
Ola is putting Krutrim AI chatbot on its electric scooters
“Hey Masakali.” No, really. That assistant hotword was in the company’s presentation. Woo!
“Hey Masakali.” No, really. That assistant hotword was in the company’s presentation. Woo!
The name’s Skyline. This one is from HMD. Previous licensee of the Nokia brand. Which once made those beautiful Windows phones. Imma cry!
Apple finally caught up to the Android competition with a bucketload of AI features for its hardware. "They gon make yo life easy," they said. They didn't say most of it exists in next year's calendar.
"...That is what they get," says the hacker, who sounds pissed off at the brand's lackadaisical attitude toward safety. So much so that they listed all the data for peanuts on a forum.
A hacker dumped files belonging to over 7.5 million Boat customers. The affected folks might have been victims of social media scams. But the scale of the leak suggests otherwise.
A Carnegie Mellon University study reveals starting your brainstorming process with Google can be detrimental to the group's creativity.
Teams relying much on search engines often produced inundatingly same, less original ideas due to a cognitive bias called "fixation effect," where seeing popular answers converges our thought process instead of diverging it.
While individuals weren't necessarily dumber with Google, groups of Google users seemed to get stuck in a rut, often coming up with the same common ideas, sometimes even in the same order! Talk about a copy-and-paste creativity crisis.
"This appears to be due to the fact that Google users came up with the same common answers, often in the same order, as they relied on Google, while non-Google users came up with more distinct answers," explained lead author Danny Oppenheimer.
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