Highlights
- A report claims that Google will soon offer early access to AI Notebook, an AI-powered note-taking app.
- As an AI-first notebook, the project is known as Tailwind.
At the yearly Google I/O 2023 conference, Google made a number of announcements and announced the launch of new AI-powered products and services; it now seems to be spreading them out.
The company will soon grant early access to the artificial intelligence (AI) notebook "Project Tailwind," according to a recent update. The business revealed "Project Tailwind" as a "AI-first notebook" last month.
What Is Project Tailwind?
Tailwind is an example of a PaLM application programming interface (API) that can help "anyone synthesizing information from many different sources" if they so choose. Tailwind allows users to train their own AI model by selecting files from Google Drive. The files are then used to suggest the information. It also gets a specialized, individualized user interface to help users browse the many notes and documents they upload or create.
Through Google Labs, users have been able to join the Project Tailwind waitlist since the beginning of the previous month.
The company stated in the most recent update on the home page, "Keep a look out for updates, including a new name," and added, "Open up early access to our waitlisted users soon." Clients from the US had the choice of enlisting for early access.
The company discovered a variety of applications for the same at Google IO 2023, particularly for students. Users in the United States could now access the waitlist, but only if they were on the waitlist; no official announcement has been made regarding the availability in other nations.
In the meantime, earlier this week, the tech giant gave the AI chatbot "Bard" additional updates that improved its logic and reasoning abilities. Bard currently recognizes computational prompts and executes code in the background using a novel approach known as "implicit code execution." It is now capable of responding to mathematical calculations, coding queries, and text manipulation.