Goto

Collaborating Authors

 claude chatbot


Anthropic's Claude chatbot can now search the web too

Engadget

In late February, Anthropic released Claude 3.7 Sonnet. As the industry's first hybrid reasoning model, it was a major milestone for the company. Rather than forcing users to pick between a version of Claude that can answer a question nearly instantaneously or work through a problem step by step, the chatbot can do both, with a simple toggle allowing you to switch between Claude's different "thinking modes." Today, Anthropic is enhancing 3.7 Sonnet by giving it the ability to search the web. "With web search, Claude has access to the latest events and information, boosting its accuracy on tasks that benefit from the most recent data," Anthropic explains.


Lyft uses Anthropic's Claude chatbot to handle user complaints

Engadget

Lyft is partnering with Anthropic to bring the startup's AI tech to its platform. "Anthropic, known for its human-centric approach to AI, will work with Lyft to build smart, safe, and empathetic AI-powered products that put riders and drivers first," the two said in a joint press release. If you're a frequent Lyft rider, you can see the early results of that collaboration when you go through the company's customer care AI assistant, which features integration with Anthrophic's Claude chatbot. According to Lyft, the tool is already helping to resolve thousands of customer issues every day, and has reduced average resolution times by 87 percent. Moving forward, Lyft plans to integrate Anthropic's tech across its business.


Anthropic's Claude chatbot is now an Android app

Engadget

Anthropic announced that its Claude chatbot is now available as an Android app. After introducing the platform's free iOS app in May, Android owners can now also play with the company's AI on their mobile devices. The Android app is free and works with both the Pro and Team plans for paid users. Conversations with Claude can happen across hardware, with both of the mobile apps and the web version connected to each other. This platform is one of several large-language model AI chatbots currently available to the public. OpenAI and its ChatGPT tool have attracted the lion's share of attention.


Google's AI Overview Search Results Copied My Original Work

WIRED

Last week, an AI Overview search result from Google used one of my WIRED articles in an unexpected way that makes me fearful for the future of journalism. I was experimenting with AI Overviews, the company's new generative AI feature designed to answer online queries. I asked it multiple questions about topics I've recently covered, so I wasn't shocked to see my article linked, as a footnote, way at the bottom of the box containing the answer to my query. But I was caught off guard by how much the first paragraph of an AI Overview pulled directly from my writing. The following screenshot on the left is from an interview I conducted with one of Anthropic's product developers about tips for using the company's Claude chatbot.


6 Practical Tips for Using Anthropic's Claude Chatbot

WIRED

Joel Lewenstein, a head of product design at Anthropic, was recently crawling beneath his new house to adjust the irrigation system when he ran into a conundrum: The device's knobs made no sense. Instead of scouring the internet for a product manual, he opened up the app for Anthropic's Claude chatbot on his phone and snapped a photo. Its algorithms analyzed the image and provided more context for what each knob might do. When I tested OpenAI's image features for ChatGPT last year, I found it similarly useful--at least for low-stakes tasks. I'd recommend you turn to AI image analysis for identifying those random cords around your house, but not to guess the identity of a loose prescription pill.


ChatGPT's chatbot rival Claude to be introduced on iPhone

The Guardian

OpenAI's ChatGPT is facing serious competition, as the company's rival Anthropic brings its Claude chatbot to iPhones. Anthropic, led by a group of former OpenAI staff who quit over differences with chief executive Sam Altman, have a product that already beats ChatGPT on some measures of intelligence, and now wants to win over everyday users. "In today's world, smartphones are at the centre of how people interact with technology. To make Claude a true AI assistant, it's crucial that we meet users where they are – and in many cases, that's on their mobile devices," said Scott White at Anthropic. The third version of the Claude chatbot is offered direct to users on its website in three flavours: a speedy and simple model called "haiku", a slower and more powerful model called "sonnet", and, for paying customers only, the full "opus" system.