Google Bard has one enormous advantage over other AI chatbots

&xcust=2-3-2166765-1-0-0&sref=https://www.pcworld.com/feed" rel="nofollow">building a PC differs around the world. You might listen to the first few minutes to get a sense for whether it’s worth your time. But Google does it the right way: it summarizes the video, and embeds it, so that you can dive deeper if you want.

Consider this example:

Google Bard video YouTube 1

Mark Hachman / IDG

Here, we see how Bard sums up some of the detail Gordon and Pedro get into, without giving the entire game away. Video, for example, thrives when it shows an engaging conversation between two people, and a summary can never eliminate that. What it does do, however, is help you decide whether you want to invest (in this case) ten minutes of your life into diving deeper.

Google’s AI search made a lot of people queasy because it sucks up the traditional list of links into a textual summary and links. Ask it a question, and it will try to answer it. This feels different, and much more fair to the content creator. Is it because Google gets paid if you actually watch the video, rather than going to a third-party web site? Very possibly.

Even in a short video where Bard does a nice job of summing up the points, you still benefit from watching the video itself:

Google Bard video YouTube 2

Mark Hachman / IDG

Where Bard doesn’t do a great job is on longer videos — such as a traditional podcast, where various points of view and topics can be debated over a long period of time. Speakers ramble, get distracted, and segue into meaningless sidetracks — all potentially entertaining, but not always of interest to either Bard or you.

Of course, you can ask Bard to collate opinions, too, its second impressive feat. I’m not as impressed here with this search, given the sometimes totally irrelevant content that Bard can highlight. Bard does a nice job in finding (admittedly, just) one video that shows how Gordon thinks about the Apple Mac. But in the search (not shown in the image below) Google also shows a collection of shorts that include cancer being found in chickens and some other random videos. None are relevant.

Google Bard YouTube video 3

Mark Hachman / IDG

One big question: can other chatbots like ChatGPT and Microsoft follow suit and deeply index YouTube’s video? I don’t know. They certainly don’t (can’t?) at present. If you ask Bing/Copilot to summarize a video, it refuses, even though Microsoft alluded to deeper search capabilities arriving in Copilot.

“I’m sorry, but I am not able to summarize the video for you,” Copilot replies, when asked to summarize a video. “However, there are some online tools that can help you with that.”

Google’s summaries aren’t perfect. As Google says, though, these are “first steps.” I’m not totally sure that Google could ever quite catch up and index the amount of content that users create daily, but Bard’s ability to make sense of it all is a noticeable improvement –and one that other chatbots simply don’t offer yet.

https://www.pcworld.com/article/2166765/googles-bard-has-one-enormous-advantage-over-other-ai-chatbots.html

Created 2y | Dec 12, 2023, 2:40:08 PM


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