Home Artificial Intelligence Google unveils personal AI laptop ‘Tailwind’

Google unveils personal AI laptop ‘Tailwind’

0
Google unveils personal AI laptop ‘Tailwind’

Waiting list application for ‘Project Tailwind’ (Photo = Google)

Google unveiled ‘Project Tailwind’, a synthetic intelligence (AI) laptop that may answer questions or analyze and summarize based on documents entered by users.

The laptop will be used as a private generative AI model that synthesizes information from multiple sources of the user’s selection.

In keeping with 9to5 Google on the nineteenth (local time), Google announced early access to preview the AI ​​laptop ‘Project Tailwind’, which was introduced at I/O 2023 last month, prior to its official release.

Project Tailwind takes a user’s free-form notes or documents and uses AI technology to routinely analyze and summarize them.

Google says it can soon open up early access to users on a waitlist within the US and provides the project a latest name.

Project Tailwind is accessible as an experimental product through Google Labs Hub. Project Tailwind is driven based on the ‘PaLM2’ large language model (LLM).

The tool allows users to pick out a file from Google Drive and create a private AI model. The difference between Tailwind and other AI models is that it’s trained on the user’s own personalized data that the user provides to the model.

The tool also creates a customized interface that helps users analyze notes and documents.

Screenshot of 'Project Tailwind' (Photo = Google)
Screenshot of ‘Project Tailwind’ (Photo = Google)

Because the user browses the document, Tailwind analyzes the text and displays details about related topics. Users may also ask Tailwind’s AI questions using easy prompts and receive responses within the context of documents and notes.

For instance, in the event you are a professor tasked with making a study guide for school students in a selected book on astronomy, in the actual world it can take a while to read the complete book. But with Project Tailwind, you possibly can access the soft copy from Google Drive and ask the AI ​​tool to create a study guide for you.

In keeping with Google, the tool may also suggest questions or create reading quizzes. You can too answer natural language questions on notes and cite any source inside a document.

Tailwind remains to be under development, but may very well be a useful gizmo for college kids. It routinely organizes and summarizes your notes, making learning and research easier. Tailwind may also answer natural language questions on documents, making exploring knowledge quick and simple.

Reporter Park Chan cpark@aitimes.com

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here