Todayâs Menu đ„
- Elon Musk Tells Advertisers To âGo F*** Yourselvesâ
- Daily Trivia: Do You Know Your Stuff?
- Find Songs You Canât Remember With Humming
- When You Take A Pregnancy Test After A Night Out
Fast Snacks đ„Ą
Pika AI Gains Another $35M In Funding
Pika Launches AI Video Editing App And Announces $55 Million In Funding. Founded in April, the four-person startup is already valued by venture…
Amazon Announces New AI Chip
Amazon Web Services announced Trainium2, a chip for training artificial intelligence models, and it will also offer access to Nvidiaâs next-generation H200 Tensor Core graphics processing unitsâŠ
Best Courses For ChatGPT, Midjourney, & More
The best way to fight your fear of artificial intelligence is to better understand this worldâŠ
Learn To Build No Code AIs
Join MindStudioâs virtual Hackathon 12/2-12/4. Learn how to develop AI business copilots that transform how we work – no coding required!
Elon Tells Advertisers To Go F*** Themselves đł
This is one of the most extraordinary 5-minute clips Iâve ever seen on this app. An epoch-making exchange. pic.twitter.com/DbAFF5MkWD
â Joel Berry (@JoelWBerry) November 30, 2023
Elon Mus, the owner of X [aka Twitter], Tesla, & SpaceX, had a message for Disney CEO Bob Iger and other advertisers who have fled the platform: âGo F*** Yourselfâ
Musk made these comments during an interview at The New York Times DealBook Summit, where he discussed the advertiser boycott, the potential impact on the company, and his feelings on the boycott.
He specifically called out Iger, who had earlier discussed Disneyâs decision to pull its advertising from X.
Elon, like many people, isnât a fan of being blackmailed with money.
Shortly after the clips went viral, the New York Times removed their own video to likely appease their own advertisers.
Did New York Times delete the interview of Elon telling the advertisers to go f*ck themselves?! đ pic.twitter.com/c5HOzsx4dy
â Ashley St. Clair (@stclairashley) November 30, 2023
MaxAI: Use 1-Click AI Anywhere đ±ïž
Will a robot be sitting at your desk tomorrow? Probably not.
However, the person competing for your next job will probably know the concepts behind AI, and how to put them to work.
Luckily, Brilliant offers thousands of quick, interactive lessons in AI, data science, and more.
Thursday Trivia đ°
What is the name of the technology that allows computers to communicate and share information over long distances?
- A. Telecommunications
- B. Network Event
- C. Data Transmission
- D. Internet Protocol
Login or Subscribe to participate in polls.
Find the answer at the bottom of tomorrowâs newsletter.
Google Can Find Any Song With Humming
Do you know that song that goes, âda na na na nuh da na na na nuh whouh whouhhâ? Or the one that starts with the guitar chords going, âreeee ne na naaâ?
Yeah⊠we all know how frustrating it is when you canât remember the name of a song but the tune is stuck in your head.
You canât use Shazam.
You canât ask ChatGPT.
You canât search for it on Google⊠or wait – you can!?
Before all the AI hype, the Google app received an update that allows you to whistle, hum, or sing a melody to Google that then uses machine learning find what youâre looking for.
- You tap the mic icon in the search bar.
- You tap the âSearch a songâ button.
- You let your best humming/singing while Google does the work.
After youâre finished humming, Googleâs algorithm helps identify potential song matches with the most likely options.
Then you can select the best match and explore information on the song and artist, view any accompanying music videos or listen to the song on your favorite music app, find the lyrics, read analysis and even check out other recordings of the song when available.
How does it work?
An easy way to explain it is that a songâs melody is like its fingerprint: They each have their own unique identity. Theyâve built machine learning models that can match your hum, whistle or singing to the right âfingerprint.â
When you hum a melody into Search, machine learning models transform the audio into a number-based sequence representing the songâs melody.
Googleâs models are trained to identify songs based on a variety of sources, including humans singing, whistling or humming, as well as studio recordings.
The algorithms also take away all the other details, like accompanying instruments and the voice’s timbre and tone, and what youâre left with is the songâs number-based sequence, or the fingerprint.
Finally, they compare these sequences to thousands of songs from around the world and identify potential matches in real time.
So next time you canât remember the name of some catchy song you heard on the radio or that classic jam your parents love, just start humming. Youâll have your answer in less than a minute.
5 AI-Powered Apps To Improve Your Writing đ§°
Hemingway Editor: A web-based tool that helps you write clear and concise prose..
Rytr: A writing tool that can help you generate email content, marketing copy, and social media posts.
Narrato: A content generation platform that can help you generate email content, blog posts, and website copy.
Writerzen: A writing tool that can help you generate marketing copy, blog posts, and website copy.
Scalenut: A writing tool that can help you generate blog posts, website copy, and social media posts.
Taking A Clear Blue Test After Drinking Too Many đ€Ł
Correct Answer âïž
The correct answer was C. Natural language processing (NLP)
C. Natural language processing (NLP)
NLP is a field of AI that deals with the interaction between computers and human language. It is concerned with the ability of computers to understand, interpret, and generate human language.
NLP techniques are used in a wide variety of applications, including machine translation, chatbots, and voice assistants.