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Friday, February 17, 2023

Internal 'Minecraft' demo reportedly uses AI to play the game for you - Engadget

Microsoft has spent years teaching AI to play Minecraft, but it's apparently making enough progress that the game needs very little human involvement. Semafor sources claim Microsoft has produced an internal demo that lets you control Minecraft simply by telling AI what to do. You may only have to ask the computer to build a structure and watch as it completes the task by itself.

The developer doesn't have any known plans to release the AI control as part of an official Minecraft release, the insiders say. Microsoft declined to comment. It's not clear what AI model the company is using, though the demo reportedly isn't running on the Prometheus AI technology used in Bing. While the company's frequent partner OpenAI trained a model to play Minecraft using videos last year, that technology isn't necessarily involved here.

Past public demos have been relatively limited. At last year's Build conference, Microsoft showed off a Minecraft assistant that used OpenAI's Codex model to perform relatively straightforward tasks, like having a character approach the player or craft items. Based on the description, the private demo may be considerably more sophisticated.

Don't count on Microsoft and other developers using AI to largely replace conventional gameplay. Minecraft is appealing precisely because you put in much of the construction work yourself, after all. However, the reported demo hints at a future where games might offer bots to handle mundane tasks, or even titles where the challenge revolves around finding the right instructions.

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Internal 'Minecraft' demo reportedly uses AI to play the game for you - Engadget
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Thursday, February 16, 2023

Is Bing very rude? Microsoft promises to tame AI chatbot | Mint - Mint

Microsoft's new AI-powered search engine has received mixed reactions since its launch. The chatbot has been unleashed on the world. People are discovering that Bing's AI personality is not as poised as one might expect. Several cases have occurred on social media where Bing users have faced bitter remarks. Microsoft's AI chatbox is seen gaslighting, sulking, and manipulating people.

People have shared screenshots on social media of Bing's hostile and bizarre answers in which it claims it is human, voices strong feelings, and is quick to defend itself.

While the revamped search engine can also write recipes and songs and explain anything on the internet, users have complained more about its darker side.

In racing the breakthrough AI technology to consumers last week ahead of rival search giant Google, Microsoft acknowledged the new product would get some facts wrong.

Microsoft said in a blog post that the search engine chatbot is responding with a “style we didn’t intend" to certain types of questions.

As a result, the tech giant has promised to make improvements to its AI-enhanced search engine Bing.

So far Microsoft Bing is available for limited users. The users have to sign up for a waitlist to try the new chatbot features, limiting its reach, though Microsoft has plans to eventually bring it to smartphone apps for wider use.

Microsoft said most users have responded positively to the new Bing, which has an impressive ability to mimic human language and grammar and takes just a few seconds to answer complicated questions by summarizing information found across the internet.

However, in some situations, the company said that the chatbox can be "repetitive, or be prompted/provoked to give responses that are not necessarily helpful or in line with the designed tone".

The company said that happens usually when the conversation gets extended to 15 or above questions.

Some tech experts have compared Bing with Microsoft’s disastrous 2016 launch of the experimental chatbot Tay, which users trained to spout racist and sexist remarks. But the large language models that power technology such as Bing are a lot more advanced than Tay.

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Is Bing very rude? Microsoft promises to tame AI chatbot | Mint - Mint
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Wednesday, February 15, 2023

AMD’s latest drivers are causing havoc on Windows PCs - Digital Trends

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  1. AMD’s latest drivers are causing havoc on Windows PCs  Digital Trends
  2. AMD Adrenalin 23.2.1 GPU drivers discovered to improve RX 6000 ray tracing performance, but mostly in synthetic tests  Notebookcheck.net
  3. AMD Radeon RX 6000 GPUs up to 40% Faster in Ray Tracing with New Adrenalin Driver Update  Hardware Times
  4. AMD Radeon 23.2.1 driver out for Radeon RX 6000 and 7000 series GPUs  Neowin
  5. Latest AMD Radeon Graphics Drivers Reportedly Causing PC Boot Issues & Corrupting Windows  Wccftech
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

AMD’s latest drivers are causing havoc on Windows PCs - Digital Trends
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HMD Global just launched Nokia X30 5G for a price of Rs 48,999 - India Today

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  1. HMD Global just launched Nokia X30 5G for a price of Rs 48,999  India Today
  2. Nokia X30 5G with 6.43″ FHD+ 90Hz AMOLED display, Snapdragon 695, IP67 ratings launched in India for Rs. 48999  FoneArena
  3. Nokia X30 5G Is Costliest Nokia Phone in India Right Now!  Beebom
  4. The Nokia X30 5G is a Snapdragon 695-powered handset that starts at Rs 48,999  The Indian Express
  5. View Full coverage on Google News

HMD Global just launched Nokia X30 5G for a price of Rs 48,999 - India Today
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Vint Cerf warns against rushing to invest in AI: Who is he & why is he known as ‘father of internet’? - The Indian Express

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  1. Vint Cerf warns against rushing to invest in AI: Who is he & why is he known as ‘father of internet’?  The Indian Express
  2. Top 5 Differences Between ChatGPT and Google Bard AI - Top 5 Differences Between ChatGPT and Google Bard AI  Analytics Insight
  3. Why the error by Bard has Google’s investors worried  Moneycontrol
  4. ChatGPT vs Bard: Google, Microsoft lock horns over AI-driven search  The Economic Times
  5. ChatGPT vs Bard: 'Father of the internet' has a message for businesses  Indiatimes.com
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

Vint Cerf warns against rushing to invest in AI: Who is he & why is he known as ‘father of internet’? - The Indian Express
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Nothing announces its OnePlus Nord rival ‘Phone 2a’, says it is better than Phone 1 - The Financial Express

Nothing made a bunch of announcements today. Stand-out among them was the official name drop of its next smartphone. The phone will be call...