The Rabbit R1 will offer up-to-date answers powered by Perplexity’s AI

The Rabbit R1 launch at CES left many questions unanswered, but earlier today, the brand finally shed light on which LLM (large language model) will be powering the device’s interaction with us mere mortals. The AI provider in question is none other than Perplexity, a San Francisco-based startup with ambitions to overtake Google in the AI space, which is no wonder that it has already received investments from the likes of NVIDIA and Jeff Bezos.

Perplexity will be providing up-to-date search results via Rabbit’s $199 orange brick — without the need of any subscription. That said, the first 100,000 R1 buyers will receive one year of Perplexity Pro subscription — normally costing $200 — for free. This advanced service adds file upload support, a daily quota of over 300 complex queries and the ability to switch to other AI models (GPT-4, Claude 2.1 or Gemini), though these don’t necessarily apply to the R1’s use case.

In case you were wondering:

Today we announced that we will use Perplexity as one of our key LLM services for r1 – and r1 still does not require any subscription to benefit from this partnership.

The $200 credit for Perplexity Pro is a standalone bonus kindly offered by… https://t.co/qYMM7TKFyZ

— rabbit inc. (@rabbit_hmi) January 19, 2024

The Rabbit R1, designed by Teenage Engineering, features a 2.88-inch touchscreen, a scroll wheel, two mics, a speaker, a rotational camera and a “Push-to-Talk” button. By leveraging its Large Action Model (LAM), this dedicated gadget can perform tasks like booking rides, finding recipes based on the ingredients you have, identifying people and objects (including items in, say, your fridge), or just fact checking — which we now know will rely on Perplexity’s real-time search engine. The R1 is available for pre-order now ahead of shipment in March or April.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/the-rabbit-r1-will-offer-up-to-date-answers-powered-by-perplexitys-ai-031313883.html?src=rss 

Kelly Osbourne Admits the Controversial Comment She Made on ‘The View’ Is the ‘Worst Thing’ She’s ‘Ever Done’

Nearly a decade after ‘The View’ alum made the infamous comment about Latinos in America, Kelly broke her silence on the matter during a January 18 interview.

Nearly a decade after ‘The View’ alum made the infamous comment about Latinos in America, Kelly broke her silence on the matter during a January 18 interview. 

Teresa Giudice Recalls Cooking Dinner for ‘Everyone’ While Incarcerated & Says Prison Food ‘Was Really Good’

The ‘RHONJ’ star insists she ate well during her time in prison, at least in part because she was doing the cooking!

The ‘RHONJ’ star insists she ate well during her time in prison, at least in part because she was doing the cooking! 

Erika Jayne Wants Kyle Richards ‘Eviscerated’ at the Upcoming ‘RHOBH’ Reunion Over Mauricio Split

The ‘Pretty Mess’ songstress appeared on a recent episode of ‘Watch What Happens Live’ and dished on what she expects to happen at the next ‘RHOBH’ reunion.

The ‘Pretty Mess’ songstress appeared on a recent episode of ‘Watch What Happens Live’ and dished on what she expects to happen at the next ‘RHOBH’ reunion. 

Microsoft’s tool for AI reading lessons is now a standalone app

Microsoft is rolling out Reading Coach as a standalone app, which will expand its tools for educators in Microsoft Teams. The new app will be part of its Reading Progress suite designed to help students improve literacy in the classroom and at home. The tool will use artificial intelligence to provide users with personalized feedback on how to improve reading scores as well as specific suggestions for how to improve things like pronunciation. It will be free to any users that have a Microsoft account.

With prolonged use, the AI tool will flag specific words that a reader frequently mispronounces or misunderstands during reading sessions. To keep students engaged, the program will also ask a reader to choose prompts that can change a storyline as they progress.

Microsoft says teachers can integrate its program in classrooms through learning platforms starting in the Spring. But the tool is available to educators this month in preview. Teachers will be able to track how student’s feel about assignments using the Reflect tool within the program. This kind of feedback might help an educator determine what assignments students feel most excited about and which lessons might not be working. Beyond tracking student performance, the new features for Microsoft’s Teams for Education suite will help teachers generate content for lessons, such as passages and assignments for a student to engage with.

Microsoft also introduced new features for its Teams for Education app, which is designed to help educators tailor content for digital learning platforms. The Classwork tool will use AI to emphasize particular messages in an assignment’s instructions, according to an educator’s particular goals for that lesson. The Assignments tool will use AI to streamline the rubric generating process. Outlines can be tailored by a teacher based on grade level, evaluation scale or other factors.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/microsofts-tool-for-ai-reading-lessons-is-now-a-standalone-app-230520756.html?src=rss 

Justin Timberlake’s New Album: All the Details We Know So Far

The pop sensation hasn’t released a new studio album since 2018, and now J.T. fans suspect that his sixth album is on the way. Here is everything to know about JT6.

The pop sensation hasn’t released a new studio album since 2018, and now J.T. fans suspect that his sixth album is on the way. Here is everything to know about JT6. 

Penelope Cruz’s Kids: Meet Her Two Children, Luna & Leo

Penelope Cruz leads a pretty private life with her husband Javier Bardem and their two children. Learn about the actress’s adorable son and daughter here.

Penelope Cruz leads a pretty private life with her husband Javier Bardem and their two children. Learn about the actress’s adorable son and daughter here. 

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