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Braina is a virtual assistant [1] [2] and speech-to-text dictation [3] application for Microsoft Windows developed by Brainasoft. [4] Braina uses natural language interface, [5] speech synthesis, and speech recognition technology [6] to interact with its users and allows them to use natural language sentences to perform various tasks on a computer.
The Mycroft project had created smart speakers that run its software. All of its hardware is open-source, released under the CERN Open Hardware Licence. [22] Its first hardware project was the Mark I, targeted primarily at developers. Its production was partially funded through a Kickstarter campaign, which finished successfully. Units started ...
Starting in 2024, this key replaces the menu key for licensed Windows-compatible keyboards. Microsoft Copilot is a generative artificial intelligence chatbot developed by Microsoft. Based on the GPT-4 series of large language models, it was launched in 2023 as Microsoft's primary replacement for the discontinued Cortana.
The surprise breakout of DeepSeek has brought the debate over open versus closed-source development into the forefront, with software engineers and tech leaders long arguing over the best approach ...
Microsoft is in a race to become Silicon Valley’s go-to name in generative AI thanks to its multi-billion dollar investment in OpenAI. But rival Google (GOOG, GOOGL), which helped develop the ...
Open-source artificial intelligence is an AI system that is freely available to use, study, modify, and share. [1] These attributes extend to each of the system's components, including datasets, code, and model parameters, promoting a collaborative and transparent approach to AI development. [1]
Devin AI is an autonomous artificial intelligence assistant tool created by Cognition Labs. Branded as an "AI software developer", [1] the demo tool is designed to complete software development tasks. The tool has received praise, concern, and skepticism over implications surrounding the future of artificial intelligence and software development.
[5] [6] It is free and open-source software released under the Apache License 2.0. It was developed by the Google Brain team for Google's internal use in research and production. [7] [8] [9] The initial version was released under the Apache License 2.0 in 2015. [1] [10] Google released an updated version, TensorFlow 2.0, in September 2019. [11]