Do you remember the AI wearable gadgets that were all the rage last year?Six Swedish Girls at a Pump (High Test Girls Two of the biggest physical products just resurfaced this week after falling out of the limelight following underwhelming releases: Humane and Rabbit.
Humane announcedit was killing its Ai Pin less than one year after launching it, effectively confirming it was a failure.
Rabbit, however, appears to still be kicking. In fact, the company just released a preview videothat showed off a demonstration of its new Android AI agent.
Rabbit's Android AI agent is able to control an Android device based on the prompts provided by the user. According to Rabbit, with these capabilities its Android agent is able to change app notifications in the device's settings, search YouTube, add ingredients from one app to a list on Google Keep, generate a poem using AI and then sent it in WhatsApp, download a game from Google Play and learn how to play it, and more.
The company says this Android AI agent builds on the work that they showed off last year involving its web agent LAM Playground.
SEE ALSO: Humane has killed its Ai Pin less than a year after its releaseWatching the video, it's clear that the Android AI agent is very much a work in progress. The AI generally delivers on each user request but with varying degrees of competence. The whole thing is pretty slow though. It's unclear exactly why you would use an AI agent to do these specific tasks mentioned in the video as these are things that can be accomplished by the user basically in the same timeframe it takes to enter the prompt and have the AI deliver it.
The odd thing about the whole video is that the company's actual product that it sold to customers, the wearable AI agent known as Rabbit R1, is just sitting unused on a desk. It serves no purpose. The product that's actually available and being sold to customers for $199 is not involved in the performance of any of these tasks being demoed.
After seeing Humane crash and burn so quickly, this video shows that Rabbit is still alive and very much working on AI products, so that's a good thing for consumers who have invested in the product already. For now.
Topics Artificial Intelligence
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