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  • 🧠 Intel is going all in on AI

🧠 Intel is going all in on AI

PLUS: AI needs its own alphabet for watermarking

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Happy Friday Big Brainers!

My favorite AI chatbot went down before I could have it write me an intro today. So sorry for the poor quality. (Just kidding… Or am I?)

Today's AI spotlights:

  • Intel is going all in on AI 🤖

  • Photoshop can expand images with AI-generated scenery 👩‍🎨

  • AI needs its own alphabet for watermarking 🔠

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NEWS

Intel's CEO, Pat Gelsinger, is on a mission to make Intel a leader in the AI space, and he ain't playing around.

With the first consumer chip featuring a built-in neural processor for machine learning tasks, Meteor Lake, set to ship later this year, we're about to witness an AI revolution.

Gelsinger's vision goes beyond just premium chips, as he expects AI to be integrated into everything Intel sells.

This aligns with his belief in the "five foundational technology superpowers" of tech companies, which include AI and cloud.

So, get ready for an AI-powered shakeup that's gonna reshape the tech landscape and redefine Intel's role in the market.

NEWS

Adobe's leveling up with a new AI feature in Photoshop called "Generative Expand".

By way of Firefly, the company's generative AI, it can basically 'uncrop' images.

Naturally, it comes with a 'no nasty stuff' filter. Gotta keep things safe for work, of course.

Now this isn't exactly groundbreaking. OpenAI's Midjourney and DreamStudio having similar tech.

The biggest difference is Adobe's network effect. After all, they do have 29 million users or so…

One hiccup? Commercial use is a no-go for now.

And we can’t forget, Adobe's also adding more language support, making Photoshop a truly global tool.

NEWS

AI content is getting hard to distinguish from the stuff that’s human-made.

Lawmakers and companies alike think that we need a watermark-solution for AI content, and quick.

Enter Unicode, what many think is a better bet versus English's 26-letter alphabet.

It's the universal numbering system for text - each character has its own number.

The TL;DR? Many think AI would benefit greatly from having its own character set based off of Unicode.

Nothing's a magic bullet, and this won't stop bad actors from faking human text. Still, it can help mark and trace the AI content.

After all: in the Age of AI, we'll need as many effective tools in our arsenal as possible.

📰 Full Article Here (non paywall here)

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