Google’s new AI app is a glimpse of the future

Key points (condenses speech into a bulleted list)
Formal (shifts the text into a professional tone)
Short (summarizes the message)
Long (expands on the initial text)
(For most writing, I don’t recommend these kinds of stylistic shortcuts; I recommend com

[…Keep reading]

This problem might not need a solution: customer-service bots that code for free

This problem might not need a solution: customer-service bots that code for free

Key points (condenses speech into a bulleted list)

Formal (shifts the text into a professional tone)

Short (summarizes the message)

Long (expands on the initial text)

(For most writing, I don’t recommend these kinds of stylistic shortcuts; I recommend communicating in your own style.) 

After you dictate something, you can press a stop button or a pause button. This is a great pair of choices because if you’re working on a longer piece, the pause button lets you gather your thoughts, do a bit of research, then resume, ending up with the whole screed in the clipboard. 

The most surprising feature is that it can learn custom words. For example, it learns from your edits, from the manual addition of words or — wait for it — from your Gmail conversation history (a button asks your permission, and you need to choose to explicitly log in to Gmail). The Gmail option brings in not only jargon, but also names, brand names you’ve talked about, abbreviations, foreign words, place names, and others. 

About Author

What do you feel about this?

Subscribe To InfoSec Today News

You have successfully subscribed to the newsletter

There was an error while trying to send your request. Please try again.

World Wide Crypto will use the information you provide on this form to be in touch with you and to provide updates and marketing.