Despite the surge in the number of Gemini users, Google is still struggling to close the gap with ChatGPT, which leads with 600 million active users per month.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman reveals that polite human behavior toward chatbots costs millions of dollars in electricity and unnecessary computing. What does ChatGPT think about it?
OpenAI’s Head of Product sparked a massive uproar with a statement regarding a potential acquisition of Chrome from tech giant Google.
Sermons that spoke about Israel did so in overwhelmingly positive terms, especially after Oct. 7.
A new feature sparks a web storm: Users ask ChatGPT to create food images with a "smell effect," reporting a real sensation of smell – even though it’s just an image. Here's how it works.
ChatGPT's new feature lets users create high-quality images with better accuracy, clearer text, and support for multiple objects. It prevents deepfakes and is available to free users.
Sam Altman reveals that using polite language with chatbots like ChatGPT wastes millions of dollars in electricity and computing resources, urging a shift towards more efficient interactions.
While the Internet and AI can’t aid in the original thought and analysis that is the essence of Torah study, they can act as helpful resources to begin one’s study of a subject.
It’s an acknowledgment that something given was received. All like to know that. Even a machine.
Altman posted on X, 'We added one million users in the last hour,' a stark contrast to the five days it took to reach that milestone at ChatGPT's launch.