![]() There’s also been a lot of hype around Microsoft’s $10bn investment into OpenAI since it launched its ChatGPT chatbot to the public in November last year. After a successful alpha launch, the all-in-one productivity tool Notion recently launched its generative AI feature to all users. The problem is that other companies are already way ahead of the curve. “Getting this right - and at scale - is something we take very seriously,” it noted, citing careful testing needed for safeguarding and data privacy. Google clearly wanted to pre-empt any criticism around its timeline. “We will be bringing these new generative-AI experiences to trusted testers on a rolling basis throughout the year,” was the official line in the press release - so we’re still potentially years away from seeing this tech released to the public. Here’s the kicker: Google is deliberately vague on when the generative AI capabilities would launch. The press release stressed human control would be a top priority for the release, with users able to reject and amend AI suggestions before the changes are confirmed. A demo video for the announcement shows AI as a collaborative partner by summarizing email chains, drafting user responses, building presentations and taking notes in meetings. The announcement is full of promises to make users’ lives easier, more streamlined and get work done faster. The search engine giant announced yesterday that it would introduce generative AI features to its Workspace suite, which encompasses Google Docs, Slides and Sheets among a host of other applications.
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