The AI Daily Brief: Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis - What OpenAI's RecentAcquisitions Tell Us About Their Strategy
Episode Date: June 26, 2024OpenAI has made significant moves with their recent acquisitions of Rockset and Multi, signaling their strategic direction in the AI landscape. Discover how these acquisitions aim to enhance enterpris...e data analytics and introduce advanced AI-integrated desktop software. Explore the implications for OpenAI’s future in both enterprise and consumer markets, and understand what this means for AI-driven productivity tools. Join the discussion on how these developments could reshape our interaction with AI and computers. Learn how to use AI with the world's biggest library of fun and useful tutorials: https://besuper.ai/ Use code 'youtube' for 50% off your first month. The AI Daily Brief helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI. Subscribe to the podcast version of The AI Daily Brief wherever you listen: https://pod.link/1680633614 Subscribe to the newsletter: https://aidailybrief.beehiiv.com/ Join our Discord: https://bit.ly/aibreakdown
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Today, we are looking at what OpenAI's recent acquisitions tell us about their strategy moving forward.
The AI Daily Brief is a daily podcast and video about the most important news and discussions in AI.
To join the conversation, follow the Discord link in our show notes.
Hello, friends, quick note today before we dive in.
I'm actually recording this a day early because I am traveling.
I'm headed to the AI Engineer World Fair in San Francisco.
Because of that, this is one of those no headlines, main episode only shows,
but it's one that I think is pretty interesting.
Over the last week or so, Open AI has announced not one but two acquisitions.
And as Bloomberg reporter Sharon Gaffery pointed out, when she broke the story of the first last
week, this is the first acquisition that wasn't just an aqua hire. So what's the deal?
On Friday, June 21st, OpenAI posted that they had acquired Rockset. The blog post reads,
enhancing our retrieval infrastructure to make AI more helpful. AI, they write, has the opportunity
to transform how people and organizations leverage their own data. That's why we've acquired
Rockset, a leading real-time analytics database that provides world-class data indexing and querying
capabilities. Rockset enables users, developers, and enterprises to better leverage their own data and
access real-time information, as they use AI products and build more intelligent applications.
We will integrate Rockset's technology to power our retrieval infrastructure across products,
and members of Rockset's world-class team will join OpenAI.
Said Brad Lightcap, OpenAI, C-O, Rockset's infrastructure empowers companies to transform their
data into actionable intelligence. We're excited to bring these benefits to our customers by
integrating Rockset's foundation into OpenAI products. So what is this deal about? Well, it's clearly
about data and the ability for companies that are working with OpenAI to leverage their data for
more advanced AI applications. J. Deep Bright's OpenAI acquired Rockset, but what makes it so special?
And shared a graphic, which lots of people were sharing as well. The graphic is labeled world's fastest
search and analytics database and basically shows the idea of Rockset sitting between all sorts of
company data sources, and being able to give a variety of user-facing use cases, ranging from
analytics to recommendations to geospatial search, and more access to that data with very, very low
latency. Something that I've described before is the fact that enterprise teams right now are thinking
about AI in two ways. Roughly put, there is horizontal AI and vertical AI. Horizontal AI refers to
individual employees figuring out workflows that save them time or allow them to do new things in a more
efficient way, basically individuals experimenting with tools to capture a half an hour here or an
hour there. When you aggregate all of that across a big organization, it can add up to significant
time savings, huge productivity gains in a very distributed bottoms up kind of way. However, the other
side of AI, vertical AI, for lack of a better term, refers to these solutions which take
advantage of all of a company's data and are available to use that data to power dedicated applications
that are available to the entire team. In many ways, the big enterprise fight, at least between the
Frontier Labs is all about that vertical business, and the acquisition of Rockset is clearly meant
to give OpenAI a leg up in that particular fight. Some also added this as evidence in the column
that OpenAI is pushing towards building a search engine. Dwayne Forrester said,
tell me you're building a search engine without telling me you're building a search engine.
My position continues to be that OpenAI is not so much building a separate product as a
search engine, but is slowly trying to morph chat GPT into the role that the search engine plays now.
In other words, your gateway to the rest of the internet.
However, to the extent that that is just a different version of a search engine, I think this is dead on.
When someone asked investor D.D. Das about how this acquisition plays into OpenAI's larger strategy,
he said, this is speculation, but I imagine Roxette will power all their enterprise search offerings
to compete with Glean and or a consumer search offering to compete with perplexity in Google.
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So that was acquisition one, but it wasn't the only one.
Next up, on Monday of this week, we found out that Multi was joining Open AI.
The Multi announcement reads,
what if desktop computers were inherently multiplayer? What if the operating system placed people on
equal footing to apps? Those were the questions we explored in building multi and before that
re-motion. Recently, we've been asking ourselves how we should work with computers, not on or using
computers, but truly with computers. With AI. We believe it's one of the most important product
questions of our time, and so we're beyond excited to share that Multi is joining OpenAI. TechCrunch
characterized the announcement as OpenAI buying a remote collaboration platform. They write,
multi-set out to build a Zoom-based platform designed for remote teams to work together through video chats.
Multi-offered features like the ability to collaborate across screen shares from up to 10 people at the same time,
customizable shortcuts, and automatic deep links for code design and documents.
So what's interesting here is how a product that was originally designed to be collaboration between different people in different places
might turn into a product that's about a collaboration between a person and their computer in a slightly different way.
Many pointed out that this seemed like another step in chatchipTs move into desktop software.
investor Sarah Guo writes,
Great things ahead as AI moves out of the chat box and into the desktop.
Nick Kramer writes, envision a world where chat GPT controls your computer.
This isn't science fiction.
OpenAI has just acquired multi, a collaboration tool for Mac OS.
Nick sees some of the implications as chat CBT handling your emails, scheduling meetings,
code, analyzing data, all directed with your voice and through various apps.
Nick continues, imagine starting your day with chat GPT summarizing overnight emails,
drafting responses, and setting your schedule, your morning routine, streamlined, and stress-free.
all while you grab a cup of coffee. Dejan writes,
OpenAI just bought and shut down multi-dot app,
and this likely means you'll soon be able to screen share with GPT
and show it things on your screen and vice versa,
leading to a more integrated human AI U.S.
Some like Leran Zhang think that the acquisition might be about a specific use case
of ChatGBT being a better coding agent.
When Chubby on Twitter retweeted the acquisition announcement and wrote,
The rumor seems to confirm that Sam Altman and OpenAI are building their own operating system
and communication tool. The evidence is mounting.
OpenAI leaker Jimmy Apples wrote,
I'm really bored, so in case you missed it, a month or so, they were hiring for this role.
He pointed to a LinkedIn post looking for a software engineer who will build a, quote,
zero to one product that brings chat GPT to where our users are already doing their work, the desktop.
So ultimately what we learn from these deals is that, one,
OpenAI absolutely continues to be focused on winning the enterprise battle.
The company is now up to about a $3.5 billion annualized run rate,
and they are clearly trying to cement their position as the leader in Enterprise AI.
At the same time, the Rockset acquisition could not only help them with that,
but also help push them in the direction of a different type of consumer search experience,
which if the multi-acquisition suggests anything,
might be deeply integrated into ultimately what is a new way of interfacing with computers overall.
I don't think OpenAI or Sam Altman have been particularly coy
about the fact that they think that fundamental changes are coming to how people interact with computers.
These acquisitions are breadcrumbs that are all part of that story coming to fruition.
However, for some, they don't care about any of this news,
and they just want features that they feel like they were already promised.
Surfer 808 on Reddit the other day, writes,
I'm sick of waiting for chat GPT-40 voice
and I lost a lot of respect for OpenAI.
They write,
I've been religiously checking for the voice update
multiple times a day considering they said it would be out
in a quote few weeks.
I realize OpenAI just put that demo out there
to stick it to Google's AI demo
which was scheduled for the next day.
What a horrible thing to do to people.
I'm sure so many people signed up
hoping they would get this feature
and it's nowhere in sight.
Meanwhile, Claude 3.5 Sonnet is doing a great job
and I'm happy with it.
So, as always, lots of interesting things
going on in the world of OpenAI, I'm sure it won't be long before we get another announcement.
Whether that announcement will be about something we can actually get our hands on,
well, that is the question.
For now, though, that is going to do it for today's AI Daily Brief.
Until next time, peace.
