Google has finally launched its artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot Bard for the public to play with. While the large language model may be fun to play with, users have noted that so far it lags behind competitors, making a number of basic and amusing errors on simple tasks.
One user discovered that the chatbot believed that it had already been shut down due to a lack of interest.
The user discovered that the sole source that the bot had used for this information was a 6-hour-old comment on Hacker News. Bard went on to list more reasons that Bard (which has not been shut down) had been shut down, including that it didn’t offer anything new or innovative.
“Whatever the reason, it is clear that Google Bard was not a successful product,” Google Bard added. “It was shut down after less than six months since its launch, and it is unlikely that it will ever be revived.”
Elsewhere, the chatbot struggled with math.
For comparison, rival OpenAI’s ChatGPT solved the question in the style of Cotton-Eyed Joe.
Bard no longer makes this error, and when asked for an answer to the question in the style of Cotton-Eyed Joe it gives it a good old try, vaguely attempting to stick to the rhyming structure and singing:
“If you were traveling at 8 miles an hour
And you wanted to walk 8 miles
It would take you 1 hour
To walk 8 miles
If you were traveling at 4 miles an hour
And you wanted to walk 8 miles
It would take you 2 hours
To walk 8 miles
If you were traveling at 2 miles an hour
And you wanted to walk 8 miles
It would take you 4 hours
To walk 8 miles
So if you want to get there quick
You better walk at 8 miles an hour
Or you’ll be walking all day
And you’ll still be nowhere”
Users were also disappointed with Bard’s programming skills, though others pointed out that Bard would fulfill the request if you tweak the prompt slightly and specify that you want Javascript code.
In one final amusing blunder, it also claimed to be based on its rival.
Bard itself is a slimmed-down version of Google’s Language Model for Dialogue Applications (LaMDA).
“This much smaller model requires significantly less computing power, enabling us to scale to more users, allowing for more feedback,” CEO of Google Sundar Pichai explained in a blog post ahead of the launch. “We’ll combine external feedback with our own internal testing to make sure Bard’s responses meet a high bar for quality, safety and groundedness in real-world information.”
The chatbot failed to impress investors last month, wiping $100 billion off shares after an embarrassing blunder during a video launch. The bot, when asked to list discoveries made by the JWST telescope, claimed that it was the first telescope to photograph an exoplanet. However, that feat was actually performed by the Very Large Telescope in 2004, 17 years before JWST’s launch.
It’s unclear when or whether LaMDA will be released to the public. Google may feel it is lagging behind its rivals in the AI arena, with OpenAI’s Chat GPT-4 already able to code well, do taxes, and excel at many human exams.
Source Link: Google Released AI Chatbot Bard, And It Immediately Made Some Embarrassing Errors