What are the Features of The New Microsoft Edge Web Browser?

 A new version of Microsoft's Edge web browser has been released, and its standout feature is the incorporation of AI tools provided by ChatGPT, a current industry powerhouse. In order to provide users with a more intelligent browsing experience, Microsoft has integrated an AI upgrade for its Bing search engine into its browser, as it had previously announced.

By combining "search, browsing, and chat into one unified experience, delivering better search scenarios, more thorough answers, a new chat experience, and the ability to generate content," the company hopes to achieve its goals.

Create and summarize.

With the help of the new AI writer and chatbot in Edge's sidebar, you can compare and summarize the content in your search results as well as produce new written content. This sidebar is similar to the one in Bing.

At the tech giant's press conference yesterday, a 15-page PDF document from a website could have its key points extracted when you asked the AI chatbot. Additionally, it can contrast data from various sources and even arrange them in fresh tables for your benefit.

It was demonstrated that the AI can write and modify code by taking a Python script and rewriting it in Rust on command. It has the same ability as ChatGPT to create new content in natural language, so when asked to write a post for LinkedIn, a Microsoft-owned company, it obliged. It can also edit the output in accordance with your requests; for instance, if you tell it to be more formal, the post will be rewritten to reflect the change in tone.

It has the same ability as ChatGPT to create new content in natural language, so when asked to write a post for LinkedIn, a Microsoft-owned company, it obliged. It can also edit the output in accordance with your requests; for instance, if you ask it to be more formal, it will rewrite the post to reflect the change in tone.

Due to Microsoft's sizable investment in OpenAI, the business behind ChatGPT and co-founded by Elon Musk, there is now extensive AI integration with its products. Microsoft made a commitment to commercialize the AI technology it acquired, and it has started to do so. Viva and Excel are two additional Microsoft products that will soon feature AI implementation.

Additionally, .Microsoft revealed how Bing now uses OpenAI's most recent GPT-4 engine and is not only aware of information and events up to 2021 but also more recent ones.



Here we are in the AI wars. One where businesses are vying to be the dominant source of your artificial intelligence connection, not the one we imagined where Skynet launched an unexpected missile attack on its creators. to give you and everyone else access to this powerful technology. Microsoft and Bing are, somewhat surprisingly, at the tip of this spear.

But here's the crazy part. I've seen and used Microsoft's brand-new Bing search engine and its potent chatbot, both of which were unveiled at an event on Tuesday in Redmond, Washington, and I believe Microsoft may have just won the opening battle for supremacy in the tech industry. Unlikely as it may be, this is Bing's chance. The "moment" that you begin to notice or care that Microsoft has had its own search engine for well over a decade is what I refer to.

You ought to begin utilizing Bing. At the very least as soon as you can access Bing's initial iteration and its brand-new chatbot, both of which, fortunately, I currently have access to.

I am aware that Microsoft just announced the launch of a new chatbot-enhanced search engine, 24 hours after Google unveiled Bard, a ChatGPT rival, and its plans to redesign its own, much more well-known search engine. The distinction, however, is as follows. Google's Bard is about to launch. The brand-new Bing is now available, and it functions as you would hope and anticipate an "ask me anything" search engine to.

The new Bing resembles the old Bing in some ways but is different. The desktop version, which is currently accessible and will be followed by a mobile one, does not conceal or compel you to use AI chat.

The interface is obviously different. There is a new "Chat" option in the menu, and you can even switch between the main search screen and a screen solely for the chatbot. Once again on the search screen, the query box is much bigger and can hold up to 1,000 characters, which is a pretty wide range for any natural language query you can think of.

You can type pretty much anything into that space, and I did the same. According to Microsoft, the average person types 2 points 4 words into a search box, but that only applies when using a typical search engine's parameters and restrictions. Microsoft is not, I repeat, NOT, REINVENTING THE ROAD here. Most people already use Google Search to enter lengthy queries and receive respectable keyword-based results. The new Bing, however, expands upon this idea.


Even though Google doesn't think so, Bing and ChatGPT might be the search engines of the future.

Bing was gathering the usual fare like Wikipedia results on me and muffin recipes from various foodie sites as we typed in our various queries, which included a vanity search on me and longer ones like asking about baking blueberry muffins for someone who's allergic to gluten and milk. If you only focused on the center of the screen, you might conclude that nothing has changed, but a new box on the right is gradually filling up with more conversational search results from Bing's chatbot.

Similar


to its cousin ChatGPT, but also different, are the outcomes. In essence, Microsoft took OpenAI's work on ChatGPT and, with OpenAI's assistance, iterated on it, backed it up with the formidable power of Azure Cloud Services, and combined it with Bing's knowledge graph to create what it calls the Prometheus Model.

Expanding and deepening.

Each time, the chat response provided more information about the findings, and since the format is conversational, the initial response may only be the start of a longer discussion. We received information about my career from my vanity search, but we also enquired of the chatbot whether I had ever received any honors. It located the contests I participated in and the ones where I came in second (thanks, new Bing).

If you click the "Let's Chat" button at the bottom of the right-hand chat box result, you can ask more questions to delve deeper into the issue.

In response to my baking query, I received information on how to locate ingredients that wouldn't irritate my allergic friend. Some of these results, but not all of them, stand out because every reference is cited exactly where it belongs, unlike ChatGPT. To view the source or navigate to the origin page, I simply had to hover my mouse over one.

Every result in the chat screen displays more guiding questions to help you narrow down your search. Bing apologized for my back injury and added, "I hope you are feeling better now," in response to my query about how to exercise my quads without hurting it (I had told Bing I had hurt it last summer, but that was a lie).

It can be difficult to develop your quads, or quadriceps femoris, if you suffer from back pain, but there are some exercises you can do to help yourself without endangering your back. " followed by a lengthy list of well-cited exercise options. There were numerous citations in the lengthy list.

We have, however, already encountered some results that omit references, such as one that a colleague produced on exercise recommendations but which lacked references despite recommending a number of different workout options. The issue here is that the chatbot didn't even take into account the possibility that the person searching can't handle those kinds of activities.

The new Bing is still in its infancy, and the whole point of artificial intelligence (AI) is that it can learn and improve over time. Additionally, the system does include a feedback mechanism that allows you to flag incorrect responses. This is done by choosing dislike, but you can be more specific by providing more information and including a screenshot in a feedback window. The option to right-click on the exact text that is the problem and choose "this is inaccurate" would be nice. "Perhaps in a later release.

The first fully integrated Search AI is still the beauty of what Microsoft has created here. In addition to being stylish and practical (you can ask Bing Chat to sum up a page for you through the Microsoft Edge integration), it's also entertaining, as is frequently the case with the best new AI tools.

Additionally, it's directing us to the best result, which is probably what we always wanted search to do. The most potent and complete knowledge graph is undoubtedly that of Google, but a simple search might not yield the results you're looking for. You thus modify your search. Up until you achieve the best outcome, there are many starts and stops. With the addition of Bing Chat, search is transformed into a funnel where more context and inquiries can help you get the best results.

Although abuse is a concern, the chat benefits from Bing's advantages and capacity to reduce inaccurate, outdated, and harmful information because Microsoft built it on top of that search engine's already solid foundation.

Because AI is rarely error-free, I'm confident that it won't be. However, ChatGPT has become so popular not only because it is so strong and simple to use, but also because it has largely avoided exposing the prejudices and bad judgment that have dogged so many of the earlier chatbots.

In other words, Microsoft combined a well-established search engine with what could be argued to be the best-in-class consumer AI, enhanced both of them, and created something entirely new that anyone can use without any training at all.

Post a Comment

أحدث أقدم