Google Bard doesn't catch ChatGPT, testers say

On Tuesday, Google began testing Bard from the world, inviting users in the US and UK to sign up for access.

google bar

The company first introduced Bard in February, after the launch of ChatGPT which started taking the world by storm.

Unfortunately the alpha of Bard originally released did not elicit positive comments as there were already benchmarks against OpenAI's GPT-4 technology. The Bard with an error in presenting his demonstration last month it caused $100 billion to be lost from its valuation of the Alphabet company.

So the bad news continues as the testers report that the current version of Bard doesn't measure up to the competition.

“I play with it for a while today and I never thought I'd say this, but… Bing is way ahead of Google right now (in this particular chat mode),” wrote YouTuber Marques Brownlee on Twitter.

Ethan Mollick, an associate professor at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School, where he teaches entrepreneurship and innovation, added that, although it's early, Google's Bard doesn't seem as capable as learning as much as Bing or GPT-4”.

Mollick added that "Google's Bard loses" to his rival in poetry, struggling far beyond his ability to create a consistent verse form.

In a prompt to create Bard a synopsis of a “Star Wars” movie in the style of director David Lynch, known for his incredible storytelling, ended up reproducing a “Star Wars” plot by standard standards.

Bard also has trouble handling word puzzles, an area where AIs powered by large language models should theoretically excel.

iGuRu.gr The Best Technology Site in Greecefgns

every publication, directly to your inbox

Join the 2.087 registrants.
Google Bard, ChatGPT

Written by giorgos

George still wonders what he's doing here ...

Leave a reply

Your email address is not published. Required fields are mentioned with *

Your message will not be published if:
1. Contains insulting, defamatory, racist, offensive or inappropriate comments.
2. Causes harm to minors.
3. It interferes with the privacy and individual and social rights of other users.
4. Advertises products or services or websites.
5. Contains personal information (address, phone, etc.).