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What's brewing in AI #32
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Welcome to the 211 new subscribers who joined last week. Iâm thrilled that youâre here to learn with me.
Whatâs brewing in AI #32
Microsoft hires key people from Inflection AI
Nvidiaâs groundbreaking new AI chip and tools
Why GPTs arenât taking off (yet)
The other AI news this week you donât want to miss
Darioâs Picks
I. Microsoftâs non-acquisiton of Inflection AI
Mustafa Suleyman, co-founder of Inflection AI (startup valued at 4$ billion), recently joined Microsoft as the head of the companyâs s new AI divison, where heâll be in charge of building and advancing Microsoft Copilot.
Suleyman isnât the only one from Inflection Microsoft just hired; Chief Scientist KarĂŠn Simonyan and several other researchers from the startup join the newly started Microsoft division as well. The hiring was part of a 650$ million licensing deal in which Inflectionâs models will be available on Azure; presumably as a way for the whole thing not to be seen as an acquisiton.
Inflection AI is the company behind the Pi (a more personal chatbot, which Iâve found myself using quite a bit). Pi will still be available but the company is changing itâs direction: Rather than focusing on Pi, the chatbot product, theyâll go B2B, focusing on API licensing and their AI studio, where commercial customers can test and fine tune their model to their own business.
Why it matters:
Inflection has actually created a great product with Pi (test it and see for yourself), including training their own LLM and acquiring the GPUs needed for that, but is now losing key talent. It makes sense that theyâll focus more on the big fish (businesses rather than consumers) to license their existing products, which would likely be an easier game than trying to compete with ChatGPT.
On the flipside, Microsoft is getting Inflectionâs LLMs available on Azure, which could potentially be a big helper in making their copilots more useful, as well as new use cases for AI within Microsoftâs products that arenât just about productivity.
II. Nvidiaâs new AI chip and tools
Nvidia announced new tools to power next-generation AI models:
NVIDIA Blackwell: a new GPU with 2.5x performance of its predecessor. The GB200 version will be the worldâs most powerful chip.
NIM microservices, pre-built packages that enable plug-and-play creation custom AI tools.
Omniverse Cloud APIs which expands the capabilities for simulation
GR00T: a foundation model for humanoid robots.
Why it matters: Better, more capable GPUs expand the limits of whatâs possible, and has the potential to drive the AI revolution forward much faster. The software products theyâre launching in parallel to this tell a lot about where weâre headed next: easy-to-build AI agents, virtual worlds and humanoid robots.
III. Character.ai gets voices
Character AI just introduced a new feature that allows users hear characters speaking. The move is part of the companyâs plan to build a multimodal interface.
The chatbot platform now has a voice library (community-created voices that can be used in-chat) and a tool to create your own voice (by uploading an audio sample). When chatting to a character, users can now explore and switch between voices which are created by others and set to âpublicâ.
Why it matters:
Character AI just took the voice-modality inside chatbots to the next level. I think weâll see other popular chatbots take heavy inspiration from this soon. How about ChatGPT with your very own voice?
Want to try Character AI? Check out my categorised list of top c.ai bots.
âIn Focusâ
Why GPTs arenât taking off (yet)
OpenAIâs GPT store is off to a slow start, according to The Information. Developers cite lack of analytics about their users, access being limited to paying customers (ChatGPT plus subscribers) and a promised monetisation program for creators that has yet to materialise.
My take on this:
I agree with the factors mentioned above â I would add that a lot of advanced GPTs (the most popular ones are generally âadvancedâ) currently rely on sending users to external websites for the core functionality to work, which is a real friction in the user experience. Something more intuitive would be great.
My guess is that OpenAI is still tinkering with the whole concept of GPTs internally, and waiting with solving some of these limitations and weaknesses until their next big product update. If OpenAIâs concern was achieving many times more traction and interest in GPTs quickly, I think they wouldâve already done so by making them available on ChatGPTâs free version.
GPT-5 is rumoured to not only be materially better than itâs predecessor, but also great at calling agents that can do work autonomously. To me, this sounds like it could be the next iteration of GPTs.
I have little clue why the monetisation program isnât introduced yet (was planned for Q1). OpenAI is likely taking learnings from Poe (Quoraâs own chatbot platform) which introduced a monetisation scheme 5 months ago that is similar to usage-based builder revenue program described by Sam Altman on DevDay back in November. Maybe the proposed revenue model isnât providing enough value to developers, users or the company?
GPTs
Top new arrivals in the GPT store
Highly rated, new GPTs featured in OpenAIâs official GPT store (from the last week)
MapGPT Featured
Question Maker Featured
Library of Babel Featured
Fresh off the whatplugin blog
Iâm collaborating with writers to create easy tutorials and reviews of GPTs to achieve different tasks. Hereâs what we have this week:
Summarising PDFs with AI By Denise
GPTs for Astrology By Raphael
Weâre still working on improving the content and format of these articles. Any specific topic youâd like to see covered by us? Leave your feedback in the poll at the end of this email.
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Bytes
Emad Mostaque, Stability AIâs CEO and board member, resigns from his positions. Some of the companyâs key researchers also left last week. Stability AI is well known for its open-source tools, particularly Stable Diffusion.
Insightful comparison of ChatGPT, Claude and Gemini by Ethan Mollick.
Worldcoin, a company backed by Sam Altman, open-sources part of Orbâs software. Orb is an eyeball scanner that lets people prove their humanness online.
OpenAI is pitching Sora to Hollywood film studios. Meetings are reportedly ongoing this week.
Product
OpenInterpreter launches 01 Light: a voice interface for your home computer.
Stability drops new model that can turn single, flat images into 3D.
Gemini Pro 1.5 (yup, the one with 1M context length) is available for everyone to try inside Googleâs AI Studio. Coming soon to API, too.
âThe wizardâs favourite AI newslettersâ
what iâm reading right now
simple.ai đľđťââď¸ - deep-dives on AI by Hubspotâs co-founder (highly recommended)
The Neuron đ¸ - easy weekday read on AIâs latest developments
Bagel Bots 𼯠- best hands-on tips & tricks
AI Minds đ§ - semi-technical breakdown of trending AI topics
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Thatâs a wrap for this week! Fellow sorcerers â join me on LinkedIn. Until next time, Dario Chincha đ§đźââď¸ |
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