After Auto-GPT and Code Interpreter API, a new open-source project is making waves in the AI community. The project is named Open Interpreter, and it’s been developed by Killian Lucas and a team of open-source contributors. It combines ChatGPT plugin functionalities, Code Interpreter, and something like Windows Copilot to make AI a ubiquitous solution on any platform. You can use Open Interpreter to do anything you can think of. You can interact with the system at the OS level, files, folders, programs, internet, basically everything right from a friendly Terminal interface. So if you are interested, learn how to set up and use Open Interpreter locally on your PC. — Read More
Open Interpreter lets LLMs run code (Python, Javascript, Shell, and more) locally. You can chat with Open Interpreter through a ChatGPT-like interface in your terminal by running $ interpreter after installing.
This provides a natural-language interface to your computer’s general-purpose capabilities:
Create and edit photos, videos, PDFs, etc.
Control a Chrome browser to perform research
Plot, clean, and analyze large datasets
…etc.
GitHub
The 01 Project is building an open-source ecosystem for AI devices.
Our flagship operating system can power conversational devices like the Rabbit R1, Humane Pin, or Star Trek computer.
We intend to become the GNU/Linux of this space by staying open, modular, and free.
GitHub
Daily Archives: March 22, 2024
Nvidia is now powering AI nurses
Nvidia announced a collaboration with Hippocratic AI on Monday, a healthcare company that offers generative AI nurses who work for just $9 an hour. Hippocratic promotes how it can undercut real human nurses, who can cost $90 an hour, with its cheap AI agents that offer medical advice to patients over video calls in real-time. — Read More
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AI on Trial: Bot Bharara Steals Stay Tuned
How might AI infringe on intellectual property and personality rights? And could AI replace Preet as the host of Stay Tuned?
This is the final episode of a Stay Tuned miniseries, “AI on Trial,” featuring Preet Bharara in conversation with Nita Farahany, professor of law and philosophy at Duke University.
Preet and Nita discuss the hypothetical case of an artificial intelligence chatbot that impersonates Preet as the host of a copycat podcast, Stay Tuned with Bot Bharara. The unauthorized chatbot was trained on everything Preet has ever said or written online. Can Preet protect his intellectual property rights? Is the law on the real Preet’s side, or is it time to surrender to an AI-dominated world and collaborate with the bot? — Read More