The AI Daily Brief: Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis - AI Wearables: Is There a There There?
Episode Date: April 15, 2024Critiques of Humane, a new launch from Limitless (i.e. Rewind), plus Meta is (supposedly) sharing two Llama 3 models this week. ** Get your free NetSuite KPI Checklist - https://netsuite.com/breakdown... CHECK OUT THE JUST-LAUNCHED SUPERINTELLIGENT PLATFORM - 300+ AI video tutorials https://besuper.ai/ ** ABOUT THE AI BREAKDOWN The AI Breakdown helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI. Subscribe to The AI Breakdown newsletter: https://theaibreakdown.beehiiv.com/subscribe Subscribe to The AI Breakdown on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheAIBreakdown Join the community: bit.ly/aibreakdown Learn more: http://breakdown.network/
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Today on the AI Breakdown, we're asking if there's really any demand for AI wearables.
Before that on the brief, certain versions of Lama 3 are expected to drop this week.
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Welcome back to the AI Breakdown Brief, all the AI headline news you need in around five minutes.
Today we kick off with the most anticipated drop of this week.
Now, of course, this being AI, who knows what might get released,
but one thing that we do know for sure is that it appears
that some of the smaller versions of meta's forthcoming Lama 3 models
should be coming out this week.
This news was first reported last Monday by the information.
They had it from a meta employee that META was going to launch two small versions
of its third-generation open-source Lama network,
which would precede the large version to be released later in the summer.
While initially a meta spokesperson declined to comment, the next day at a public event,
meta made it seem like yes, these models were coming and they were coming very soon.
This is exciting to the AI community for a couple of different reasons.
First of all, meta has made it clear that their objectives when it comes to Lama 3 have shifted.
While previously they seemed, at least for the time, content to be state-of-the-art when it came
to open-source models, Lama 3, they've promised to be a GBT 4-class model at least,
and indeed Zuckerberg has said that going forward, they want Lama models to be able to compete at
state-of-the-art in general, not just for open-source. That, of course, makes the big release
the largest version that would come out in the summer, but there's still reasons that people
are really excited about even these smaller versions. A couple big ones, one, of course, is
cost. Smaller models tend to be cheaper, and a lot of what's going on in AI development right
now is arbitrage between cost and performance, given how expensive the most advanced
state-of-the-art models are. But there's also differences in where small models can run. If you're
looking to build, for example, mobile device applications that don't necessarily rely on the cloud,
or AIPC applications, once again, that don't have to rely on Google Cloud or Amazon Web Services
or Microsoft Azure.
Advances in smaller models actually matter more than state-of-the-art when it comes to LLMs.
The three versions of Lama 2 that we got had 7 billion parameters, 13 billion parameters,
and the largest had 70 billion parameters.
And the information has previously reported that the largest version of Lama 3 could have
more than 140 billion parameters.
Anticipation is heating up. Hyperite AI CEO Matt Schumer says,
Lama 3's will start to drop next week, assuming there's a 7B,
version, I'm expecting it to far surpass the current mistral model. Now, something I've said on
this show before is that up until Mistral started releasing its models, Meadow was the undisputed
open source champ in terms of dominating where developer attention was. With the release of Mistral models,
they definitely started to suck some of the oxygen out of Mehta's room, and so this is a chance
for meta both to reclaim that open source space, but also to try to push into the general LLM
performance space as well. Next up, something at the intersection of AI and geopolitics. One of the big
questions right now in U.S. policy is whether TikTok is going to be outright banned or, as many
are advocating, forced into a sale to a U.S.-owned company for the U.S. facing version.
One of the people who is trying to orchestrate that type of deal is Stephen Mnuchin,
former Treasury Secretary under Donald Trump. According to the New York Post, quote,
Insiders say Mnuchin is pitching a plan to rebuild TikTok's algorithm in the U.S. as the only
likely way to satisfy congressional concerns that the app poses a national security risk,
as well as China's strict export laws that could block a sale.
So basically where we are with this situation is that the House has voted to pass a bill that requires Bight Dance to divest TikTok within six months or face a total ban, but the devil is going to be in the details.
White Dance doesn't want to give away its proprietary algorithms, even if that's a lot of where the value lies.
And so trying to get it ahead of that, Manuchin and his consortium are trying to find an AI partner that could rebuild that particular capacity.
One partner that has been mentioned, although not necessarily in this context, is Oracle.
Even before the ban push reached its recent apex, TikTok has been.
had committed to storing the data of U.S. and servers operated by Oracle in order to try to head
off those issues. This isn't the first time that an Oracle TikTok hookup has been discussed.
During the Trump administration, when Manuchin was Treasury Secretary, Oracle almost bought
TikTok then as part of that administration's push to get by Dance to Divest as well.
Now, on top of all the concerns and issues with China, another big question is what's going
to clear regulatory scrutiny, particularly when it comes to antitrust. One of the reasons that an
Oracle might be a better candidate than someone like Google, Mehta, or Apple is, in fact,
those antitrust considerations. All of this is very weird uncharted territory, and frankly has been for some
time. Back in 2020, when Microsoft tried to buy TikTok in a similar context, CEO Satinadella later said that
the aborted bid was, quote, the strangest thing I've ever worked on. Now, over in Adobe land,
a bunch of new announcements today. First of all, Adobe Acrobat has released an AI assistant that starts at
five bucks a month. This is basically PDF intelligence as a service. Now, given how popular PDF-reading-type
features were in the early ChatGPT app store, it makes sense that Adobe's trying to grab a
piece of that for itself, given that it owns the core PDF reader in Acrobat. Additionally, however,
Adobe announced that generative AI is coming to Premiere Pro. This is, of course, its video
editing software, which is hugely used across basically every industry that touches video at all.
Now, in addition to Adobe's proprietary Firefly models coming into Premiere Pro in the same way that
they have in software like Photoshop, Adobe also surprised by announcing that it was developing a way
for users to integrate third-party tools from companies like runway PICA Labs and Open AI.
The details have not yet been figured out.
Adobe said that they haven't settled how revenue generated by third-party AI tools would be split
up between Adobe and outside developers.
But the fact that they're announcing this at all suggests they're at least a little bit
nervous about competition from these new generative AI video tools and want to keep everything
in their ecosystem.
This is a good distraction from the end of last week when Bloomberg reported that
despite a lot of hemming and hawing about their ethical approach to Firefly training,
which was sort of pitched on the idea that Adobe was only training their models on images
that they had rights to, it seems as though Firefly was also trained on mid-jorney images,
which of course, if you're concerned about where mid-jorney images are coming from,
kind of just seems like the AI data training equivalent of money laundering.
Still, mostly I am just excited to see in-painting come into video editing,
and so I, for one, am excited to see what Premiere Pro does with AI.
That's going to do it for today's AI breakdown brief.
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AI breakdown. Welcome back to the AI breakdown. One of the things you will have noticed,
if you've been paying any attention at all to the AI space over the last, call it six months,
is that there has been a huge explosion in the number of different companies that are interested
in AI wearables. One that's gotten a ton of buzz, for example, is the Rabbit R1, which was designed
in part by teenage engineering and came out with a very Steve Jobsian introductory video. Then there
are all the rumors about the collaboration between iPhone designer Johnny Ive and Sam Altman,
who are apparently out fundraising more than a billion dollars. The most recent reports
say that they are talking with Lorraine Powell Jobs and her Emerson Collective, as well as Thrive
Capital. And previously, we had also heard reports that SoftBank was in the conversations as well.
Now, when it comes to that device, all we've really heard about its form factor is that it will not look like a phone.
Speaking of phones, every phone device manufacturer right now seems to be advertising their new phone as an AI powered phone.
And I'm sure that will only increase when we hear about iOS 18 at the Worldwide Developer Conference this year.
We've also had big bold pronouncements that the era of the AIPC is coming.
And so all of this is to say that hardware is big when it comes to AI.
And specifically, this new form factor of wearables is something that a lot of people are interested in.
Perhaps the poster child for this is the humane AI pin.
This has been buzzy since last year when one of the founders of the company showed off some of its capabilities in a demo at TED.
For example, there was a live translation that sounded exactly like the speaker.
Well, when the pin was previewed last November, it came with what to some was a surprising price tag.
The device itself was $600, and you needed a $24 a month subscription on top of that.
As the verge put it, this wearable computer promises to free you from your smartphone.
phone. But then echoing basically every review that we've gotten so far, they write,
there's only one problem. It just doesn't work. Now, I think that there is a lot of agreement or
interest in the underlying thesis behind Humane, which is that it would be better if we spent
less time on screens, hunched over this device, furiously typing with our thumbs, and ignoring
the world around us. So the question for the Humane AI pin in many ways was two part. One,
are there actually use cases that you don't want to use your phone for that some device
like this would be better. And two, is this that device? Now, I read part of the Verge review last
week, but to reread the most important part again, the author writes, I've learned I do lots of
things on my phone that I might like to do somewhere else. So yeah, this is something, maybe something
big. I've seen enough glimmers of what's coming that I'm optimistic about the future.
But then, when that same reviewer asks, should you buy this thing, they write, that one's easy.
Nope, n'uh, no way. The AI pin is an interesting idea that is so thoroughly unfinished and so
totally broken in so many unacceptable ways that I can't think of anyone to whom I'd recommend
spending the $6.99 for the device and the $24 monthly subscription. There are a couple challenges
that they flag. First, the device itself is a little fiddly, that you sort of have to get the
position just right. Second, as they put it, the AI pin is also just incredibly unsubtle.
When you stand in front of a building tapping your chest and nattering away to yourself,
people will notice. And everything gets in the way too. Then goes through a long list of
functionality that the pin doesn't seem to have. The author continues, the more I tested the AI pin
the more it felt like the device was trying to do an awful lot,
and the hardware simply couldn't keep up.
The battery life, they said, was rough.
The projectors user interface was to use their words, bananas.
And ultimately, they concluded,
it feels like Humane decided early on that the AI pin
couldn't have a screen no matter what
and did a bunch of product in interface gymnastics
when a tiny touchscreen would have handled all of these things much better.
Kudos to Humane for swinging big,
but if you're going to try to do phone things, just make a phone.
Now, other reviews came out that were very similar.
Mark German, who is Bloomberg's Apple Whisperer,
wrote a piece called The AI Device Revolution,
isn't going to kill the smartphone.
German had a similar litany of problems with the device.
He said it can be slow to respond or fail to recognize the touch gesture
necessary to begin listening to a command.
It overheats to a worrisome degree and is missing key features like the ability to control
timers and calendars.
He can't tap into third-party apps and has a frustratingly brief battery life.
Ultimately, he said the company acknowledges that the device is a version 1.0,
but it feels even earlier than that.
The controversy really ramped up, though, over the weekend,
when Marquez Brownlee, who has something like 18 million followers on YouTube,
published a review called the worst product I've ever reviewed.
Dot-da-dot for now.
People had an extremely strong reaction to this.
Daniel Vassallo tweeted,
I find it distasteful, almost unethical to say this when you have 18 million subscribers.
Hard to explain why, but with great reach comes great responsibility.
Potentially killing someone else's nascent project, wreaks of carelessness.
First, do no harm.
However, a lot of people disagreed with Daniel to an intense degree as well.
For example, commentator Sigil writes,
Yes, a world where reviewers hide their true feelings about a product is so much better.
Let's make sure consumers are never informed about the truth.
For what it's worth, Marquez posted a slightly more nuanced title on Twitter,
calling the video Humane Pin Review, a victim of its future ambition.
He said, this clip is 99% of my experiences with the pin,
doing something you could already do on your phone, but slower, more annoying, or less reliable, and accurate.
Turns out, smartphones are pretty incredible.
But there are occasional small glimpses of a future where this product could actually peel you away from your phone,
reduce your screen time and help you live more in the moment. And I can't be mad at that. Sam Schaeffer,
the head of new media at Humane, wrote, an honest, solid review Marquez, all fair and valid critiques,
both the good and the bad. Feedback is a gift, we reflect and we listen and we learn, we continue
building. Broadly speaking, I think there are two camps when it comes to the Humane AI pin. Notably,
there is no camp, at least that I can find, that thinks the device is good and really particularly
useful in its current format. The optimistic camp, however, is appreciative of the company taking a huge swing,
recognizes the fact that totally new categories of technology are extremely hard to get right
and take a lot of iteration and experimentation, and generally are glad that people are trying
things even if they don't get it right right away. The flip side is that some people are convinced
that the entire category is complete vaporware. In a back and forth between Daniel Vassalo,
who I quoted before, and Dogecoin Foundership Toshi Nakamoto, at Billy M2K says,
his review as the product is literally pointless and bad at what it is setting out to do and doesn't need to exist.
Anyone even mildly smart already knows that this product is a complete joke and only shows how delusional and out of touch some tech pros are.
Benjamin DeKraker, who is an AI entrepreneur, writes,
haven't seen any evidence that people even want AI wearables.
The people enthusiastic about them seem to be the same people trying to sell you one.
Meanwhile, the form factors people do seem to want, smartwatch, phone assistant, headphones are being nearly totally ignored.
Some people have ethical issues.
Stuart Reed says,
I've said it before, I'll say it again.
I absolutely despise the idea of AI wearables
watching and recording everything we do.
We need less surveillance capitalism, not more.
Amit as investing writes,
Wow, the biggest tech YouTuber just called the humane AI pin
the worst product he's ever reviewed.
I've been on record saying most of these AI wearables
are beyond nonsense and the fact that people are buying them is beyond me.
It seems most people buying them are tech enthusiasts willing to give new products a shot,
not the average consumer.
By the way, my bearishness on wearables extends to the Apple Vision Pro.
It is absolutely useless and I see zero, and I mean zero use cases for it.
As much as the company has been trying to put on a good face,
the level of critique is clearly bothering people at Humane.
Colin Cornwell writes, wild, how many people want to see you fail.
We'll make it all that much better when we win.
Sam Schaeffer again, quote tweeted that and said,
Easy to dog pile, much harder to build.
Yes, the software is not where it needs to be full stop,
and that's entirely on us.
The overwhelming negative sentiment, what happened to optimism,
what happened to pushing things forward.
Now, regardless of what one thinks of humane,
the reality is that a lot more people are going to try to create some version of an AI wearable
before the category is abandoned. Take for example the pendant, which was just announced today,
by Limitless, which is a spinoff of the company, Rewind. Co-founder Danceroker,
who had announced a version of this device last year, tweeted this morning, introducing Limitless,
a personalized AI powered by what you've seen, said, or heard. It's a web app, Mac app,
Windows app, and a wearable. So you may have previously heard of this company as Rewind.
This is a company that keeps track of basically everything that's going on, on your desktop, in your meetings,
and giving you the ability to get rich insights from all of that information, to be able to go back to
exactly where you need to to check something out.
Like I said, the pendant they had announced very briefly last year, but the product vision
has clearly come together in a different way.
This form factor people seem a lot more excited about.
It promises a hundred-hour battery life.
It is actually lightweight.
It comes in a variety of colors that make it potentially less highly visible.
and it even has an interesting approach to privacy.
So, for example, the way that they show off how it would work in the context of a conversation
is in a transcript.
They show the pendant wear, in this case, founder Dan Sorokker, speaking with a new speaker
with the transcript saying, new speaker is speaking but hasn't given consent to be recorded.
Dan then responds, this meeting is really important to me and I really want to remember
your advice.
Are you okay if I record and transcribe our chat?
The co-speaker, Sam, says, sure, no problem, and then is identified and actually becomes
part of the transcript. Developer Nick Dobos writes, cool touch on AI wearables, auto-opt-in recording
consent, using auto-voice ID, need to see privacy concerns and solutions evolve. Now at this stage,
I really don't have any idea which if any of these devices are likely to work. I tend to think that
when it comes to completely new form factors like this, it's not going to be some one-to-one
replacement use case that makes them useful, but something new that we don't imagine doing now,
that once we start doing, we can't imagine a time when we didn't do it. Could limitless keeping
track of everything that you've said or done be that new use case, it's totally possible. It's also
totally possible that there's something else that no one is imagining yet that is the thing.
And it's totally possible that these form factors don't amount to anything. And that for at least
some time to come, the devices that we're already using are the way we interact with AI.
I will say in general, I am for more, not less experimentation. And so I'm certainly wishing
all the builders luck. This is an area of building that I think is going to see more and more
attention and more and more entrepreneurs, so I'm sure we will be talking about it again.
For now, though, that's going to do it for today's AI breakdown. Until next time, peace.
