Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast - EP 394: AI News That Matters - November 4th, 2024
Episode Date: November 4, 2024GPT-5 is delayed. So is Copilot Recall Annnnd Google's Project Astra? While Big Tech is facing AI delays, Anthropic is shipping, the Chinese military is reportedly using Meta's open Llama mo...del, and LinkedIn has a new AI agent to do its recruiting. Here's this week's AI news that matters. Newsletter: Sign up for our free daily newsletterMore on this Episode: Episode PageJoin the discussion: Ask Jordan questions on AIUpcoming Episodes: Check out the upcoming Everyday AI Livestream lineupWebsite: YourEverydayAI.comEmail The Show: info@youreverydayai.comConnect with Jordan on LinkedInTopics Covered in This Episode:1. ChatGPT Search2. Google AI gets real-time search3. Anthropic Claude gets updates4. OpenAI GPT-5 delayed5. Google's Project Astra delayed6. Microsoft Recall feature delayed7. China hacks Meta’s Llama modelTimestamps:00:00 Improved ChatGPT: deeper engagement, Google-like search.04:42 Google unveils real-time search for Gemini AI.07:09 OpenAI and Google's strategies differ for developers.12:30 Google demonstrates delayed Project Astra with computer vision.15:52 Recall testing postponed; opt-in feature due December.17:34 Microsoft may rebrand AI as Windows Intelligence.23:26 LinkedIn aims to automate 80% of recruiting tasks.26:45 China uses open models for military purposes.28:45 Sam Altman confirms no imminent GPT-5 release.32:05 OpenAI prioritizes reasoning models; GPT-5 delayed.35:08 AI updates: LinkedIn, Meta, Reddit AMA, and more.Keywords:ChatGPT, New Search Tool, Google, Gemini AI, AI Business Competition, Anthropic, PDF processing system, AI Industry Trends, Jordan Wilson, Google Project Astra, Microsoft Copilot Plus Recall Feature, Windows Intelligence, Microsoft Rebranding, advanced voice mode feature, DALL-E, Soarra, GPT-5, Search GPT, Claude Mac app, LinkedIn AI hiring assistant, China, Meta’s Llama model, military AI development, Sam Altman, Reddit AMA, Australia, rebranding, Copilot, potential bias, export restrictions.Send Everyday AI and Jordan a text message. (We can't reply back unless you leave contact info) Start Here ▶️Not sure where to start when it comes to AI? Start with our Start Here Series. You can listen to the first drop -- Episode 691 -- or get free access to our Inner Cricle community and all episodes: StartHereSeries.com Also, here's a link to the entire series on a Spotify playlist.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is the Everyday AI Show, the everyday podcast where we simplify AI and bring its power to your fingertips.
Listen daily for practical advice to boost your career, business, and everyday life.
Meet Firefly AI Assistant, now live and Adobe Firefly, the all-in-one creative AI studio.
Just describe what you want to create and the assistant handles the rest,
orchestrating multi-step workflows across Photoshop, Premiere Express, and more in one conversational interface.
You direct the outcome.
The assistant accelerates execution.
ChatGBTGBT's new search tool is out, but that was actually kind of scooped by Google.
Meta's Lama model is reportedly being used by the Chinese military.
Microsoft and Google are experiencing AI delays.
Anthropic isn't.
They keep shipping.
And chat GBT won't be shipping GBT anytime soon.
Yeah.
a lot going on in AI news this week as always and we're going to get you caught up right now.
What's going on, y'all?
My name is Jordan Wilson and I'm the host of Everyday AI.
Welcome.
Thank you for tuning in.
If you're listening on the podcast, appreciate you.
As always, make sure to check out your show notes for more on all of today's stories that
we're going to be recapping, live stream audience.
Thank you.
It's great to see you.
I'm actually in a different country and all.
Australia right now on an anniversary with my wife.
So, you know, who knew?
Shout out to Sydney.
Apparently, I was checking our podcast at.
Sydney is the number one city all time.
So thanks for kind of keeping with today's audio and video issues.
Not going to be the best.
Trying very hard, but coming to you live-ish in the hotel room here.
So sorry if there's a little bit of an echo, but enough of that.
Let's just get into what actually matters and going over the AI news.
And like I said, if you haven't already, please go to your everyday AI.com.
Sign up for the free daily newsletter.
We will be recapping all of these stories.
All right, let's get straight into it.
That first story, chat GPT has introduced its enhanced web search capability for users.
So chat GPT has just rolled out an upgraded search feature that allows users to receive timely answers
with links to relevant web sources, significantly improving the user experience.
So the new search functionality is available to chat GPT Plus and teams users with plans to extend
access to free tiers in the coming months.
So the feature enables users to ask questions conversationally and receive responses
that may include information source from the web, making it easier to obtain accurate and
relevant answers. And then follow-up questions will be considered in the context of the entire chat,
allowing for deeper engagement in more tailored responses. So this is essentially what we heard of
a while back when we heard of this search GPT. So when OpenAI released that, they did say
search GPT was a prototype. And what was just released does not look exactly like this, but it does
look like a much improved version of Open AI's older browse with
Bing search. So the new chat GPD search, I've used it. I'm sure many of you have as well.
If you haven't used it, it really just kind of looks and feels a little more like Google, right?
So that's what I think OpenAI is really making a huge play for because here's what people don't
understand. Right now, you do not even need an account to use chat GBT. You don't need to be
logged in. You can literally just go to chat gptcom and start using it. So you can't use
this new chatGBT search that way.
Again, right now you have to have an account,
and it needs to be a paid account.
But I think this is where OpenAI is actually headed right now.
I don't think they're trying to compete with perplexity necessarily.
I think they're actually trying to compete with Google.
I think it's a smart play because the new chat GPT search is really, really good.
So feedback from global publishers so far has been instrumental.
and shaping this feature, emphasizing the importance of maintaining journalism's core values and
integrity. So that's another big piece here. Open AI has a lot of deals with publishers that is
allowing them to source this material more quickly. So yeah, it is blazing fast. This is faster than
perplexity. And it is even faster than Google's AI search. So it's very impressive to see what OpenAI has done so
far with chat GPT search. And I'm sure we'll be talking about this a lot more. All right. Well,
they actually kind of got scooped by this, though, because Google literally right before this,
they launched their real-time search for Gemini AI, setting the stage for some intense
competition in the AI-powered search. So Google has introduced real-time search capabilities,
but for its Gemini AI platform, not for its Gemini chatbots.
So the new feature is called grounding with Google Search, and it enables developers to enhance
their AI applications with current information source directly from Google Search.
So like I said, this is not the same thing as Chad GPDC search or perplexity.
This is for developers who are already maybe using Gemini, but to get real-time access to Google
search, which I think is huge, right?
But again, if you're just using AI chatbots as a front-end user, or if your company maybe uses the Gemini API, but you don't need real-time search, this may not impact you.
However, if you are using the Gemini API or maybe you want to learn it and you also need real-time access to Google, this is huge.
So, you know, you have to give your kind of tip your hat to Google.
I've been saying this for a very long time.
I'm not impressed at all with their Gemini chat, but their back-end tools for developers,
fantastic.
So this new grounding with Google search, pretty cool.
So the service right now is priced at $35 per 1,000 queries, so kind of pricey, right?
But reflecting the high computing costs associated with this real-time search functionality
on top of the Gemini API.
So Google's dynamic retrieval system scores queries based on their relevance to current events with scores ranging from zero to one to optimize costs and response time.
So yeah, there's a little bit of handling on the front end there.
So this integration comes at a critical moment as Google reported $49.4 billion in search advertising revenue in quarter three when they just report.
their quarterly earnings while also facing increasing competition from AI-driven initiatives.
And like we said, OpenAI's recent launch of chat GPT search offers a consumer-focused approach,
whereas this new grounding with Google search is really offering a similar capability,
but just for developers.
So both companies have secured licensing agreements with major news organizations,
although the details of these deals remained undisclosed,
and it's not with all the publishers, right?
Here's the big, you know, elephant in the room
that mostly people aren't talking about, right?
All these big, large language model makers essentially just scrape all website content,
not just those that they have licensing deals with.
So it does seem like in some unofficial testing early on
that they seem to prefer or to serve answers from those publishers
that actually have, you know, the results.
So, you know, a way you can test this, it's very unofficial.
You can do a normal, like Google search as an example and see, you know, which of these
partnership players that maybe have a result on, you know, the first page of Google if you're
searching for something.
And then you can do that same search, you know, if you are using the grounding with Google
search or similarly, you know, do something like that with chat, GBT search.
And you will see that Open AI and Google.
are seemingly favoring these companies that they have licensing deals with, but that doesn't
cover everything, right? So don't worry, you know, if you're a publisher out there, you know,
your results are still going to be coming up on chat, GPT search and this new grounding with
Google search. Adobe just introduced an entirely new way to create, bringing the power and
precision of its creative suite into one conversational experience. Meet Firefly AI assistant, now live
in the Adobe Firefly app, the all-in-one creative AI studio.
Powered by Adobe's creative agent, Firefly AI assistant lets you start with your vision,
just describe what you want, and shape the outcome as it takes form with the assistant.
The assistant orchestrates multi-step workflows, drawing on 60 plus pro-grade tools across
Adobe Creative Cloud apps, including Photoshop, Illustrator, Premiere, Lightroom Express, and more
to help bring your ideas to life.
You can also get started with creative skills, a growing library of pre-built workflows for common creative tasks, like batch editing photos, creating mood boards, portrait retouching, and creating social variations.
Every step the assistant takes is visible so you can refine, redirect, or take over at any time.
You stay in the driver's seat as the creative director.
Adobe Firefly AI assistant now in public beta.
See it today at firefly.adopi.com.
All right, our next piece of AI news.
Speaking of the big, large language model makers,
Claude just shipped a lot.
All right.
So Claude launched their dedicated Mac app.
So they've introduced a dedicated Mac app for Claude enhancing accessibility for
users on both Mac and Windows platforms.
So the Claude app is currently in beta and available for download to all users,
whether they are on free or paid plans.
So you got to love that from Anthropic.
So the app right now provides easy access to Claude's latest model,
which is Claude 3.5 Sonnet New.
Yeah, I know.
You can just, I call it 3.6.
A lot of people call it 3.6.
But this also is not the only update because there's also dictation within the app.
And also two other things from Anthropic.
So they also released the new PDF processing system that employs a three-phase methodology,
which is text extraction, visual processing, and integrated analysis, allowing for a more
comprehensive understanding of documents.
So what that means, yeah, let me just recap that.
So we have now the new, number one, we have the new desktop app.
Number two, there is dictation now.
so you can speak to Claude and, you know, instead of having to type to it.
And number three, it has this new kind of three-pronged PDF support.
And this is huge because by default, most large language models do not handle kind of,
I'll say multimodal PDFs, right, even though they're not multimodal technically, right?
But essentially, most large language models don't do well if the PDF that you upload and you're
asking it a question or you're asking it to read something.
back or summarize something, most do not do a good job with images, graphics, et cetera.
So this is really what this update from Anthropic is all about.
The PDF update is this new kind of three-phase methodology, text extraction, which is not new.
But the big thing here is the visual processing and the integrated analysis.
So I did do a quick kind of little tip, trick and tutorial on how to actually.
do this in chat gbt because by default chat gpte doesn't do this very well you do have that uh you know
know your way around some basic prompt engineering so love to see this update uh from anthropic
and uh hey live stream audience let me know if you want to see uh maybe a tutorial on these new
uh pdf features from anthropic uh we got so much news uh so while anthropic was announcing updates
and just shipping google was announcing delays
All right, so Google has delayed its Project Astra AI launch until at least 2025.
So Google's ambitious Project Astra, which was aimed at developing AI applications for real-time
understanding, will not be launched until at least 2025 as revealed by Google CEO Sundar Pachai during
the company's quarter three earnings call.
So Project Astra was showcased in a demo at Google's IO developer conference,
in May of this year, highlighting its potential to enhance smartphone capabilities,
such as recognizing surroundings and answering questions.
So essentially what this project Astra was, it was what chatGBT's live kind of voice
assistant will be or could be once it gets video capabilities, right?
So what they showed in the demo was, you know, someone kind of walking around Google's
office asking questions about things on the desk and they can, you know, kind of use computer
vision and see in real time. That's pretty interesting here that Google had yet another delay.
You will also remember about a year ago, Google infamously kind of showcased some of these
features, right? When it first launched its Gemini kind of chatbot, but then they kind of
later said, oh, yeah, I guess everyone else kind of said like, hey, this isn't really true. This is
not how it works. So Google did have a live working demo of Project Astra, which again,
it can see in real time with video. And then it is a voice assistant that you can talk to.
So it did appear to be a working demo in May at the I.O. conference. Yet we might not even get it in
2025. Yes, it says 2025 at the earliest. So it might not even be until 2026.
So this is another page out of the Google Playbook with, you know, shiny demo, you know, lots of marketing.
And then, you know, you might get it in three to six months or in this case, even longer.
So pretty, pretty shocking that we might not even get it in 2025.
So initial reports suggested that a consumer-focused agent experience was set to launch in December 2024.
and it was capable of handling tasks like purchasing products and booking flights.
However, we don't know if this report still holds true.
We talked about this last week on our AI News That Matter segment.
So we weren't sure if that is more similar to Claude's computer use, right?
So more of a kind of agent that you run on your computer or if this was supposed to be Project Astra.
But now, at least according to Google's CEO, so from the source himself,
we are not going to be getting Project Astra.
So pretty interesting there.
A lot of delays, and they're not the only one because Microsoft also just delayed.
It's the, I don't even know if we can call it a popular feature because it has not been released yet,
but Microsoft has once again delayed its recall feature for co-pilot plus PCs until December.
All right.
So at least we have a timeline on this one.
So Microsoft has announced another delay in the rollout of its recall feature for
Copilot Plus PCs, which is now set to be previewed with Windows Insiders by December.
So the recall feature, essentially it is like history for your browser, but for everything, right?
So anything that you do within Windows programs, it can kind of remember it.
and then you can talk to it like you would,
a large language model.
And there's, when it was first announced,
I think there was both a lot of optimism,
but also a lot of skeptic, like skepticism, right?
People are like, oh, this is a privacy nightmare.
And I think Microsoft did a good job in addressing those concerns.
But again, we are seeing more delays.
So the recall feature was originally scheduled to be tested with Windows insiders in October,
but has, like we said, just been postponed till at least December for further refinement.
So like I said, recall, it captures screenshots of user activity on co-pilot plus PCs,
and it aims to enhance productivity by allowing users to search and retrieve their past actions.
So the features development has been complicated by security issues leading to an overhaul
that included making recall an opt-in experience in ensuring a complete uninsenged.
install option for users. So yes, whether this was a kind of feature that was added or a security
hole that Microsoft did plug, but now it is an opt-in feature, whereas before it was presumed to be
kind of a feature that was on for everyone, and then you had to turn it off if you did not want
it. So Microsoft did clarify this a couple of months ago and say it is an opt-in experience,
and also it does give the option for a complete uninstall for users.
There's also been a little more confusion with some mistakenly believing recall was being
installed on all PCs running Windows 11, but that is not the case.
It is just for those co-pilot plus PCs.
So these are for the newer copilot plus PCs that have the very powerful CPUs,
GPUs and also the NPUs, which allows you to run kind of this edge AI or on-device AI.
All right.
So, yeah, Microsoft made a ton of headlines this week.
We just talked about two of them.
Also, they just had some huge updates with GitHub co-pilots.
But here is one that I'm not maybe a fan of.
So according to reports from Tech Radar, Microsoft is reportedly,
considering a rebranding of its AI features under the name Windows Intelligence,
potentially aligning its strategy with Apple's branding choices when Apple decided to call their AI Apple Intelligence.
So again, this is just according to reports from Tech Radars, so nothing official here yet.
But references from an internal operating file suggests that AI features in Windows 11 may soon be grouped under a Windows intelligence,
name indicating a potentially strategic rebranding effort.
So the name Windows intelligence has been used by Microsoft in the context of cybersecurity,
but this new application could signify a broader AI integration.
By adopting a name similar to Apple's Apple intelligence, Microsoft appears, according to reports
to be aiming to create a strong association between its operating system and AI capabilities
in the mind of consumers.
Let me just, I'm going to go ahead and insert my opinion, right?
Normally I don't do this too much on our weekly AI News That Matters shows.
I don't think this is needed.
I don't.
I think the Apple intelligence moniker is kind of dumb, if I'm being honest.
You know, I don't think, you know, because Apple was so late to the party, you know, years, years after Microsoft, years after Google, years after chat, GPT.
and Apple comes in and just, you know, they say, oh, this is Apple Intelligence, right?
And for the most part, yes, it does do some things on device and it does so okay.
Nothing great, right?
The best feature of Apple Intelligence so far is its integration with ChatGPT.
So I don't think that Microsoft needs to rebrand its AI offerings under a Windows intelligence, not a huge fan.
I personally like the word copilot, right?
That's where it's branded right now.
I think that so many people out there are using this copilot terminology to talk about
or to describe an AI that you can work along with.
However, Microsoft's, so I get that Microsoft's kind of in a weird position with this, right?
Because everyone's using co-pilot to reference an AI, right?
But I would say the majority of people, when you talk about AI,
in co-pilot, you're thinking Microsoft, right? So it's almost like a Kleenex, right? You don't tell
someone, hey, pass me tissue, pass me unnamed, what, right? You say Kleenex, whether it's a Kleenex or not.
And I think that Microsoft has gotten to that point with its co-pilot. So I'm not sure really why they
would want to be moving away. Again, this is, you know, they probably have dozens of people working
on this project who know way much, who know way more than I do. But not a huge.
fan. But the rebranding of co-pilot, this isn't anything new, right? So we saw a complete rebrand
if you're using co-pilot on the web. So if you're using the free version of co-pilot or the paid
version, so not the biz chat. But otherwise, you did see a completely new version of Microsoft
co-pilot, right? You saw rebranded, a completely new interface with a new voices. So, yeah,
we might see Microsoft continue in this direction.
All right.
AI agents at LinkedIn?
Yeah, maybe.
So LinkedIn has just launched an AI hiring assistant that they're hoping will transform the recruiting process.
So LinkedIn has introduced its first AI hiring assistant aiming to revolutionize the recruiting landscape by automating up to 80%
of traditional recruiting tasks, which is wild.
So the new AI hiring assistant is designed to streamline various recruiting tasks,
from creating job descriptions to conducting interviews, freeing up valuable time for recruiters.
So the tool builds on LinkedIn's previous features,
enhancing the capabilities of its generative AI to offer personalized suggestions
through conversational memory.
So recruiters can input job descriptions, notes, and feedback.
ensuring the AI's output aligns with their unique requirements.
So concerns remain, though, that the increased reliance on AI could lead to bias in a lack of personal touch in candidate interactions, as seen in similar instances with other companies like Amazon.
However, LinkedIn allows recruiters to selectively automate tasks, enabling them to maintain the human element essential in recruiting.
So the other thing, I mean, this is great.
Also, you know, pretty expected.
LinkedIn has been pretty heavy on AI, given it is owned by Microsoft, right?
However, don't fully understand this one either because unless they are going to end up charging a ton for this, right?
If you're going to automate 80% of traditional recruiting tasks, isn't this also?
going to cut down their revenue a lot. I mean, I'm sure they've thought this through,
but think of this. Let's say you have a team, let's say you're a big recruiting agency, right?
And you have a team of a hundred recruiters, right? Is this only going to automate 80% of all
of those recruiters jobs or might you only need 20 of them in theory if this works out? So, you know,
I like the push here by LinkedIn because I think so many of these tasks in recruiting, right? I've,
spend so much time recruiting people to small, you know, small businesses that I own,
as well as companies that I've worked with in the past.
So I understand that a lot of this is mundane and it should and can be automated.
But to say that you can automate up to 80 percent, I mean, you have to think like,
okay, is this either going to be terribly expensive, right, once it's kind of fully rolled out
or are just, you know, might you have to, if you have a team of a hundred recruiters,
maybe is your team going to be 50 or maybe is it only going to be 20 right so it's it's it's kind of
weird right that uh lincoln is hoping to automate uh a big part of its marquee software right
uh lincoln premium lincoln sales navigator sales navigator lincoln uh recruiter right so yeah
interesting move so we'll have to see how this one pans out once it fully comes to market
All right. Our next news story for this week, China is leveraging META's Lama model for military AI development, raising security concerns.
So recent reports from Reuters indicate that Chinese researchers linked to the People's Liberation Army have adapted META's Lama model for military applications, highlighting the ongoing global competition in artificial
intelligence. So a June paper from six researchers associated with the Academy of Military Science
detailed the creation of chat BIT or chat bit. I'm not sure which one it is. In AI, I think it's actually
chat BIT, an AI tool based on an early version of Mata's Lama model, specifically tailored for
military intelligence and operational decision making. So chat BIT reportedly outperatively outperatured
perform other AI models achieving capabilities comparable to OpenAIs chat GPT4, although the researchers
provided limited details on its performance metrics and operational status. Meta has stated that any
military use of its open weights models by the PLA is unauthorized and contradicts its acceptable
use policy, which prohibits applications in military, warfare, and espionage contexts. So despite
these restrictions, meta acknowledges the challenges of enforcing its policies due to the public
availability of its models, which has led to concerns about the potential misuse of open source
AI technology. Yeah, so I think we've kind of known that this has been going on for quite some time,
but not specifically, right? I think anyone that reads a lot of AI news or, you know,
like myself, that gets to talk to very smart people, right? We all know that these open source
models are being used for bad purposes. Sometimes there's exacts. Sometimes there's not.
Right. So here, this exclusive report from Reuters, a little scary, right, that China has been
using this for these open models for military purposes. So this does raise some concerns on ways that
you can better track how these models are being used and for what purposes. And I mean, we might see in the same way
that the U.S. government has recently enforced some restrictions on companies exporting GPUs as an example,
we might see some similar restrictions on, you know, exporting models. And I know that may not make
sense now, right? But think back in the day of, you know, downloading music, right? And, you know,
you could ban IPs or something like that. So, you know, I wouldn't be surprised if we see a move from
the U.S. government sometimes soon because as meta's models specifically get better and better and better,
you know, these closed and proprietary models, you have so much more control over knowing who's using them and who's not, right?
Because in theory, the companies know that.
But at a certain point, right, when these open source models, they get forked, you know, they get fine-tuned and re-uploaded, right?
So that is the nature of an open, you know, open source, open weights.
I know meta is not truly open source, but with an open weight model is it just keeps being built upon, right?
It's almost like a cup of water, right?
If you keep pouring it in 10 different glasses, pretty soon you're going to, you know, forget where it came from, which is problematic, right?
So that is the downside and the ugly side of these models that are very open is it can end up in the bad, like,
like bad hands, hands that you don't want it into, such as U.S. kind of enemy forces in these Chinese
military operations. All right. And our last AI news story of the day, didn't see this one coming,
but Open AI's CEO, Sam Altman, in a Reddit, Ask Me Anything session discussed, well, just
about everything. But one of the biggest thing here was discussing the GPT5 timeline in some
future AI releases. So in a recent Reddit, Ask Me Anything post, OpenAI CEO, Sam Altman
addressed the anticipated release of GPT5 and also provided insights on the company's ongoing
struggles with compute capacity, which he said is affecting product timelines. So Altman clarified
that there is no imminent release plan for GPD 5 stating,
we have some very good releases coming later this year,
but he emphasized that none of them will bear the GPT5 name.
So yeah, a lot of speculation about what does that mean?
You know, people are saying, oh, it could still be GPD5,
but it could be this new Orion model or it could be a GPT 4.5.
But Sam Olman did essentially say there won't be a GPT5 this,
year, which is something that I'd hate to be saying this, y'all. I've been saying this for forever,
forever. I said there will not be a GPD 5 in 2024. I said it would probably be first quarter of
2025 if we do actually get it. So the ongoing challenges in compute capacity are also a
significant factor in delaying the rollout of these new AI models, Altman said. And he also
noted that as models become more complex, open AI faces something.
tough decisions about resource allocation, right? They have all these other products that also require
a lot of resources. But recent reports, which we talked about in the newsletter last week,
suggests that Open AI has been working with Broadcom to develop a specialized AI chip to enhance
its computational power, although this new technology may not be available until 2026 if it's
available at all. So some other tidbits from this Ask Me Anything session.
So the advanced voice mode feature for chatGBT was initially expected to include vision capabilities,
but those plans have been postponed, again, due to compute limitations, right?
So same moment saying, hey, we don't have enough access to compute.
So the rushed demo of that feature was during a press event, was intended to just draw attention away from Google's I.O.
developer conference despite concerns about its readiness.
So there we go.
Again, you know, having these working demos really just being used as a marketing against
the other big company.
And, you know, here we go.
It's, I mean, who's actually shipping here?
So also, Altman mentioned that the image generation tool, Dolly is currently lacking
any release timelines for future versions.
and the video generation tool, SORA, has also encountered some technical setbacks that hinder its competitive edge against other AI video systems like Luma and Runway.
So Altman reiterated that improving the reasoning models right now.
So the 01 preview, the 01 mini, and eventually the 01 full model are open AI's top priority with several exciting features on the horizon.
All right. So yeah, pretty, pretty interesting. Again, I'm on vacation. So I was not expecting
Sam Altman to do it, tell all kind of Reddit, ask me anything. So nothing there terribly
shocking aside from him saying that the top priority was seemingly working on the reasoning
models and that a GPD 5 model would not be released this year, where we did have previous
reporting as recent as last week saying that a new model would potentially be landing in
December after the U.S. election, right? So we've always said here at the election tomorrow,
right, we've always said that there will not be, and by we, I've always said that there will not be,
you know, a big Claude Sonnet release, which there wasn't. I said there won't be a Google Gemini
2.0, which there wasn't. I said there won't be a GVD5. There, there wasn't.
until after the election, even though every other person out there, you know, a year ago was saying,
oh, we're going to get these models. I'm like, no, we're not. Not until after the election.
And then, you know, we kind of heard these December timelines, but it looks like at least for GPD5,
we are not going to be getting it in 2024. And the priority is the reasoning models.
All right. So that was a lot, y'all. Let me just do a very, very quick recap of the AI News That Matters.
for this week, November 4th.
So chat GPT introduced its enhanced web search capability.
So not exactly the search GPT, but it does look like this is going to be the, you know,
kind of the replacement for that.
Very capable, very impressive.
Next, Google in response, or actually right before OpenAI, did launch its real-time
search for Gemini AI and the API, setting the stage for some intense competition.
in AI-powered search.
Speaking of launches,
Claude also launched its dedicated Mac app,
its dictation features,
and a new three-tiered PDF processing system inside of Claude.
Google announced delays for its project Astra
and said it might not launch until 2025 at the earliest.
Speaking of delays, Microsoft also announced another round of delays
for its co-pilot's plus PC's ability for the recall feature,
but it looks like now we make it that in December.
Then we have Microsoft, a report from TechRadar that said Microsoft may rebrand
its AI features as Windows Intelligence.
I hope not, but it could happen.
Also, LinkedIn launched its AI hiring assistant.
China is reportedly leveraging Meta's Lama model for military AI development.
element and we got a whole bunch of open AI and chat chbt news when sam maltman did a ask me
anything on reddit all right that was a lot as it is every single week y'all i hope this was
helpful i'm sorry that the audio and the video is not as good as it normally is uh but we'll be back
uh next week for more so thank you for tuning in and hey shout out australia i'm enjoying it here
so far if if you're listening if you're listening if you're from australia
reach out.
We'd love to just give me a recommendation or two.
So thank you all for tuning in.
I hope to see you all tomorrow and every day for more everyday AI.
Thanks y'all.
Meet Firefly AI Assistant.
Now live in Adobe Firefly, the Allman One Creative AI Studio.
Just describe what you want to create in your own words and the assistant handles the rest,
orchestrating multi-step workflows across Adobe Creative Cloud apps, including Photoshop, Premiere
Express, and more in one conversational interface.
You direct the outcome while the assistant.
accelerates execution.
Stay in control with the ability to step in and refine at any time.
See it today at firefly.adobie.com.
And that's a wrap for today's edition of Everyday AI.
Thanks for joining us.
If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe and leave us a rating.
It helps keep us going.
For a little more AI magic, visit Your EverydayAI.com and sign up to our daily newsletter
so you don't get left behind.
Go break some barriers and we'll see you next time.
