I have seen enough to know that it’s going to alter our lives. Just think what AI tools could do when used by creative people in fashion or architecture

The recent flurry, or rather blizzard, of announcements of new variants of generative AI have brought a storm of hype and fright. OpenAI’s ChatGPT already appeared to be a gamechanger, but now this week’s new version, GPT-4, is another leap ahead. GPT-4 can generate enough text to write a book, code in every computer language, and – most remarkably – “understand” images.

If your mind is not boggled by the potential of this, then you haven’t been paying attention. I have spent the past five years researching how artificial intelligence has been changing journalism around the world. I’ve seen how it can supercharge news media to gather, create and distribute content in much more efficient and effective ways. It is already the “next wave” of technological change. Now generative AI has moved potential progress up a gear or two.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

JetBlue ready to launch low-cost New York to London flights

US-based airline aims to tread where others have failed – and in…

How much can Labour pledge at election while remaining credible?

Keir Starmer will offer voters change – but how much is deliverable…

‘An absolute disgrace’ say frustrated Netflix subscribers over app pop-ups that ‘make no sense’

NETFLIX users have been frustrated with the app’s recommendation algorithm. It shouldn’t…

How Tory hopefuls snapped up campaign web addresses well before Boris Johnson quit

Rishi Sunak denies registering Readyforrishi.com in December, months before launch of campaign…