Meet Google ‘Bard’, - A ChatGPT-like conversational AI chatbot From Google
Rushikesh Pandit
International Digital Marketing Trainer | AI Consultant | Founder & CMD | Digital Business Coach | Startup Consultant | Trained 40k+ | IIT-Bombay | upGrad | Simplilearn | Amity | TISS | The Economic Times
Google has introduced ‘Bard,’ its conversational artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot, with CEO Sundar Pichai explaining the concept in a series of tweets, and also on the Google blog. Bard will be a direct rival to OpenAI's ChatGPT, which, since its launch in November last year, has taken the internet by storm.
What is Google Bard? How does it work?
In simple words, Google Bard is an AI-powered chatbot that can offer answers to many queries in a conversational way -- similar to ChatGPT.
Google says Bard draws on information from the web to provide fresh, high-quality responses. At its core, Google's chatbot is powered by LaMDA, Google's language model built on Transformer, a neural network architecture. Interestingly, ChatGPT relies on GPT-3 language model, which is also built on Transformer. Google Research invented and open-sourced Transformer in 2017.
How to access Google Bard?
Currently, Google Bard is not available for testing to the public, but select users have access. Google is releasing a "lightweight model version of LaMDA," which requires significantly less computing power. This will allow Google to receive more feedback.
The post reads, "We'll combine external feedback with our own internal testing to make sure Bard's responses meet a high bar for quality, safety and groundedness in real-world information."
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5 Points to Understand About Bard:
(1.) Described by Pichai as an ‘important next step in our AI journey,’ Bard, according to the CEO, 'seeks to combine the breadth of the world's knowledge with the power, intelligence, and creativity of our large language models.'
(2.) It is powered by the tech giant's Language Model for Dialogue Applications or LaMDA; for now, a lightweight model version of LaMDA will power the chatbot.
(3.) Bard will provide fresh, high-quality responses by drawing on information from the web, and can also be used to simplify complex topics.
(4.) To make sure Bard's responses meet a high bar of quality, safety and groundedness in real-world information, Google will take external feedback, and combine it with its own internal testing.
(5.) For now, therefore, it will be made available only to ‘trusted testers,’ and, in the coming weeks, to the general public.
Source: Google | The Hindustan Times