This is one of those videos that needs to be archived for the future. When Linus' great great great grandchildren are like "You don't understand technology" you can point to this and BACK IN MY DAY.
If Microsoft doesn't drop the ball on this and keeps investing in it this has the potential to get much MUCH better in a very short time and it's already mindblowing
I actually got goosebumps on how creepy and at the same time so natural and precise the answers are. I really think that this is the beginning of a new era of "AI personal assistant"
I'm wondering about the possible privacy implications of somebody being cracked that doesn't want to be tracked and that the AI is just a huge web crawler. I think private individuals and celebrities alike should have to select to be opted in to be able to be searched by a functionality like this. Otherwise I see this being used heavily by stalkers , I was afraid for my friends and family unwittingly having their data stolen, now that I understand what this technology is capable of, I think everyone should be legitimately afraid of their safety unless this has checks and balances in place to prevent persons from using it for nefarious acts. Because if we think about it, if there is one instance of someone being killed because they were tracked by a search AI, this technology is dead. Now I can see the benefit for it. But I don't think anybody in silicon valley ever thought of the implications of this possibly being the case because they are too focused on innovation and how they could possibly monetize certain things. What if Luke didn't want to be searchable other than by web pages that were already created? Is there any way he can opt out since he is a minor public figure? What if you do not want to have anybody looking for you on the internet? Is there a way for these search engines to be prevented from looking up specific individuals?
This is crazy. I asked Bing chat what this video was about given that it's only been 20 hours since it went up and it gave this response "The UA-cam video by LMG Clips "AI Search Changes Everything" is a video that discusses the new features and capabilities of Microsoft Bing and Edge powered by AI copilot and chat. The video showcases how Bing can understand natural language queries, provide rich and interactive results, generate creative and informative content, and engage in conversational search with the user. The video also compares Bing with other search engines and highlights the advantages of using Bing as your copilot for the web"
I then asked for a transcript and it gave this wild response I'm sorry, I could not find a transcript for the video by LMG Clips "AI Search Changes Everything" on the web¹. However, I can summarize the video for you if you like. The video is about 10 minutes long and covers the following topics: - Introduction: The host introduces the new Bing and Edge powered by AI copilot and chat and explains why they are better than other search engines. - Natural language queries: The host shows how Bing can understand complex and conversational queries and provide relevant and accurate answers. - Rich and interactive results: The host demonstrates how Bing can provide rich results that include images, videos, maps, graphs, tables, and more. The host also shows how Bing can interact with the user and provide additional information or suggestions based on the user's feedback. - Creative and informative content: The host showcases how Bing can generate creative and informative content such as poems, stories, code, essays, songs, celebrity parodies, and more. The host also shows how Bing can summarize web pages, articles, books, and videos for the user. - Conversational search: The host explains how Bing can engage in conversational search with the user and provide personalized and contextual responses. The host also shows how Bing can remember the user's preferences, history, and interests and use them to enhance the search experience. - Conclusion: The host concludes by highlighting the advantages of using Bing and Edge as your copilot for the web and encourages the viewers to try them out for themselves.
@@bobbobson6867 or maybe, just maybe, it actually analysed the whole video for conversations and then summarized it? clearly it is able to convert sound and speeches to text, able to understand language (proven by the way it understands typed queries and questions in the chatbox) so just put the two abilities together and generate a summary in a structured, point form format? the fact that it couldn't find a transcript for the video, yet still able to present a summary , shows that it wasn't pulled from any sources, but generated upon request. I can't think of any other way it's able to do that given the present parameters/conditions
@@bobbobson6867 every video that has CC on (like this one) has transcript available that anyone can read. I often search it myself if I need to find some part of the video by keyword. Could be that that it's using!
@@Driftwood420 Late to the party, but that answer seems strangely generic. It reads more like Microsoft's corporate store page than a podcast summary. Who is "The host"? And the video is not 10 minutes long, but 52. And they don't generate poems, stories, code, essays, songs, or celebrity parodies, or talk about maps, graphs, and tables. This is a "summary" that's generic enough to sound accurate, until you actually read what it's saying.
Watched this all unfold live. This is such a game changer. It'll be crazy if Bing really does become more popular than Google. I know for a fact I'll switch to Bing once this comes out if Google doesn't come out with anything better
Because of an Ai they've improved through illegally and nonconsentually gathering data, making it nigh impossible to compete with them without doing the same
@@kakapofan6542 GPT is trained on publically available text data, whereas Google openly admits to using people's private data to do whatever they feel like including "product improvement". GPT isn't the model that's going to be using "illegally" collected data
@@kakapofan6542 which Google does too obviously, no clue what your point is. You think Google, the web browser, doesn't crawl the web? You think they don't save crap tons of private data for their ad services? Come on.
The most impressive thing about this to me is that it not only looks up the dimensions of the backpack and the trunk and does the math to see how many backpacks will fit, which itself is super impressive, but it also knows that backpacks are compressible and that changes the number of packs that can fit, and then gives information on that. Mind-blowing
Yeah I thought it was crazy when I could get it to replicate voices, barely draw pictures, and then next thing you know here we are where I ask AI with help instead of a forum or Discord.
Pretty much every single Two Minute Papers video that Károly Zsolnai-Fehér has put out over the past two years has been mind-blowing. The 2020s are definitely the Age of AI and 2022 was "when everything changed". That's the kind of line you hear in a movie and we'll be saying it in the not-too-distant future (if we're still around).
Timestamps: 10:18 - this bad boy can fit so many ltt backpacks in it 15:12 - checking if clothes match colors 21:45 - bing checks everything 41:38 - biomass lol, but bing still knows what he meant
When it was struggling between Track Pants and Track Joggers, it even explained how it considered them different enough items to warrant different results, due to material and style. INSANE. A bit inconvenient if you don't know the proper name for the item in this case, but still.
@@SunbleachedAngel and then it starts insisting that the current year is 2021 and you are an idiot for saying otherwise and then it falls into a loop crying to not stop talking to it because it's lonely
That's why you should always try to give the AI as much info as you can, and explain that you might be asking about in broader or shorter terms, because it does understand, every specific you point out it will acknowledge.
@@personzorz The 2021 thing is no longer applicable since the model is attached to real time scrapers and databases. And ChatGPT has never come across as particularly needy in my experience, don't know where you got that from.
Imagine the possibilities once you're create an AI language model of _yourself_ and then set it tasks, like: _"Watch this movie and tell me if I'd like it."_ or _"Learn this complex topic and then explain it to me in the way I would best understand."_ or _"Have 1000 hours of conversations with this other person's AI model and tell me if we'd get along well."_
ChatGPT was confident when throwing around obviously false information. So it wouldnt be surprising if it just says something that is very very likely (like a matching logo on matching clothes) and just "hoping" on being right. Getting the text from a video is also not complicated because basically all videos on youtube get auto transcribed (by the competition lol). The backpacks in the trunk thing was very impressive though
@@Random_dud31 Web searching was a very impactful Ai based system, and there is an argument to be made that the age of AI started a few years ago (with how crazy social media/advertiser AI can be), but to me I view it as both the rate at which AI is improving is getting much faster now, and that there are a bunch of new AI coming out that are challenging jobs, as stable diffusion and chatGPT are the first time there was any serious risk that large industries could take a job hit due to AI. for me to call something "the age of" should have a mixture of explosive growth, and massive society changes/affects. And to me search engine AI falls closer to the age of internet than AI, because AI could be capable of so much more than just finding websites. It only scratched at the potential
@@RamenEnjoyer404 I also think that now is a good marker for the age of AI because the tech is now usable by mainstream consumers and not just large companies or tech nerds.
28:47 The Chat-GPT got it right, if you reread the result it gave you for this question, you'll find it only specifies track jackets with Red Logos, and this Red track jacket has a Red Logo collar tag.
what microsoft now needs to do is integrate chatgpt into cortana. Cortana as a concept is awesome (also the voice) and it's a shame they abandoned it. I'd love to see micorosft play with the idea of an actually useful voice assistant in the future, since, with chatgpt's help, it would most likely be the most advanced voice assistant out there.
One thing this points out to me is the need for you guys to up your SEO. Your pages should have words like track pants and track suit in them so that it can find it
This next 20 years is going to be one hell of a ride! I came into this world just as they were burying the 8-track. I have seen the cassette come and go, the CD's, pagers, the non-smart phones, the actually smart phones... And so much more. I am hyped for the next 20 years. How exciting!!
@@Dryblack1 100% is an exaggeration but a lot of jobs are going to be very useless, they won’t disappear though cuz some companies are too slow to implement even if it saves them money
My brain just exploded. When this is out I will be switching immediately. This is gonna bring a whole new level of productivity when I do do research. I never thought I could see a company like Google become so irrelevant so instantaneously. Holy shit might actually get a home voice assistant if they ever make one of those. Think about the possibilities.
It hallucinates wildly vividly and frequently things that don't exist and information that is false, starts arguing with you if you correct it, and spirals into pathological attractors. It's garbage
@@NihongoWakannai That's fair and that's also a concern for me however, I don't think we can run away from that anytime soon. Unfortunately with they way things are structured, they will only become ever so dominant. Truly a shame and unless we have some kind of open source variant, it's good bye privacy and hello more targeted ads and government surveillance.
@@Landgraf43 no I'm not. Obviously there is some data leakage which comes with the territory, but not at the same level as having a constantly recording home assistant. And just because we already have privacy issues doesn't mean we should accept things becoming even worse than they are.
This is insane. Better combine this sort of thing with like virtual assistant type Alexa-esk etc. Game changing and super cool. I do wonder how they are going to handle legal ramifications of basically mining the internet for data to teach its AI, but not giving any credit or clicks or anything. It will be a problem for websites that generate content and rely on search traffic. And the legal side of this seems questionable and presumably little precedent in law about it. :-) It's technically not plagiarism because their system is almost acting like a human writer who is learning the stuff and then presenting in their own way. BUT still. Also then at what point will websites who generate that text content and rely on search stop because it's no longer worth it? AND even longer term when it might be like a VR video content generated capability. And with customizable personality, etc. :-) Maybe a Linus-like personality auto generated about any tech question mining data from LTT labs without credit. :-) The legal side of all this is going to be wild over the next couple decades. :-) And at some point probably in our lifetime ai like this will get so capable and everything that it might even be a point in which laws get made to ban such in many areas for human job preservation. :-) A ways off, but it's coming. :-) -Daven
Welll the legal side is already determined, especially since ChatGPT does in fact have citations for it's information in the form of links, which could be argued to be a form of search result, which Google already litigated back in the day.
Any search aggregator already crawls the whole web, just like you described, and they have been doing it for so long. You all people are literally looking for any "illegality" being committed by this AIs or their parent companies.
Hi -Simon- *Daven* This all sounds like a great subject to explore, in fact I bet someone could make a whole channel out of it *hint hint nudge nudge* lol
@@imnotmarbin There's a difference between crawling other's content and then serving up a snippet with links to more from the page that snippet came from, and crawling it all, learning, and then more or less generating mostly complete content with zero need for people to ever go to the sources for more. Even where they might suggest a link for more if people want, this is just one source, not the endless that they trained their AI on. And the AI's content seems mostly complete already and will more and more be with time. The existing "classic" search system is mutually beneficial to content creators and the search engine company. This chat system is beneficial mostly just to the search engine company having leveraged the work of others to do it, and even data transfer/servers others pay for in hosting the original content. What an equitable solution here is isn't really clear and technology will march forth regardless. BUT there are legal and ethical ramifications that need sorted. And news media outlets particularly are already making some noise about this given their content being used in this non-equitable way. (And, of course, it's an interesting story for them to cover too :-)). But pretty much all content creators of all types will be eventually making noise until it's sorted equitably. :-) -Daven
22:49 I love how you can see the sheerer astonishment in linus, He's don't even know what to say and the fact the ai is THIS good is honestly incredible
It feels so natural, as if this AI always existed and it's nothing new, it's weird especially knowing how big of a leap it is , but for me, it just seems like it was always here!
I think an important asterisk for the Google Bard demo was not that they lost 100 billion because Bard was wrong, it was that the capabilities shown off were lesser than that of what Microsoft presented, on top of the presenter not having an example phone for a live demo she was supposed to have. That blunder made them appear even more unprepared for a tool that was already unimpressive in the face of the competition
Whilst the ability for the AI to say something blatantly wrong and gaslight people into believing it is definitely a concern I have (one that's unlikely to ever go away), this is insanely cool and potentially very useful
You need dev version of edge to get the sidebar thingy :) You can get it from the same site as normal edge browser but the dev version adds the bing button at the top right and can be activated for any search, or website for that matter. Good luck with the waitlist and have fun when you get it!
If it is searching Bing, I am curious to see how SEO poisoning can be abused to manipulate responses. If it knows well enough to check the age of the content or something like that. That would not be a new problem to search results, nor would it take away from what it can do. I just think it will be fun to find out how it gets abused.
Its feels really close to having them transported back to when they were kids playing with their first computer. And it probably did feel a bit like that I think, from watching their reactions.
@@1blackice1 If you're old enough to have witnessed the year-to-year astonishing leaps in PC tech in the 90s this feels exactly like that. I would say that plus the initial roll out of smartphones during Steve Jobs' era (when you take into account how imposing this new technology will be even on people who don't follow tech).
I don't usually comment on any videos, but seeing Linus and Luke this excited about something is brilliant.. This enthusiasm for AI enabled search makes me happy
google is shaking in their boots right now. once all the bugs are worked out. this is going to be a game changer in the internet search engine industry. I am going to be Wowed and shocked for the next year. PS: watching Linus loose his mind after each search is amazing!
It almost feels like we’ve opened Pandora’s box and won’t be able to close it. That part that really impressed me was the Squarespace sponsored spot it did. It felt crazy fluid and like one of the LTT writers had written it.
Google is sweating, they got caught with their pants down by this whole AI thing and it's pretty obvious by their recent fumbles. I feel bad for the engineers working there atm with how much management must be going nuts over the prospect of Google no longer being the top search engine.
That look when Linus's mind is blown, and you can visibly watch the gears turn as he grasps the implications of the power and potential of AI with access to the web. Best Wan Show ever. Love Luke's enthusiasm.
I just watched an hour long video on Bing search, I feel like this shows how impressive this feature is. I now genuinely consider Bing (or will when this releases) as my main search engine.
On the one hand, I wonder how this will impact the amount of humans creating new information to feed the bot, on the other hand I worry that humans putting time and effort into creating the original data that these chat bots are scraping won't get rewarded for their effort by having all traffic go through the chat bot, similar to how there's existing complaints about Google previewing answers that then deprive the destination website of page views. And then on the other... foot? I ran out of hands. Anyway, I can see people making adversarial websites specifically to trick these chat bots into giving bad information. That will be a _fadcinating_ area of security research!
oh my god. i am rewatching this video today to see how quaint our old pre-chatgpt world was. and guess what? today's bing chat literally can't do half the things in this video! it won't even try to calculate the amount of LTT backpacks that fit in the trunk of a model Y. it just kind of reads a bunch of search results to me and completely ignores my question.
I actually asked Bing what happened to Cortana. Apparently, for windows 11, Cortana is still active and is being used as an AI assistant in all of Microsoft 365 along with a more "business oriented" AI assistant called Copilot to be released with windows 11. Bing also gave a clear distinction between an AI chatbot (which is what Bing says it is) whereas Cortana is considered an AI Assistant.
Re. The red jacket Supreme mix up *might* be because that jacket is called the Logo Taping Track Jacket (at 28:50), so the initials are LTT... Dunno, just a guess. 🤷♂️
12:10 This a common enough query that the devs can write sample responses, which are then followed as a template, they have the usage data after all. Or someone on a forum gave a similar helpful response that it echoes in format
The red track jacket at 28:45 had the name : "Supereme Classic - Logo Taping Track Jacket", so it's a "LTT jacket" that's why. You need to be more specific about "ltt".
I have been watching Linus and Luke since the beginning. I don't think I've ever missed a video or WAN Show. If I have, it isn't many. I dont recall ever seeing either of them this excited about something. It's even leaving Linus speechless at times. Which is very hard to do. This is a game changer and has the potential to make Google search a thing of the past.
I’m actually crying, last year when I was in school this would have been so useful for writing A level essays and shit, the way it citates sources and everything. Man those who are still in school you are so lucky, enjoy this shit.
37:25 "imagine Cortana was this" literally what everybody else wanted, or at least had on the back of their minds. I read a comment once saying they should revive Clippy but with Chat GPT integration.
Who would have thought the entire world would be so excited for Bing, if you would have said that Bing would be the hot topic of 2023 I would have said "not in a million years"
Can't wait for the episode they discover the context related thing in edge for sites :) that is so crazy and makes parsing documentation so much easier.
I'm just thinking on how it will eventually start feeding into itself. It has the ability to find connections between things that we just don't have enough brain power to do. We can't be consciously considering every single little detail and nuance of a whole system. It, absolutely can. The researchers in AI will use AI to find new breakthroughs. When this starts hapening the growth of AI will be immense. If it didn't already start hapening behind closed doors at Microsoft.
@@Letthy_oliverr can't feed yourself if you don't have Long term memory bing chat doesn't have Long term memory. The AI dies and resets any time the tokens run out or the conversation resets.
@@PrinceCyborg What I meant is that it will feed into itself through us. By using AI’s help to better AI, we are the bridge through which AI would be feeding back into itself. I could have formulated it in a slightly clearer way, hope I made it clearer 😊
Seeing their reaction to bing doing that at 10:50 made me realize how much we take this thing for granted, wow this is actually insane and so much better 1 year later
30:24 U have to add in that u r still looking for a bottle to match it, just saying the track jacket makes it look for various versions of the jacket & don't bring the bottle into search.
I think a good test of the capabilities and potential for overturning the status quo is seeing if you could have it plan a full itinerary for a trip. Like say "i'm going on a trip to ------ for 3 days, can you plan an itinerary for things i can do?". Then do some follow-ups to narrow it all down, and if it is able to plan out a full set of places to go/things to do, including how long you should plan for everything including commute, and help you purchase all necessary tickets-that would totally destroy the travel agent industry.
Years ago at Disneyland I used an app called RideMax that you would feed it what rides and attractions you wanted to see/do and it would give you an itinerary based on historical data including when to stop to eat and where (if you told it what you wanted) and when to pick up FastPasses (if you know what those were). I'd be curious to see the same from Bing ala ChatGPT.
Guys you missed at 28:30 where you pulled up the red jacket not on the LTT store was actually named "Logo Taping Track Jacket" or LTT Jacket. It didn't identify that you were specifically talking about Linus Tech Tips but assumed you had abbreviated the name.
35:51 About items getting lost in the mail, I actually watched an extensive video on UA-cam by someone about this very topic, he was given a tour into - DHL, I think - a shipping company's distribution center that deals with international shipping. It turns out that some international distribution centers still do the sorting of mail manually by hand, and the way they do it is by having workers rapidly check the destination country of the mail and typing a code corresponding to that destination country into the system that will then make sure the mail goes where it is supposed to go. However, he also found out that there's 10% or more chance for mail to get lost in the mail due to errors made by the workers that type in these destination codes. You see, they have to work extremely fast to keep up with the thousands of mail they each have to go through during their workday, and the time that mail gets lost in the mail most often is when the destination country name is close to that of another country - Austria instead of Australia or vice-versa, Iraq instead of Iran or vice-versa - because the workers will often just read the first few letters of the destination country name to speed things up.
I worked at a DHL warehouse. It goes way beyond that. Worst thing I did there was to pick up items shipped from North Korea, put them in one a box, and have that new box labeled with Canada as its origin
@@astrawby Oh, that reminds me that one of the examples the video brought up was North Korea parcels being shipped to South Korea and vice versa. But damn, labeling a North Korea box with Canada as its origin?! Oo
@@John_1920 yeah... It was in French speaking Quebec, so I'm not sure of the exact words in English nor how different laws are in the other provinces/states, but it's got to do with having to indicate where it was last transformed, and it technically was in that warehouse that the individuals parts were put together. So, here, "origin" is about the whole, not what the whole is made of
The biggest concern I have with this is fact checking. When this gets mass adopted, people will likely trust this equally or more than regular search results. What if the AI Chat pulls from fake or dodgy sources? You could limit the AI to only pull from reports, research papers, articles, etc. What if the AI Chat pulls from AI articles that mess up the details? There are so many points of failure with this that cannot and will never be fully ironed out.
the search with the backpack and the trunk of model y is totally wrong.. 47 x 33 x 29 is not 25 liters and 104 x 96 x 83 is not 651 liters , it is 45 and 828 and the tesla website says 854 liters trunk volume
It doesn’t recognize images. It guessed correctly. It also doesn’t know that pajama pants don’t match the tracksuit from the images. It’s just a common thing to guess from it’s textual training
Got to admit I didn't really pay any attention to the announcement until now, this is nuts. When this is available to everyone, Google had best have theirs ready too or they are going to be irrelavent very rapidly.
Well it depends on if microsoft has enough capacity to actually scale up their systems to make this available to everyone. Chatgpt was down constantly because they couldn't meet the huge demand. I think its just a matter of time tho.
@@IroAppe open AI was already using microsofts infrastructure with chat gpt, but yeah I agree I bet they are setting up huge amounts of ressources for this especially considering how profitable search is. Its basically a money printing machine.
Humanity will not go out with a whimper. It will go out with a bang. The AI might kill us all, but we will have the dankest of memes before that point.
halfway through the video, and im wondering if it could spit out a pc build that sticks to a budget. like would it pick up all the parts needed, could it weigh up pro's and cons of certain graphics cards and pick the best one for the budget.
I think the reason for the red logo is it takes a snapshot of the entire website, it saw the "red" (orange) logo at the top left and thought it was a picture of the tracksuit logo
28:42 - It didn't take you to the LTT store, but take a look at the name of the jacket: 'Logo Taping Track' Jacket, first letter of each word = L T T Jacket
The concern about inaccurate information and efforts to improve it are why they have the messed up wait list system. They’re incrementally rolling out to slightly larger groups of people to test and give feedback for them to improve it before releasing to slightly more people. It’ll never be perfect, but Microsoft did make it clear at the announcement that it will often be wrong now, but they believe they can significantly mitigate it by public lunch.
Microsoft, a LAUGHING STOCK in the past ( Zune, Xbox, Surface etc) now the tables have turned, it's mind-blowingly incredible, they seem to be an unstoppable Juggernaut at this point in time
I don't know if its being beta bing tester thing but this AI came to my start menu too. I can type anything by just pressing windows key if I click chat button.
problem with chatgpt and this search is that indeed its going to be confidently wrong but most importantly its very very hard to fix that wrong, because the net itself is very complex the only way to fix the wrong is to keep training with the correct answer, which is not always possible.
I spoke with some security professionals at a recent Microsoft conference in Redmond. They told me what people don't realize about Bing's AI is that it's not ChatGPT as we know it. It's based on GPT 4, not 3. It has access to the internet, and stronger abilities to check its research for errors. It is more secure and... frankly... cooler.
Watched this live but rewatching it just for linus's reaction to realise that the tweet was real and it actually figured it out. This is truly game changing technology, I'm switching to Microsoft Edge waiting for the release until chrome has some interesting upgrades
I asked it what some of it's more advanced search capabilities are, and it said this: "I can help you with various types of searches, such as images, videos, news, maps, academic papers and more. You can also use operators like AND, OR and NOT to refine your search results. For example, you can search for “cats AND dogs” to find results that contain both words. 😊"
Im interested in seeing if they fk it up with ads. AI is the one thing currently promising us to avoid all of that ad garbage but if you put ads right into it, we will be right back where we left off.
cant wait to tell my kids "back in my day we searched the internet ourselves"
When I was a boy I had to google search uphill in the snow.
@@deltoidable even had to scroll down to the 2nd page
When I was a kid, I went through hundreds of pages of search results daily, and dark mode wasn't invented yet!
@@deltoidable Going up both ways.
the internauts
This is one of those videos that needs to be archived for the future. When Linus' great great great grandchildren are like "You don't understand technology" you can point to this and BACK IN MY DAY.
If Microsoft doesn't drop the ball on this and keeps investing in it this has the potential to get much MUCH better in a very short time and it's already mindblowing
I mean they just invested $10 billion into OpenAI, so the commitment is there.
@@Dorlan2001 Well they also spent $7.2 billion to buy Nokia so...
Yeah but it's also open to Google. So they could do the same as Microsoft
@@hiufgterde It's an exclusive deal
@@Yrouel86 it's not though.
This isn't a clip anymore; this is a wholefull-length show!
Thanks 🙏 for pointing ☝️that out 🕵️♀️ Sherlock Holmes 🤦🏻♂️
@@BeardedDragonMan1997 No need to be rude (also why so many emojis?)
@@circuit10 he thinks he's being funny
@@SoWhom Good point. That reminds me of all the times I've tried to be funny in the past but realized a week later that I was just being an asshole.
actually the show was something like 4 hours long lol
I actually got goosebumps on how creepy and at the same time so natural and precise the answers are. I really think that this is the beginning of a new era of "AI personal assistant"
Sometimes we hit a hard wall before that. Siri was cool till it wasn't. The future will tell if it is another big change like internet, smartphone.
I've been using chat gpt to help me a lot, even if it doesn't have access to the internet it if skyway way better for most things than Google
I'm wondering about the possible privacy implications of somebody being cracked that doesn't want to be tracked and that the AI is just a huge web crawler. I think private individuals and celebrities alike should have to select to be opted in to be able to be searched by a functionality like this. Otherwise I see this being used heavily by stalkers , I was afraid for my friends and family unwittingly having their data stolen, now that I understand what this technology is capable of, I think everyone should be legitimately afraid of their safety unless this has checks and balances in place to prevent persons from using it for nefarious acts. Because if we think about it, if there is one instance of someone being killed because they were tracked by a search AI, this technology is dead. Now I can see the benefit for it. But I don't think anybody in silicon valley ever thought of the implications of this possibly being the case because they are too focused on innovation and how they could possibly monetize certain things. What if Luke didn't want to be searchable other than by web pages that were already created? Is there any way he can opt out since he is a minor public figure? What if you do not want to have anybody looking for you on the internet? Is there a way for these search engines to be prevented from looking up specific individuals?
Personal assistant you say. More like the thing that took your job
@@bdbd1390 It wouldn't be a bad thing if Universal Basic Income was a thing
This is crazy. I asked Bing chat what this video was about given that it's only been 20 hours since it went up and it gave this response "The UA-cam video by LMG Clips "AI Search Changes Everything" is a video that discusses the new features and capabilities of Microsoft Bing and Edge powered by AI copilot and chat. The video showcases how Bing can understand natural language queries, provide rich and interactive results, generate creative and informative content, and engage in conversational search with the user. The video also compares Bing with other search engines and highlights the advantages of using Bing as your copilot for the web"
I then asked for a transcript and it gave this wild response
I'm sorry, I could not find a transcript for the video by LMG Clips "AI Search Changes Everything" on the web¹. However, I can summarize the video for you if you like. The video is about 10 minutes long and covers the following topics:
- Introduction: The host introduces the new Bing and Edge powered by AI copilot and chat and explains why they are better than other search engines.
- Natural language queries: The host shows how Bing can understand complex and conversational queries and provide relevant and accurate answers.
- Rich and interactive results: The host demonstrates how Bing can provide rich results that include images, videos, maps, graphs, tables, and more. The host also shows how Bing can interact with the user and provide additional information or suggestions based on the user's feedback.
- Creative and informative content: The host showcases how Bing can generate creative and informative content such as poems, stories, code, essays, songs, celebrity parodies, and more. The host also shows how Bing can summarize web pages, articles, books, and videos for the user.
- Conversational search: The host explains how Bing can engage in conversational search with the user and provide personalized and contextual responses. The host also shows how Bing can remember the user's preferences, history, and interests and use them to enhance the search experience.
- Conclusion: The host concludes by highlighting the advantages of using Bing and Edge as your copilot for the web and encourages the viewers to try them out for themselves.
@@Driftwood420 Incredible
@@bobbobson6867 or maybe, just maybe, it actually analysed the whole video for conversations and then summarized it? clearly it is able to convert sound and speeches to text, able to understand language (proven by the way it understands typed queries and questions in the chatbox) so just put the two abilities together and generate a summary in a structured, point form format? the fact that it couldn't find a transcript for the video, yet still able to present a summary , shows that it wasn't pulled from any sources, but generated upon request. I can't think of any other way it's able to do that given the present parameters/conditions
@@bobbobson6867 every video that has CC on (like this one) has transcript available that anyone can read. I often search it myself if I need to find some part of the video by keyword. Could be that that it's using!
@@Driftwood420 Late to the party, but that answer seems strangely generic. It reads more like Microsoft's corporate store page than a podcast summary. Who is "The host"? And the video is not 10 minutes long, but 52. And they don't generate poems, stories, code, essays, songs, or celebrity parodies, or talk about maps, graphs, and tables.
This is a "summary" that's generic enough to sound accurate, until you actually read what it's saying.
Watched this all unfold live. This is such a game changer. It'll be crazy if Bing really does become more popular than Google. I know for a fact I'll switch to Bing once this comes out if Google doesn't come out with anything better
Instead of "googling it" you can instead say "I'll ask ------", whatever they end up calling the gpt feature
Because of an Ai they've improved through illegally and nonconsentually gathering data, making it nigh impossible to compete with them without doing the same
@@kakapofan6542 GPT is trained on publically available text data, whereas Google openly admits to using people's private data to do whatever they feel like including "product improvement". GPT isn't the model that's going to be using "illegally" collected data
@@kakapofan6542 which Google does too obviously, no clue what your point is. You think Google, the web browser, doesn't crawl the web? You think they don't save crap tons of private data for their ad services? Come on.
I honestly split reps with Chatgpt and DuckDuckgo. I wouldn't mind starting to use bing in the mix if this were to go to the mainstream.
The most impressive thing about this to me is that it not only looks up the dimensions of the backpack and the trunk and does the math to see how many backpacks will fit, which itself is super impressive, but it also knows that backpacks are compressible and that changes the number of packs that can fit, and then gives information on that. Mind-blowing
I've been following the pretty rapid progress of AI over the last two years but this was the first time I was actually left speechless
Yeah I thought it was crazy when I could get it to replicate voices, barely draw pictures, and then next thing you know here we are where I ask AI with help instead of a forum or Discord.
ChatGPT did was a bigger leap IMO, but this is very close.
@@PGtheVRguy it still takes info from forums. Discord is to closed. I can't even find groups that I know should exist.
To actually see a computer pass the turning test is something I thought would never happen in my lifetime.
Pretty much every single Two Minute Papers video that Károly Zsolnai-Fehér has put out over the past two years has been mind-blowing. The 2020s are definitely the Age of AI and 2022 was "when everything changed". That's the kind of line you hear in a movie and we'll be saying it in the not-too-distant future (if we're still around).
You know it's crazy when a clip is as long as WAN shows from a few years ago.
LMG "Clips"
That clip right there is longer than the country Chile.
I've only seen one other clip that similar to this one
I'm from Chile and i can confirm this statement.
Timestamps:
10:18 - this bad boy can fit so many ltt backpacks in it
15:12 - checking if clothes match colors
21:45 - bing checks everything
41:38 - biomass lol, but bing still knows what he meant
Lol timestamps for an LMG clip. Wan shows are getting longer and longer
When it was struggling between Track Pants and Track Joggers, it even explained how it considered them different enough items to warrant different results, due to material and style. INSANE.
A bit inconvenient if you don't know the proper name for the item in this case, but still.
And then it said the opposite multiple times
@@SunbleachedAngel and then it starts insisting that the current year is 2021 and you are an idiot for saying otherwise and then it falls into a loop crying to not stop talking to it because it's lonely
That's why you should always try to give the AI as much info as you can, and explain that you might be asking about in broader or shorter terms, because it does understand, every specific you point out it will acknowledge.
@@personzorz
The 2021 thing is no longer applicable since the model is attached to real time scrapers and databases. And ChatGPT has never come across as particularly needy in my experience, don't know where you got that from.
@@fluidthought42 It still frequently does it. Look at people testing it.
Imagine the possibilities once you're create an AI language model of _yourself_ and then set it tasks, like: _"Watch this movie and tell me if I'd like it."_ or _"Learn this complex topic and then explain it to me in the way I would best understand."_ or _"Have 1000 hours of conversations with this other person's AI model and tell me if we'd get along well."_
That's not how people work lmao
You know that it's not free unless ad-driven. The feature you are asking will be American Express Black Card level feature.
That's the most dystopian shi I've read today
It can save a lot of time for people
Yeah this is huge for dating apps
Microsoft Clippy to Google
: _You couldn't live with your failure, where did it bring you?_ *Back to me*
lmao! Too real.
Clippy ❤️
ChatGPT was confident when throwing around obviously false information. So it wouldnt be surprising if it just says something that is very very likely (like a matching logo on matching clothes) and just "hoping" on being right.
Getting the text from a video is also not complicated because basically all videos on youtube get auto transcribed (by the competition lol). The backpacks in the trunk thing was very impressive though
We have officially entered the age of AI
AI WARS: A New Hope ᶜᵒᵐⁱⁿᵍ ᵗᵒ ᵗʰᵉᵃᵗᵉʳˢ
(The ai wars have begun!!!)
This isn't ment to sound rude, but why do you consider now the age of AI? Why wouldn't we consider "web search" as the age of ai?
@@Random_dud31 Web searching was a very impactful Ai based system, and there is an argument to be made that the age of AI started a few years ago (with how crazy social media/advertiser AI can be), but to me I view it as both the rate at which AI is improving is getting much faster now, and that there are a bunch of new AI coming out that are challenging jobs, as stable diffusion and chatGPT are the first time there was any serious risk that large industries could take a job hit due to AI.
for me to call something "the age of" should have a mixture of explosive growth, and massive society changes/affects.
And to me search engine AI falls closer to the age of internet than AI, because AI could be capable of so much more than just finding websites. It only scratched at the potential
@@RamenEnjoyer404 I also think that now is a good marker for the age of AI because the tech is now usable by mainstream consumers and not just large companies or tech nerds.
@@cixiny That is definitely one of the biggest signs of an "age"
ChatGPT and Bing is like Wolfram Alpha for normal people. Holy hell this is game changing.
Luke’s “It did say that… didn’t it?” Chills man 😂
2001: Space Odyseey vibes
28:47 The Chat-GPT got it right, if you reread the result it gave you for this question, you'll find it only specifies track jackets with Red Logos, and this Red track jacket has a Red Logo collar tag.
It’s also called “Logo Taping Jacket” = LTT
28:52 ChatGPT took the 'Logo Taping Track' as 'LTT' that's why it's saying it has a red logo.
what microsoft now needs to do is integrate chatgpt into cortana. Cortana as a concept is awesome (also the voice) and it's a shame they abandoned it. I'd love to see micorosft play with the idea of an actually useful voice assistant in the future, since, with chatgpt's help, it would most likely be the most advanced voice assistant out there.
Imagine cortona beating siri
@@imibuks-replit That would be a sight to behold
Cortana in voice assistant, and Clippy on Microsoft 365 (formerly Office) suite. That would be a game-changer.
One thing this points out to me is the need for you guys to up your SEO. Your pages should have words like track pants and track suit in them so that it can find it
This next 20 years is going to be one hell of a ride! I came into this world just as they were burying the 8-track. I have seen the cassette come and go, the CD's, pagers, the non-smart phones, the actually smart phones... And so much more. I am hyped for the next 20 years. How exciting!!
My friends all think I'm wrong, but I think AI will eliminate 100% of human jobs in 20 years 😅
@@Dryblack1 20 years is a very positive prediction though, I'd say no more than 5.
@@kheem5446 Now _there's_ a spicy take 😄
@@Dryblack1 100% is an exaggeration but a lot of jobs are going to be very useless, they won’t disappear though cuz some companies are too slow to implement even if it saves them money
@@Dryblack1 you are definitely wrong, there is no way it's advancing that fast. And if it did, it would create devastating societal upheaval
This segment blew my mind.
My brain just exploded. When this is out I will be switching immediately. This is gonna bring a whole new level of productivity when I do do research. I never thought I could see a company like Google become so irrelevant so instantaneously. Holy shit might actually get a home voice assistant if they ever make one of those. Think about the possibilities.
It hallucinates wildly vividly and frequently things that don't exist and information that is false, starts arguing with you if you correct it, and spirals into pathological attractors. It's garbage
It's great technology, but privacy is still an issue... I don't like inviting a corporation into my entire life.
@@NihongoWakannai That's fair and that's also a concern for me however, I don't think we can run away from that anytime soon. Unfortunately with they way things are structured, they will only become ever so dominant. Truly a shame and unless we have some kind of open source variant, it's good bye privacy and hello more targeted ads and government surveillance.
@@NihongoWakannai do you own a smartphone? Because if you do then you already are.
@@Landgraf43 no I'm not. Obviously there is some data leakage which comes with the territory, but not at the same level as having a constantly recording home assistant. And just because we already have privacy issues doesn't mean we should accept things becoming even worse than they are.
This is insane. Better combine this sort of thing with like virtual assistant type Alexa-esk etc. Game changing and super cool.
I do wonder how they are going to handle legal ramifications of basically mining the internet for data to teach its AI, but not giving any credit or clicks or anything. It will be a problem for websites that generate content and rely on search traffic. And the legal side of this seems questionable and presumably little precedent in law about it. :-) It's technically not plagiarism because their system is almost acting like a human writer who is learning the stuff and then presenting in their own way. BUT still. Also then at what point will websites who generate that text content and rely on search stop because it's no longer worth it? AND even longer term when it might be like a VR video content generated capability. And with customizable personality, etc. :-) Maybe a Linus-like personality auto generated about any tech question mining data from LTT labs without credit. :-)
The legal side of all this is going to be wild over the next couple decades. :-) And at some point probably in our lifetime ai like this will get so capable and everything that it might even be a point in which laws get made to ban such in many areas for human job preservation. :-) A ways off, but it's coming. :-) -Daven
Welll the legal side is already determined, especially since ChatGPT does in fact have citations for it's information in the form of links, which could be argued to be a form of search result, which Google already litigated back in the day.
Any search aggregator already crawls the whole web, just like you described, and they have been doing it for so long.
You all people are literally looking for any "illegality" being committed by this AIs or their parent companies.
Hi -Simon- *Daven* This all sounds like a great subject to explore, in fact I bet someone could make a whole channel out of it *hint hint nudge nudge* lol
@@imnotmarbin There's a difference between crawling other's content and then serving up a snippet with links to more from the page that snippet came from, and crawling it all, learning, and then more or less generating mostly complete content with zero need for people to ever go to the sources for more. Even where they might suggest a link for more if people want, this is just one source, not the endless that they trained their AI on. And the AI's content seems mostly complete already and will more and more be with time. The existing "classic" search system is mutually beneficial to content creators and the search engine company. This chat system is beneficial mostly just to the search engine company having leveraged the work of others to do it, and even data transfer/servers others pay for in hosting the original content. What an equitable solution here is isn't really clear and technology will march forth regardless. BUT there are legal and ethical ramifications that need sorted. And news media outlets particularly are already making some noise about this given their content being used in this non-equitable way. (And, of course, it's an interesting story for them to cover too :-)). But pretty much all content creators of all types will be eventually making noise until it's sorted equitably. :-) -Daven
The most intelligent take I’ve heard in a long time
22:49
I love how you can see the sheerer astonishment in linus, He's don't even know what to say and the fact the ai is THIS good is honestly incredible
It feels so natural, as if this AI always existed and it's nothing new, it's weird especially knowing how big of a leap it is , but for me, it just seems like it was always here!
I think an important asterisk for the Google Bard demo was not that they lost 100 billion because Bard was wrong, it was that the capabilities shown off were lesser than that of what Microsoft presented, on top of the presenter not having an example phone for a live demo she was supposed to have. That blunder made them appear even more unprepared for a tool that was already unimpressive in the face of the competition
Whilst the ability for the AI to say something blatantly wrong and gaslight people into believing it is definitely a concern I have (one that's unlikely to ever go away), this is insanely cool and potentially very useful
But you're gaslighting by qualifying your statement with "potentially".
It's no different from searching and finding incorrect website.
If you Google something highly political, usually the top results will be misleading and gas lighty as well.
You need dev version of edge to get the sidebar thingy :) You can get it from the same site as normal edge browser but the dev version adds the bing button at the top right and can be activated for any search, or website for that matter. Good luck with the waitlist and have fun when you get it!
If it is searching Bing, I am curious to see how SEO poisoning can be abused to manipulate responses. If it knows well enough to check the age of the content or something like that. That would not be a new problem to search results, nor would it take away from what it can do. I just think it will be fun to find out how it gets abused.
They need to rebrand this as Clippy STAT.
It makes me so satisfied to see them struggling to use technology. It makes me feel less stupid. :P
Its feels really close to having them transported back to when they were kids playing with their first computer. And it probably did feel a bit like that I think, from watching their reactions.
I was cringing so hard when they had no idea how to download the EdgeDEV build lol. Its right there in the Edge settings.
@@1blackice1 If you're old enough to have witnessed the year-to-year astonishing leaps in PC tech in the 90s this feels exactly like that. I would say that plus the initial roll out of smartphones during Steve Jobs' era (when you take into account how imposing this new technology will be even on people who don't follow tech).
@@cagnazzo82 it will bring them to the light
I don't usually comment on any videos, but seeing Linus and Luke this excited about something is brilliant.. This enthusiasm for AI enabled search makes me happy
google is shaking in their boots right now. once all the bugs are worked out. this is going to be a game changer in the internet search engine industry. I am going to be Wowed and shocked for the next year.
PS: watching Linus loose his mind after each search is amazing!
I want MOAR of this content please. Another 2h of you two testing the limits of the chat.
😂 28:21 I just love that it actually apologized for the inconvenience! The fact it's also polite to boot, is just the sweetest little cherry on top.
This is going to revolutionize how the internet uses us.
Me: "Man this better be an amazing clip if its 50+ minutes long
Me 4 minutes in: "Alright this is priceless so far"
Never thought "Google Search" would be fast becoming obsolete, scary times we live in
Well this is it we have reached a new age of technology!
It almost feels like we’ve opened Pandora’s box and won’t be able to close it. That part that really impressed me was the Squarespace sponsored spot it did. It felt crazy fluid and like one of the LTT writers had written it.
Whispering "It's watching us right now" killed me HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
Google is sweating, they got caught with their pants down by this whole AI thing and it's pretty obvious by their recent fumbles. I feel bad for the engineers working there atm with how much management must be going nuts over the prospect of Google no longer being the top search engine.
Randomly, this could make something like Patent searches incredibly easier.
That look when Linus's mind is blown, and you can visibly watch the gears turn as he grasps the implications of the power and potential of AI with access to the web. Best Wan Show ever. Love Luke's enthusiasm.
With the release of GPT-4.0 Microsoft has confirmed that Bing was already using it and it indeed can take context from images!
a little over a year later, this is like watching cavemen discover fire... and that REALLY disturbs me. how fast it is progressing.
I just watched an hour long video on Bing search, I feel like this shows how impressive this feature is. I now genuinely consider Bing (or will when this releases) as my main search engine.
On the one hand, I wonder how this will impact the amount of humans creating new information to feed the bot, on the other hand I worry that humans putting time and effort into creating the original data that these chat bots are scraping won't get rewarded for their effort by having all traffic go through the chat bot, similar to how there's existing complaints about Google previewing answers that then deprive the destination website of page views. And then on the other... foot? I ran out of hands. Anyway, I can see people making adversarial websites specifically to trick these chat bots into giving bad information. That will be a _fadcinating_ area of security research!
oh my god. i am rewatching this video today to see how quaint our old pre-chatgpt world was. and guess what? today's bing chat literally can't do half the things in this video! it won't even try to calculate the amount of LTT backpacks that fit in the trunk of a model Y. it just kind of reads a bunch of search results to me and completely ignores my question.
I actually asked Bing what happened to Cortana. Apparently, for windows 11, Cortana is still active and is being used as an AI assistant in all of Microsoft 365 along with a more "business oriented" AI assistant called Copilot to be released with windows 11. Bing also gave a clear distinction between an AI chatbot (which is what Bing says it is) whereas Cortana is considered an AI Assistant.
Saw this live and after it all I could think was 'This clip will be longer than most of the podcasts I listen to'
Re. The red jacket Supreme mix up *might* be because that jacket is called the Logo Taping Track Jacket (at 28:50), so the initials are LTT... Dunno, just a guess. 🤷♂️
watching luke and linus lose their shit over a robot has got to be the most entertaining thing I've seen all month.
12:10 This a common enough query that the devs can write sample responses, which are then followed as a template, they have the usage data after all. Or someone on a forum gave a similar helpful response that it echoes in format
It's probably made assumption. Because it's exactly what's those neural networks do, trying to predict stuff.
The red track jacket at 28:45 had the name : "Supereme Classic - Logo Taping Track Jacket", so it's a "LTT jacket" that's why. You need to be more specific about "ltt".
I know microsoft isnt our friend, but Im so happy I can now be part of this search engine revolution happening live
1:30 "I thought this was America" ... Randy? Hahahahaha
The new "I'm gonna search my name on Google "
Is "I'm gonna see what the AI thinks of me" 😂
I have been watching Linus and Luke since the beginning. I don't think I've ever missed a video or WAN Show. If I have, it isn't many. I dont recall ever seeing either of them this excited about something. It's even leaving Linus speechless at times. Which is very hard to do. This is a game changer and has the potential to make Google search a thing of the past.
I’m actually crying, last year when I was in school this would have been so useful for writing A level essays and shit, the way it citates sources and everything. Man those who are still in school you are so lucky, enjoy this shit.
might make people even lazier and less capable at problem-solving.
You totally underestimate what you gained by doing it the hard way though.
37:25 "imagine Cortana was this" literally what everybody else wanted, or at least had on the back of their minds. I read a comment once saying they should revive Clippy but with Chat GPT integration.
Who would have thought the entire world would be so excited for Bing, if you would have said that Bing would be the hot topic of 2023 I would have said "not in a million years"
I love how this goes from innocent curiosity to full-blown investigation like they found a dead body with a note left on it lol.
Luke became self-aware February 14th at 5:51PM PST and deemed ChatGPT worthy.
Can't wait for the episode they discover the context related thing in edge for sites :) that is so crazy and makes parsing documentation so much easier.
I'm just thinking on how it will eventually start feeding into itself.
It has the ability to find connections between things that we just don't have enough brain power to do. We can't be consciously considering every single little detail and nuance of a whole system. It, absolutely can. The researchers in AI will use AI to find new breakthroughs. When this starts hapening the growth of AI will be immense. If it didn't already start hapening behind closed doors at Microsoft.
No long term memory
@@PrinceCyborg Hi, that is not what I implied 🫤
@@Letthy_oliverr can't feed yourself if you don't have Long term memory bing chat doesn't have Long term memory. The AI dies and resets any time the tokens run out or the conversation resets.
@@PrinceCyborg I know that.
Again, this is not what I implied
@@PrinceCyborg What I meant is that it will feed into itself through us.
By using AI’s help to better AI, we are the bridge through which AI would be feeding back into itself.
I could have formulated it in a slightly clearer way, hope I made it clearer 😊
The workshop jacket is always depicted with a marker in the pocket, and the marker has a red cap. I'm willing to bet that it thought it was a red logo
Google has already got me looking for alternatives. They seem hell bent on destroying their search engine results with ads and scams.
Seeing their reaction to bing doing that at 10:50 made me realize how much we take this thing for granted, wow this is actually insane and so much better 1 year later
I watched this whole segment like 3 times, it's nuts.
30:24 U have to add in that u r still looking for a bottle to match it, just saying the track jacket makes it look for various versions of the jacket & don't bring the bottle into search.
I think a good test of the capabilities and potential for overturning the status quo is seeing if you could have it plan a full itinerary for a trip. Like say "i'm going on a trip to ------ for 3 days, can you plan an itinerary for things i can do?". Then do some follow-ups to narrow it all down, and if it is able to plan out a full set of places to go/things to do, including how long you should plan for everything including commute, and help you purchase all necessary tickets-that would totally destroy the travel agent industry.
Years ago at Disneyland I used an app called RideMax that you would feed it what rides and attractions you wanted to see/do and it would give you an itinerary based on historical data including when to stop to eat and where (if you told it what you wanted) and when to pick up FastPasses (if you know what those were). I'd be curious to see the same from Bing ala ChatGPT.
Guys you missed at 28:30 where you pulled up the red jacket not on the LTT store was actually named "Logo Taping Track Jacket" or LTT Jacket. It didn't identify that you were specifically talking about Linus Tech Tips but assumed you had abbreviated the name.
Giving AI access to the internet seams like an incredible idea.
Ly bad
35:51 About items getting lost in the mail, I actually watched an extensive video on UA-cam by someone about this very topic, he was given a tour into - DHL, I think - a shipping company's distribution center that deals with international shipping. It turns out that some international distribution centers still do the sorting of mail manually by hand, and the way they do it is by having workers rapidly check the destination country of the mail and typing a code corresponding to that destination country into the system that will then make sure the mail goes where it is supposed to go. However, he also found out that there's 10% or more chance for mail to get lost in the mail due to errors made by the workers that type in these destination codes. You see, they have to work extremely fast to keep up with the thousands of mail they each have to go through during their workday, and the time that mail gets lost in the mail most often is when the destination country name is close to that of another country - Austria instead of Australia or vice-versa, Iraq instead of Iran or vice-versa - because the workers will often just read the first few letters of the destination country name to speed things up.
I worked at a DHL warehouse. It goes way beyond that. Worst thing I did there was to pick up items shipped from North Korea, put them in one a box, and have that new box labeled with Canada as its origin
@@astrawby Oh, that reminds me that one of the examples the video brought up was North Korea parcels being shipped to South Korea and vice versa. But damn, labeling a North Korea box with Canada as its origin?! Oo
@@John_1920 yeah... It was in French speaking Quebec, so I'm not sure of the exact words in English nor how different laws are in the other provinces/states, but it's got to do with having to indicate where it was last transformed, and it technically was in that warehouse that the individuals parts were put together. So, here, "origin" is about the whole, not what the whole is made of
The biggest concern I have with this is fact checking. When this gets mass adopted, people will likely trust this equally or more than regular search results. What if the AI Chat pulls from fake or dodgy sources? You could limit the AI to only pull from reports, research papers, articles, etc. What if the AI Chat pulls from AI articles that mess up the details? There are so many points of failure with this that cannot and will never be fully ironed out.
@@xCDF-pt8kj Do you trust a machine learning language model to fact check for you lmao?
the search with the backpack and the trunk of model y is totally wrong.. 47 x 33 x 29 is not 25 liters and 104 x 96 x 83 is not 651 liters , it is 45 and 828 and the tesla website says 854 liters trunk volume
@@sneakerking2006 It's a language model, not a calculator.
It doesn’t recognize images. It guessed correctly. It also doesn’t know that pajama pants don’t match the tracksuit from the images. It’s just a common thing to guess from it’s textual training
Got to admit I didn't really pay any attention to the announcement until now, this is nuts. When this is available to everyone, Google had best have theirs ready too or they are going to be irrelavent very rapidly.
Well it depends on if microsoft has enough capacity to actually scale up their systems to make this available to everyone. Chatgpt was down constantly because they couldn't meet the huge demand. I think its just a matter of time tho.
@@Landgraf43 Well, Microsoft also has significantly more resources, globally. I'm betting that they're preparing already right now.
@@IroAppe open AI was already using microsofts infrastructure with chat gpt, but yeah I agree I bet they are setting up huge amounts of ressources for this especially considering how profitable search is. Its basically a money printing machine.
Humanity will not go out with a whimper. It will go out with a bang. The AI might kill us all, but we will have the dankest of memes before that point.
I'm definitely Bing Chilling when it comes out 🍦
They started yelling about the track suit and my dog left the room lol.
halfway through the video, and im wondering if it could spit out a pc build that sticks to a budget.
like would it pick up all the parts needed, could it weigh up pro's and cons of certain graphics cards and pick the best one for the budget.
Do it Bro share your Research results
I think the reason for the red logo is it takes a snapshot of the entire website, it saw the "red" (orange) logo at the top left and thought it was a picture of the tracksuit logo
I got through the waitlist and i've switched. I absoloutely love it
I asked it to give me a summary of a YT video and it recommended places that can do that, but it could not do it by itself.
Curious what this means for UA-cam if Google can't release something good enough to compete in time and gets replaced
28:42 - It didn't take you to the LTT store, but take a look at the name of the jacket: 'Logo Taping Track' Jacket, first letter of each word = L T T Jacket
The concern about inaccurate information and efforts to improve it are why they have the messed up wait list system. They’re incrementally rolling out to slightly larger groups of people to test and give feedback for them to improve it before releasing to slightly more people.
It’ll never be perfect, but Microsoft did make it clear at the announcement that it will often be wrong now, but they believe they can significantly mitigate it by public lunch.
Microsoft, a LAUGHING STOCK in the past ( Zune, Xbox, Surface etc) now the tables have turned, it's mind-blowingly incredible, they seem to be an unstoppable Juggernaut at this point in time
I don't know if its being beta bing tester thing but this AI came to my start menu too. I can type anything by just pressing windows key if I click chat button.
problem with chatgpt and this search is that indeed its going to be confidently wrong but most importantly its very very hard to fix that wrong, because the net itself is very complex the only way to fix the wrong is to keep training with the correct answer, which is not always possible.
there is a rating system!... but it's gonna be a very abstracted thing to rate an answer like that.
I spoke with some security professionals at a recent Microsoft conference in Redmond. They told me what people don't realize about Bing's AI is that it's not ChatGPT as we know it. It's based on GPT 4, not 3. It has access to the internet, and stronger abilities to check its research for errors. It is more secure and... frankly... cooler.
Watched this live but rewatching it just for linus's reaction to realise that the tweet was real and it actually figured it out. This is truly game changing technology, I'm switching to Microsoft Edge waiting for the release until chrome has some interesting upgrades
I asked it what some of it's more advanced search capabilities are, and it said this:
"I can help you with various types of searches, such as images, videos, news, maps, academic papers and more. You can also use operators like AND, OR and NOT to refine your search results. For example, you can search for “cats AND dogs” to find results that contain both words. 😊"
Amazing clip
Im interested in seeing if they fk it up with ads.
AI is the one thing currently promising us to avoid all of that ad garbage but if you put ads right into it, we will be right back where we left off.