: 32

  • Base frequency: 4.3GHz

  • Boost frequency: 5.7GHz

  • Total cache: 80MB

  • PCle: Gen 5

  • TDP: 170W


AMD Ryzen 9 9900X


  • Cores: 12

  • Threads: 24

  • Base frequency: 4.4GHz

  • Boost frequency: 5.6 GHz

  • Total cache: 76MB

  • PCle: Gen 5

  • TDP: 120W


AMD Ryzen 7 9700X


  • Cores: 8

  • Threads: 16

  • Base frequency: 3.8GHz

  • Boost frequency: 5.5GHz

  • Total cache: 40MB

  • PCle: Gen 5

  • TDP: 65W


AMD Ryzen 5 9600X


  • Cores: 6

  • Threads: 12

  • Base frequency: 3.9GHz

  • Boost frequency: 5.4GHz

  • Total cache: 38MB

  • PCle: Gen 5

  • TDP: 65W

First Published: Jun 03 2024 | 11:18 AM IST



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AMD launches AI chips to take on leader Nvidia; plans new chip every year

AMD launches AI chips to take on leader Nvidia; plans new chip every year



Advanced Micro Devices unveiled its latest artificial intelligence processors on Monday and detailed its plan to develop AI chips over the next two years in a bid to challenge industry leader Nvidia .


At the Computex technology trade show in Taipei, AMD CEO Lisa Su introduced the MI325X accelerator, which is set to be made available in the fourth quarter of 2024.


The race to develop generative artificial intelligence programs has led to towering demand for the advanced chips used in AI data centers able to support these complex applications.


Santa Clara, California-based AMD has been vying to compete against Nvidia, which currently dominates the lucrative market for AI semiconductors and commands about 80% of its share.


Since last year, Nvidia has made it clear to investors that it plans to shorten its release cycle to annually, and now AMD has followed suit.


“AI is clearly our number one priority as a company and we have really harnessed all of the development capability within the company to do that,” Su told reporters.


“This annual cadence is something that is there because the market requires newer products and newer capabilities… Every year we have the next big thing such that we always have the most competitive portfolio.”


AMD also introduced an upcoming series of chips titled MI350, which is expected to be available in 2025 and will be based on new chip architecture.


Compared to the currently available MI300 series of AI chips, AMD said it expects the MI350 to perform 35 times better in inference – the process of computing generative AI responses.


Additionally, AMD revealed the MI400 series, which will arrive in 2026 and will be based on an architecture called “Next”.


Investors who have poured billions of dollars into Wall Street’s picks-and-shovels trade have been seeking longer-term updates from chip firms, as they evaluate the longevity of the booming genAI rally, which so far has shown no signs of slowing down.


AMD’s shares have more than doubled since the start of 2023.


This surge still pales in comparison to the more than seven-fold rise in Nvidia’s shares in the same time period.


AMD is aiming at an AI chip product cycle of one year.


Similarly, Nvidia said it plans to release a new family of AI chips every year.


AMD’s Su said in April that the company expects AI chip sales of roughly $4 billion for 2024, an increase of $500 million from its prior estimate.


At the Computex event, AMD also said its latest generation of central processor units (CPUs) will likely be available in the second half of 2024.


While businesses generally prioritize spending on AI chips in data centers, some of AMD’s CPUs are used in conjunction with graphics processor units, though the ratio is skewed in favor of GPUs.


AMD detailed architecture for its new neural processing units (NPUs), which are dedicated to handling on-device AI tasks in AI PCs.


Chipmakers have been banking on added AI capabilities to drive growth in the PC market as it emerges from a years-long slump.


PC providers such as HP and Lenovo will release devices which include AMD’s AI PC chips. AMD said its processors exceed Microsoft’s Copilot+ PC requirements.

First Published: Jun 03 2024 | 11:06 AM IST



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Tech giant Google's AI search leaves content publishers scrambling

Tech giant Google's AI search leaves content publishers scrambling


By Nico Grant & Katie Robertson

When Frank Pine searched Google for a link to a news article two months ago, he encountered paragraphs generated by artificial intelligence (AI) about the topic at the top of his results. To see what he wanted, he had to scroll past them.


That experience annoyed Pine, the executive editor of Media News Group and Tribune Publishing, which own 68 daily newspapers. Now, those paragraphs scare him.

 


In May, Google announced that the AI-generated summaries, which compile content from news sites and blogs on the topic being searched, would be made available to everyone in the US. And that change has publishing executives worried that the paragraphs pose a big danger to their brittle business model, by sharply reducing the amount of traffic to their sites from Google. “It potentially chokes off the original creators of the content,”  Pine said.

 


Media executives have said they want their sites listed in Google’s search results, which for some outlets can generate over half of their traffic. But doing that means Google can use their content in AI Overviews summaries.

 


Publishers could also try to protect their content by forbidding Google’s web crawler from sharing any content snippets from their sites. But then their links would show up without any description, making people less likely to click.

 


Another alternative — refusing to be indexed by Google, and not appearing on its search engine at all — could be fatal to their business.

 


Google said its search engine continued to send billions of visits to websites, providing value to publishers. The firm has also said it has not showcased its AI summaries when it was clear that users were looking for current news.

 


Liz Reid, Google’s vice president of search, said  before the introduction of AI Overviews that there were hopeful signs for publishers during testing. “We do continue to see that people often do click on the links in AI Overviews and explore,” she said. “A website that appears in the AI Overview actually gets more traffic” than one with just a traditional blue link.

 


Reid wrote in a blog post Thursday that Google would limit AI Overviews to a smaller set of search results after it produced some high-profile errors, but added that the firm was still committed to improving the system.

 


The use of articles from news sites has also set off a legal fight over whether firms like OpenAI and Google violated copyright law by taking the content without permission to build their AI models. AI Overviews combines statements generated from AI models with snippets of content from live links across the web. The summaries contain excerpts from multiple websites while citing sources, giving comprehensive answers without the user having to click to another page. Since its debut, the tool has not always been able to differentiate between accurate articles and satirical posts. When it recommended that users put glue on pizza or eat rocks for a balanced diet, it caused a furore online.

 


Publishers said in interviews that it was too early to see a difference in traffic from Google since AI Overviews arrived.

 

Newspapers such as The Washington Post and The Texas Tribune have turned to a marketing start-up, Subtext, that helps firms connect with subscribers and audiences through text messaging. Then there’s the dispute over copyright. It took a turn when OpenAI, which scraped news sites to build ChatGPT, started cutting deals with publishers. It said it would pay firms, including The Associated Press, The Atlantic and News Corp, which owns WSJ, to access their content. But Google has not yet signed similar deals. The firm has long resisted calls to compensate media firms for their content, arguing that such payments would undermine the nature of the open web.


 


‘AI OVERVIEWS’ BOON OR BANE?

 


– Combines AI-generated statements with snippets from live web links. These summaries include excerpts from various sources, providing comprehensive answers without requiring users to navigate to another page

 


– The tool has not always been able to differentiate between accurate articles and satirical posts. When it recommended that users put glue on pizza or eat rocks for a balanced diet, it caused a furore online

 


– Publishers have noted no significant change in website traffic since the introduction of AI Overviews, raising questions about its effectiveness




– Some publishers are exploring alternatives like Subtext, bypassing reliance on search engines like Google



©2024 The New York Times News Service

First Published: Jun 02 2024 | 10:37 PM IST



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Airlines ride AI: Less work for agents, human-like responses for passengers

Airlines ride AI: Less work for agents, human-like responses for passengers


Air India and other planes parked at the airport in Mumbai, Thursday, May 9, 2024. (Photo: PTI)


From human-like responses to reduced workload for customer service agents to utilisation of trillions of parameters for answering air passengers’ queries, artificial intelligence is providing the technological tailwinds for Indian airlines as they cater to rising traffic.


For Air India, which has embarked on a five-year transformation plan, Artificial Intelligence (AI) use will be “pervasive” and its generative AI virtual agent AI.g handles over 1,300 topics.


And the country’s largest airline IndiGo has AI chatbot 6Eskai that has 1.7 trillion parameters, allowing it to answer questions with ease. Also, the bot can understand written, typed language, and verbal instructions using speech-to-text models.


Akasa Air, which describes itself as a “cloud-native and digital-native brand”, said it will continue to invest heavily in proven technology solutions across all business functions.


India, one of the world’s fastest growing civil aviation markets, is seeing rising domestic air traffic, and airlines are also expanding their fleet, including with wide-body aircraft.


Across industries, including aviation, the adoption of new-age technologies like AI and Machine Learning (ML) is on the rise.


Air India’s Chief Digital & Technology Officer Satya Ramaswamy told PTI that “AI-infused” is an integral part of the airline’s technology approach and that AI has enabled it to reduce the variance in responding to customer service requests.


“Once developed and trained, our AI agent AI.g delivers consistent responses. It has helped us streamline and sharpen our contact centre functions. It has helped our contact centre agents focus more on queries and requests that require complex and detailed interactions with customers and areas where a response cannot be pre-determined,” he said.


According to him, computer vision, which refers to analysis of images and videos using various algorithms, will be an integral part of the operations, be it in airports, maintenance bases or in airplanes.


An IndiGo spokesperson said that several enhancements are in the pipeline to elevate the capabilities of its AI chatbot 6Eskai. “These include the integration of Google’s Gemini, a tool which can easily engage in conversations across various formats such as pictures, text, speech, music, and even computer code. Additionally, we plan to incorporate the IndiGo Avatar and voice features to streamline the booking process seamlessly,” the spokesperson told PTI.


Besides, another feature is being planned to offer passengers more options in the event of operational issues.


“The AI chatbot efficiently addresses customer queries in 10 different languages and offers a first-of-a-kind platform for booking tickets across the entire network. The implementation of 6Eskai has led to a remarkable 75 per cent decrease in the workload for customer service agents,” the IndiGo spokesperson said.


Currently, 6Eskai — which boasts an impressive 1.7 trillion parameters, allowing it to answer a diverse range of commonly asked questions — is transferring only 2-9 per cent of chats to experts.


Akasa Air, which has been flying for less than two years now, said it will continue to invest in appropriate technologies such as optimisation and AI to help gain insights into its customer behaviour and operational parameters.


“We leverage these insights to make informed and data-backed decisions to serve our customers better. Additionally, we have also deployed AI-based cyber threat prevention capabilities that leverage the power of AI to identify and thwart cyber threats in real time,” Akasa Air Co-Founder and Chief Information Officer Anand Srinivasan told PTI.


He also noted that all operational and commercial decisions are backed by technologies that leverage data, mathematical models and, where appropriate, AI and Internet of Things (IoT).


“These include the pricing of our flights, choice of routes, deployment of aircraft, rostering of operating and ground crew, scheduling engine maintenance etc”.


According to Ramaswamy, the containment ratio of AI.g is 93 per cent, which means only 7 per cent of the queries are escalated to a human agent. It handles over 1,300 topics and provides human-like responses to the various ways in which customers ask questions related to these topics.


Citing an example, he said the airline had injected pet policy in the AI system. “When customers ask ‘can I take my labrador with me?’, AI.g reasons that labrador is a dog, a dog is a pet, and hence the laid down pet policy applies. This is a quantum jump from the earlier generation of technologies where one would have to train the AI model with every possible type of dog breed,” he noted.


At Air India, Ramaswamy said a generative AI agent has been deployed recently for answering employee queries.


“Our use of generative AI in CoPilots for a variety of use cases will grow as enterprise users are loving the ability to interact in natural language in dynamic ways. We anticipate a time when generative AI may front-end all of our data,” he added.


Going forward, Akasa Air’s Srinivasan said the airline will continue to utilise advanced technologies that will provide improved efficiency and passenger experience.


Ganesh Gopalan, CEO of conversational AI company Gyani.ai, said there are many opportunities for AI in the aviation sector. For instance, for rescheduling of tickets, generally the waiting time has been long and an AI application can help in reducing it, he added.

(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: Jun 02 2024 | 11:18 AM IST



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