![]() In a sample demo (GIF above), a user is shown the prompt “Help me write” and then enters a request: “Job post for a regional sales rep.” The AI system then completes the job spec for them in seconds, letting them edit and refine the text. Of all the new features, the AI writing and brainstorming tools in Docs and Gmail seem the most potentially useful. (This is also how Google announced availability for ChatGPT rival Bard.) Google says these and other features will then be made available to the public later in the year but didn’t specify when. Although the company has announced a raft of new features, only the first of these - AI writing tools in Docs and Gmail - will be made available to a group of US-based “trusted testers” this month. ![]() ![]() The company reportedly declared a “code red” in December, with senior management telling staff to add AI tools to all its user products, which are used by billions of people, in a matter of months.īut Google is definitely racing ahead of itself. Ever since the arrival of ChatGPT last year and Microsoft’s launch of its chatbot-enabled Bing this February, the search giant has been scrambling to launch similar AI features. The announcement shows Google’s eagerness to catch up to competitors in the new AI race. ![]() The features include new ways to generate, summarize, and brainstorm text with AI in Google Docs (similar to how many people use OpenAI’s ChatGPT), the option to generate full emails in Gmail based on users’ brief bullet points, and the ability to produce AI imagery, audio, and video to illustrate presentations in Slides (similar to features in both Microsoft Designer, powered by OpenAI’s DALL-E, and Canva, powered by Stable Diffusion). Google has announced a suite of upcoming generative AI features for its various Workspace apps, including Google Docs, Gmail, Sheets, and Slides. ![]()
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