Alphabet Inc.’s (GOOGL.O) Google will likely showcase more artificial intelligence in its products on Wednesday to counter Microsoft Corp.’s (MSFT.O) threat to its lead in the almost $300-billion search advertising industry.
Google’s Magi project aims to add generative artificial intelligence to its eponymous engine, which can answer queries with human-like language and generate new material from primary data.
Google officials will present at its annual I/O conference near its headquarters in Mountain View, California. According to MAGNA, the outcome might affect how customers access global information and which business wins the $286 billion search advertising industry.
Since rivals started using generative AI to present online content, Google’s position has been doubted.
Microsoft-backed OpenAI’s ChatGPT was Google’s disruptor. Bing, Microsoft’s search engine, followed with a chatbot that could answer questions like what car seat to buy for a specific model vehicle.
Microsoft last month boasted Bing’s U.S. market increases, increasing to over 100 million daily active users, nevertheless overshadowed by Google’s billions of queries.
Google’s competitors have outpaced its research discoveries from previous years. Microsoft estimated every percentage point of search advertising share it acquired might generate $2 billion in sales.
For months, Google teams have raced to disclose technologies during I/O or before, like ChatGPT rival Bard.
Alphabet’s CEO, Sundar Pichai, announced this year that Google Search would add “like blogs from people who play both piano and guitar” and generative AI to simplify difficult inquiries.
Google is reclaiming its research role. During Wednesday’s presentation, CNBC claimed it would unveil PaLM 2, a more powerful AI model. In addition, media reports foresee new Pixel hardware.
Comment Template