It is safe to say that AI has started to make all the waves that we have been expecting it to make, and for good reason. By the end of this year or next year, we will start seeing onboard AI on flagship smartphones, which have already managed to gain a lot of attention. Then we have companies like Samsung and Google constantly trying to ensure that their devices are powered by AI while maintaining the hardware specs that they have to offer. Now, a report suggests that the South Korean tech giant is apparently working with Microsoft to develop a chatbot.
Samsung developing its own chatbot by collaborating with Microsoft could deliver something impressive
Based on newly obtained information, it appears that Samsung is collaborating with Microsoft for the purposes of "in-house generative AI development." Both companies are working together to develop what is currently known as the Samsung chatbot, and the information we currently have suggests that it will be handling tasks such as translation as well as document summarization, and it will be done using LLM, which is developed by OpenAI.
All of this does sound exciting, but I am more concerned about how these chatbots are going to help the user in any way. Sure, it would be nice to have an onboard AI that will not require an internet connection, but then again, the utility of it is something that many people might not want to have this specific technology in the first place.
We cannot say a lot about what is going to happen, but it is clear as day that Samsung, along with other companies such as Apple, Google, and Microsoft, are looking forward to making it happen. Not just that, thanks to Qualcomm's next generation of Snapdragon processors, all of this is going to be even closer to reality than it currently is, and hopefully, by the end of this year, we will have a working smartphone that has an AI built into it that can operate without the need for an active internet connection.
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