As the world’s appetite for artificial intelligence (AI) grows, Microsoft is expanding its ChatGPT integration and developer tools. Simultaneously, AI funding has reached new highs, indicating that investors are optimistic about the technology’s potential.
Meta’s LLaMA, which stands for Large Language Model, according to a blog post, Meta AI will be available to researchers and entities affiliated with government, civil society, and academia under a non-commercial license. Large language models mine massive amounts of text to summarize data and generate content. They can, for example, respond to questions with sentences that appear to be written by humans. All of this in an attempt to industrialize AI.
Simultaneously, Microsoft is expanding its ChatGPT integration, which is an AI-powered chatbot that can converse naturally with humans. More developer tools are being released by the company, allowing developers to integrate ChatGPT into their own applications.
This move by Microsoft is significant because it demonstrates the company’s commitment to AI advancement and making it more accessible to developers. Microsoft is making it easier for developers to create new AI-powered applications that can solve real-world problems by providing more tools and resources.
Microsoft’s decision to broaden its ChatGPT integration comes at a time when artificial intelligence is becoming more widely used. Businesses in a variety of industries are looking to use technology to improve their operations and gain a competitive advantage. ChatGPT was able to get off to a fast start thanks to OpenAI’s partnership with Microsoft. This has also emboldened competitors, who believe that collaborating with a legacy tech giant will be difficult.
AI-powered solutions have the potential to benefit the healthcare industry in particular. Doctors can use AI to analyze medical images more accurately, and researchers can identify potential drug candidates more quickly. Implying that Generative AI could become as fundamental to life and work as cloud and mobile are today.
The sources for this piece include articles in Reuters and Axios.