Scientists have just resurrected "ELIZA," the world's first chatbot, from long-lost computer code — and it still works extremely well. Using dusty printouts from MIT archives, these "software archaeologists" discovered defunct code that had been lost for 60 years and brought it back to life.
Chatbot is a computer program that’s designed to emulate human conversation and converse with human users. Learn more here.
Microsoft Corp. is renaming its main chatbot for businesses, ramping up efforts to persuade people to use the software maker’s closest rival to OpenAI’s ChatGPT. Microsoft Copilot will become ...
Google: The Ultimate Disruptor Since Google launched in September 1998, it has never stopped innovating. Whether it was becoming the undisputed leader in web search (with a > 85% market share) or the top player in video with its YouTube acquisition,
Google CEO Sundar Pichai recently announced that OpenAI has surpassed ChatGPT's capabilities and is doubling down on AI with an ambitious target of 500 million users by year end. Stock Strategist Andrew Rocco provides the details.
With Microsoft 365 Copilot Chat, Microsoft is introducing pay-as-you-go AI agents to the free version of its Copilot chatbot for businesses.
On December 21, 2024, just before 2 pm, scientists made the dead speak. ELIZA, the world’s first chatbot is back. Long imitated, but not perfectly replicated, ELIZA has long been thought lost. But scientists discovered an early version of its code in the archives of its creator in 2021 and have spent the intervening years piecing it back together.
Microsoft made a trio of announcements this week that are going to be very important for how the company approaches its big AI bet in 2025. It started off by creating a new AI engineering group to focus its developers on building an AI platform and tools for both Microsoft and its customers.
OpenAI is introducing a new way for users to customize their interactions with ChatGPT, the company's AI-powered chatbot.
Microsoft Office is one of the world's most recognizable brands, literally used by billions. The initial rebrand to "Microsoft 365" was dumb by itself, but yesterday, the firm notorious for terrible branding decisions predictably decided to double down.
The real reason the U.S. government wants to ban a ByteDance-owned TikTok. TikTok could shut down in the U.S. as soon as January 19 if the Supreme Court doesn’t step in. The hig
The Oracle of Omaha's secret portfolio contains 120 securities -- one of which is a historically cheap AI stock.