Microsoft introduces new AI-powered Bing search engine, Edge browser

Microsoft introduces new AI-powered Bing search engine, Edge browser







has introduced its new Bing powered by “next-generation” ChatGPT artificial intelligence (AI), and also updated its Edge browser with new AI capabilities.


The AI-powered Bing search engine and Edge browser are now available for preview at Bing.com, to “deliver better search, more complete answers, a new chat experience and the ability to generate content”, the tech giant said in a blogpost on Tuesday.


According to the company, these tools act as an “AI copilot for the web”.


“AI will fundamentally change every software category, starting with the largest category of all — search,” said CEO Satya Nadella.


“Today, we’re launching Bing and Edge powered by AI copilot and chat, to help people get more from search and the web,” he added.


With the new Bing, users get an enhanced version of the standard search experience.


The updated search engine is powered by a new, next-generation OpenAI large language model that is more powerful than ChatGPT.


“It takes key learnings and advancements from ChatGPT and GPT-3.5– and it is even faster, more accurate and more capable,” the company said.


It offers more relevant results for common queries like sports scores, stock prices and weather, as well as a new sidebar that displays additional in-depth information if users need it.


The chat experience gives users the power to narrow their search until they get the complete answer they are looking for.


also announced that it has updated the Edge browser with new AI capabilities and a new look.


“With the Edge Sidebar, you can ask for a summary of a lengthy financial report to get the key takeaways and then use the chat function to ask for a comparison to a competing company’s financials and automatically put it in a table,” it said.


Users can also ask the browser to help them compose content, such as a LinkedIn post. Moreover, it can also help users to update the tone, format and length of the post.


“Together with OpenAI, we’ve also been intentional in implementing safeguards to defend against harmful content,” the company added.


–IANS


aj/ksk/

(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.)




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GMRT raise concern over giant telescope functioning, near Pune-Nashik route

GMRT raise concern over giant telescope functioning, near Pune-Nashik route







With the Pune- High-Speed project getting in-principle approval of the Centre, researchers at the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (GMRT) here have expressed concern over likely disruption of the scientific facility operations due to continuous movement of trains on the route located near the observatory antennas.


When contacted, a senior official of the Maharashtra Infrastructure Development Corporation (Maharail) told PTI that necessary precautions will be taken and all the issues will be resolved.


The GMRT, which operates at 150-1420 MHz, is located at Khodad, 80 km away from city. It consists of 30 antennas each of 45 m diameter, and is operated by the National Centre for Radio Astrophysics (NCRA) of the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research.


Maharashtra Deputy Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis on Sunday said the Ministry of Railways has accorded “in-principle approval” for the Pune- high-speed project, which will boost development and provide seamless connectivity to the industrial zones of both the cities.


A source at the GMRT told PTI that the route chosen for the high-speed rail project passes through Narayangaon, which is within the 15 km circle of the antennas at the facility and very close to some of the antennas.


The closest distance (of the rail project route) is less than one kilometre from one of the antennas.


“This whole route is going to be very dangerous (for GMRT operations) for the reason that when a high-speed electric train moves, its pantograph touches the high power line and that is like make-and-break contact and sparks are generated which produce unwanted radiation,” the source said.


Apart from these disturbances, all modern trains have communication systems which are normally of frequencies at which the GMRT operates, and this may cause a lot of problems, the source added.


NCRA Director Yashwant Gupta said they have “initiated a dialogue” with the rail authorities concerned to address the issue.


“Though we have received some response, we have not got a final conclusion for the issue and under those circumstances, giving the approval to go ahead is worrisome for us,” said Gupta.


When contacted, Maharail Managing Director Rajesh Kumar Jaiswal said they have held meetings with GMRT officials and they have been told that when the actual work of the rail line starts, necessary precautions will be taken and all the issues will be resolved.

(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.)




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OnePlus 11 5G review: A pro-grade phone even if it does not have it in name

OnePlus 11 5G review: A pro-grade phone even if it does not have it in name





kicked off 2023 with the Cloud 11 event in which the Chinese electronics maker launched in India a whole bouquet of devices, including its premium flagship – the 11 . The ticks all the right boxes for a premium . It has a glass-metal construction and top-of-the-line specifications. Besides, it gets an imaging system co-created in partnership with Hasselblad – something that was restricted to the ‘Pro’ model last year. Likewise, the alert slider is a feature that marks the return to its non-pro smartphone. Do these additions make the 11 a pro-grade phone? Let us find out:

Design

The OnePlus 11 is a polished version of the OnePlus 10 Pro (review) in terms of design. It has a premium glass-metal construction with tapered sides for secure in-hand grip. Adding to the premium quotient is the Corning Gorilla Glass Victus protection on the screen and Gorilla Glass 5 protection on the back. The phone looks dull in the titan black colour (review unit) despite featuring a fingerprint resistant sandstone-like finish on the back cover.

Aesthetics aside, the phone is neither heavy nor bulky, but appropriately built for comfortable use. Its alert slide, however, is placed a little too high from the power button – on the right side of the frame. It is aligned with the rear camera module and looks aesthetically well placed, but requires effort to operate. Nevertheless, the return of the alert slider here adds to the experience.

Display and audio

Screen is gateway to smartphone experiences and the OnePlus 11 5G scores well in this regard. It has a two-side curved 6.7-inch 2K resolution 10-bit AMOLED screen of 120Hz refresh rate. It is a LTPO 3.0 panel for adaptive properties, which allows the screen to automatically switch between 1Hz and 120Hz refresh rate based on the on-screen content requirements. The adaptive refresh rate aids power efficiency without compromising on the experience, and it works as intended on the OnePlus 11 5G.

Adding to the experience is the brightness, which makes the screen easy to read in outdoor environments and boosts the contrast for an immersive multimedia experience – especially while watching high dynamic range (HDR) content. Speaking of HDR, the OnePlus 11 5G supports Dolby Vision and HDR10+ formats. 10-bit colours, ample brightness, Dolby Vision and HDR10+ come together to deliver a wholesome experience. Lifting the experience further are the value-added display settings such as natural tone, which automatically adjusts screen colour temperature based on ambient light conditions. It may seem a small addition, but has a big influence on the experience in everyday use.

Rounding up the good visual experience is the audio experience delivered by stereo speakers. With support for Dolby Atmos, the speakers sound loud and balanced with a nuanced mix of high and low frequencies. Mid frequencies are strong, and the speakers do justice to voice-focused content such as podcasts. The OnePlus 11 5G does not have a 3.5mm audio jack for wired audio output, but it supports Hi-Res audio over wireless (Bluetooth) – LDAC and LHDC codecs. Besides, there is support for spatial audio. Therefore, you are covered on the audio front as long as you have the supported wireless headphones or earphones.

Imaging

The OnePlus 11 5G has a triple-camera set-up on the back, featuring a 50-megapixel primary sensor (Sony IMX890) with optical image stabilization, a 48MP ultra-wide-angle sensor (Sony IMX581) of 115-degree field-of-view (FoV), and a 32MP telephoto lens (Sony IMX709). On the front, the phone has a 16MP sensor (Sony IMX471). The three cameras on the back support auto-focus, which enables macro photography on the ultra-wide-angle sensor.

Details aside, the OnePlus 11 5G is the third-generation smartphone from OnePlus to feature an imaging system co-created in partnership with Hasselblad. In this generation, however, the partnership with Hasselblad goes beyond colour calibration in manual mode.

Portraits is one of the imaging features where the Hasselblad partnership brings apparent improvements. OnePlus does not force 2x or 3x magnification for portraits. Instead, it offers portraits in both 1x and 2x levels. In both, the cameras perfectly segment the subject and the background. At the 2x, tuned for half-body portraits, the phone uses the telephoto lens to mimic the bokeh effect of the Hasselblad XCD 65mm. Likewise, there is a bokeh effect similar to Hasselblad XCD 30mm available at 1x setting for the wide-angle lens to capture both the subject and its surroundings with natural shallow depth of field. In both the settings, the results look captivating. There is no stage light feature, like Apple iPhone, available here for portraits but the custom portrait solution by OnePlus and Hasselblad seems to have them built-in for no-frill experience.

Besides portraits, Hasselblad partnership with OnePlus extends to image filters too. There are three new filters – Serenity, Radiance, and Emerald – and each of them add zing to the imaging experience. The Serenity is for portrait imaging, Radiance for humanity and cultural things, and Emerald for landscapes.

It is important to note that the above features are in addition to the existing features co-created by OnePlus and Hasselblad such as colour calibration in Pro mode, 12-bit RAW+, and more.

Aside from Hasselblad features, the cameras are good and work well irrespective of lighting conditions. There is a symmetry in colours, frame, and details across sensors. Therefore, the experience is consistent. The weakest link in the imaging set-up is the front camera sensor. Not that it is bad, but not up to the mark to complement the overall imaging set-up.

Coming to the videos, the phone can do up to 8K resolution videos at 24fps and 4K resolution videos at 60fps. Both these are from the main camera with no provision to switch between available sensors before and during the recording. Video quality is good but not pro-grade. Likewise, stabilisation is modest but one expects better from cameras with optical image stabilisation. That said, the OnePlus 11 5G is good for photography, but so for videos.

Performance

Powered by Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 system-on-chip, paired with 16GB RAM (LPDDR5x) and 256GB (UFS 4.0) on-board storage, the performance is flagship-grade with no throttling even after extended usage. Gaming is one of the areas where the phone impresses with consistent performance and power efficiency. Besides, there is no heating issue to hamper the experience. The phone warms up when stretched with power-intensive workloads, but that is it.

Adding to the experience in a positive way is the Android 13 operating system-based OxygenOS 13 interface. It does not look anything like the old OnePlus interfaces, but there is no reason to complain because it is still clean, smooth, and non-intrusive.

Battery and charging

The OnePlus 11 5G has a dual-cell battery of a 5,000mAh combined capacity. With moderate usage, the phone sails through a day on a full charge with a display set to QHD+ resolution at 120Hz refresh rate. The phone ships with an 100W fast-wired-charger, which replenishes the completely drained battery fully in about 40 minutes. As stated above, there is no wireless charging here.

Verdict

It is a pro move by OnePlus to include a two-side curved screen, alert slider, and Hasselblad imaging on its non-pro smartphone. The lack of ingress protection rating and wireless charging may unsettle some, yet the OnePlus 11 5G at Rs 61,999 (review unit: 16GB+256GB) is a pro-grade smartphone even if it does not have it in the name.





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Microsoft to revamp its web browser and search engine with more AI

Microsoft to revamp its web browser and search engine with more AI







By Jeffrey Dastin


REDMOND, Wash. (Reuters) – Corp is revamping its Bing search engine and Edge web browser with artificial intelligence, the company said on Tuesday, in one of its biggest efforts yet to lead a new wave of technology and reshape how people gather information.


is staking its future on AI through billions of dollars of investment. Working with the startup OpenAI, the company is aiming to rival Alphabet Inc’s and potentially claim vast returns from tools that speed up all manner of content creation, automating tasks if not jobs themselves.


“This technology is going to reshape pretty much every software category,” said Chief Executive Satya Nadella, in a briefing for reporters at Microsoft headquarters in Redmond, Washington.


Shares of Microsoft rose 3.2% in afternoon U.S. trading to $265.10 a share.


The power of so-called generative AI that can create virtually any text or image dawned on the public last year with the release of ChatGPT, the chatbot sensation from OpenAI. Its human-like responses to any prompt have given people new ways to think about the possibilities of marketing, writing term papers or disseminating news, or even how to query information online.


Microsoft Consumer Chief Marketing Officer Yusuf Mehdi said at the briefing that the Bing search engine will be powered by AI and run on a new, next generation “large language model” that is more powerful than ChatGPT. A chatbot will help users refine queries more easily, give more relevant, up-to-date results, and even make shopping easier.


Microsoft is now aiming to market OpenAI’s technology, including ChatGPT, to its cloud customers and add the same power to its suite of products, including search.


has taken note. On Monday it unveiled a chatbot of its own called Bard, while it is planning to release AI for its search engine that can synthesize material when no simple answer exists online.


Microsoft’s decision to update its Edge browser will intensify competition with Google’s Chrome browser.


The rivalry in search is now among the industry’s biggest, as OpenAI sets up Microsoft to expand its 9% share at Google’s expense, said Daniel Ives, an analyst with Wedbush Securities.


“Microsoft is looking to win this AI battle,” he said in a research note on Monday.


For the quarter ending Dec. 31, Alphabet reported $42.6 billion in Search and other revenue, while Microsoft posted $3.2 billion from search and news advertising.


Behind Microsoft’s OpenAI partnership is its plan to invest in supercomputer development and cloud support so the startup can release more sophisticated technology and aim at the level of machine intelligence dreamed up in science fiction.


The fruit of this work, however, is more immediate. Last week Microsoft announced the startup’s AI will generate meeting notes in Teams, its collaboration software, as well as suggest email replies to vendors using its Viva Sales subscription.


 


(Reporting by Jeffrey Dastin; Editing by Matthew Lewis)

(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.)




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Microsoft to revamp its web browser and search engine with more AI

Microsoft packs Bing engine, Edge browser with AI in challenge to Google







By Jeffrey Dastin


REDMOND, Wash. (Reuters) -Microsoft Corp is revamping its Bing search engine and Edge Web browser with artificial intelligence, the company said on Tuesday, signaling its ambition to retake the lead in consumer technology markets where it has fallen behind.


The maker of the Windows operating system is staking its future on AI through billions of dollars of investment as it directly challenges Alphabet Inc’s Google, which for years has outpaced Microsoft in search and browser technology.


Now, Microsoft is rolling out an intelligent chatbot to live alongside Bing’s search results, putting AI that can summarize web pages, synthesize disparate sources, even compose emails and translate them into more consumers’ hands. Microsoft expects every percentage point of share it gains will bring in another $2 billion in search advertising revenue.


Working with the startup OpenAI, Microsoft is aiming to leapfrog its Silicon Valley rival and potentially claim vast returns from tools generally that speed up content creation, automating tasks, if not jobs themselves. That would affect products for business, such as the cloud-computing and collaboration tools Microsoft sells, as well as the consumer internet.


“This technology is going to reshape pretty much every software category,” Microsoft Chief Executive Satya Nadella told reporters in a briefing at the company’s headquarters in Redmond, Washington.


The company’s share of search so far is about an estimated tenth of the market. Still, many investors see new technology as a win for all players. Microsoft’s stock closed 4.2% higher on Tuesday, while Alphabet gained 4.6%.


The power of so-called generative AI that can create virtually any text or image dawned on the public last year with the release of ChatGPT, the chatbot sensation from OpenAI. Its human-like responses to any prompt have given people new ways to think about the possibilities of marketing, writing term papers or disseminating news, or how to query information online.


Microsoft’s new Bing search engine is live in limited preview on desktop computers and will be available for mobile devices in coming weeks. The company hopes user feedback will improve its AI, which Microsoft officials said may still produce factually inaccurate information known as a hallucination. It meanwhile has pursued work to safeguard against misuse of its tech.


Underpinning the new Bing is what Microsoft is calling the Prometheus model – OpenAI’s most powerful technology informed as needed by real-time web data from Bing. That means Bing’s chatbot can brief consumers on current events, a step beyond ChatGPT’s answers that currently are limited to data as of 2021.


Jordi Ribas, Microsoft’s corporate vice president for search and AI, told Reuters the tech advances his team witnessed last summer emboldened the company to move ahead with an AI-infused Bing.


Microsoft’s chief financial officer also said OpenAI’s “new, next-generation” technology is powering its search engine, though officials declined to specify if this entailed the startup’s highly anticipated upgrade known as GPT-4.


FROM BUSINESS TO CONSUMER


Microsoft is aiming to market OpenAI’s technology, including ChatGPT, to its cloud customers and add the same power to its entire suite of products, not just search.


In the near term, Gartner analyst Jason Wong said Microsoft’s “partnership with OpenAI is more relevant for its business customers.” Still, he said, it could offer “disruptive opportunities” in consumer businesses as well.


“Except for gaming, Microsoft has not been a leader in key consumer technologies, such as search, mobile and social media,” he added.


Google has taken note of Microsoft’s challenge nonetheless. On Monday it unveiled a chatbot of its own called Bard, while it is planning to release its own AI in search that can synthesize material when no simple answer exists online.


Microsoft’s decision to update its Edge browser will likewise intensify competition with Google’s Chrome competitor. However, the Redmond-based company expects to roll out the updated Bing to other browsers eventually.


The rivalry in search is now among the technology industry’s biggest, as OpenAI sets up Microsoft to expand its 9% share at Google’s expense, said Daniel Ives, an analyst with Wedbush Securities.


For the quarter ended Dec. 31, Alphabet reported $42.6 billion in Google Search and other revenue, while Microsoft posted $3.2 billion from search and news advertising.


PRACTICAL USES


Microsoft executives said the new Bing would change how people find information on the internet.


A chatbot for instance can help users refine queries more easily and give more relevant, up-to-date results.


The AI-driven search engine would be able to give clear answers in plain language, synthesizing what Bing found on the web and in its own data vaults, rather than simply spitting out links to websites. Queries on current events would draw more from live data on the internet.


At the news briefing with reporters, Microsoft Consumer Chief Marketing Officer Yusuf Mehdi demonstrated how the AI-enhanced search engine also could make shopping easier. He showed how Bing could estimate, for example, whether a certain type of seat could fit in the back of a car by pulling together web data on one’s vehicle dimensions and on the shopping product in question.


Within the Edge browser, Bing’s AI can present takeaways of financial results or other web pages as well, aiming to save readers from having to make sense of a long or complicated document, Microsoft said. It can suggest computer code, too.


Behind these efforts is Microsoft’s plan to invest in supercomputer development and cloud support so OpenAI can release still more sophisticated technology and aim at the level of machine intelligence dreamed up in science fiction.


Already, results of this collaboration are manifesting beyond search. Last week Microsoft announced the startup’s AI will generate meeting notes in Teams, its collaboration software, as well as suggest email replies to vendors using its Viva Sales subscription.


(Reporting by Jeffrey Dastin in Redmond, Wash.; Editing by Matthew Lewis and Christopher Cushing)

(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.)




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ChatGPT owner OpenAI gets into top 50 global sites as visits hit 672 mn

ChatGPT owner OpenAI gets into top 50 global sites as visits hit 672 mn







OpenAI, the developer of ChatGPT, has seen traffic up by 3,572 per cent to its site, from 18.3 million to 672 million visits since ChatGPT’s release in late November.


According to SimilarWeb data, over the last 28 days, OpenAI has become the 44th globally-ranked website.


Over the last month, there were around 73.9 million visits from India and the US, representing about 11 per cent of all traffic.


Other main countries that have visitors to the site are France, Canada, and Germany.


“SimilarWeb traffic shows that OpenAI is quickly becoming one of the biggest websites in the world after going viral,” a digital adoption spokesperson said.


“While ChatGPT has been tipped as the ‘next Google’, we know that Google is creating a rival chatbot, Bard, to fend off any competition, which is rumoured to be announced in the coming days,” it added.


ChatGPT drives over 92 per cent of total website traffic.


As of now, OpenAI is the number one technology website in the Computers Electronics and Technology category, overtaking Zoom, AOL and AT&T, the study mentioned.


There are currently 24 million average daily visits to OpenAI.com due to ChatGPT.


Globally, ChatGPT is the fastest-growing app currently, according to investment bank UBS, which reported the chatbot reached 100 million monthly active users by January.


–IANS


shs/vd

(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.)




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