Meta AI Studio Handbook To customize their chatbot, users can enter a detailed description along with a name and image and specify how they want it to respond to certain inputs. Llama then uses those instructions to improvise responses. According to Meta, Instagram users can “customize the AI based on the content on Instagram, topics they want to avoid, links they want to share, and more.”
Over the past year, Meta has become an AI success story thanks to its determination to deliver robust AI solutions. Free AI ModelsLast week, the company Stronger version released The company developed the large-scale language model Llama and provides developers, researchers, and startups with free access to models that rival OpenAI’s more powerful paid models. Chat GPTThe company says all of the new chatbots are based on the latest version of Llama.
But Meta has struggled to find the right tone and niche for its AI products. Launching a series of AI chatbots modeled after real celebritiesThese include a fantasy role-play Dungeon Master Bot inspired by Snoop Dogg, a jokey Sports Bot inspired by Tom Brady, an Everyday Companion Bot inspired by Kendall Jenner, and more.
But those bots weren’t a big hit, and Meta discontinued them.Meta spokesman John Carville said the company learned from its previous experiments, and “AI Studio is an evolution.”
There’s plenty of evidence to suggest that fully customizable bots are more appealing to users. Character AIFounded by several ex-Googlers who helped make breakthroughs in AI, the company engages millions of users with its custom-made chatbots.
Zuckerberg also touted Meta’s other new open-source AI advancements at SIGGRAPH. The company developed a new tool, Segment Anything Model (SAM) 2, to identify content in images and videos. An earlier version is widely used for image analysis. Meta said SAM 2 can be used, for example, to more efficiently analyze the content of videos. Zuckerberg showed off the technology to track cows roaming a ranch on the island of Kauai. “Scientists are using this technology to study coral reefs, natural habitats and the evolution of landscapes,” he told Huang.
In an onstage interview with WIRED’s Lauren Good that same day, Nvidia CEO Huang said he “absolutely” wants a “Jensen AI” that knows everything he’s said, written and done. “If you prompt it, it’ll say something clever,” he said. Huang could also force stock analysts to bombard the bot with questions about the company instead of him. “That’s the first thing we need,” he said with a laugh.