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On May 10, local time, Google (Google) released the AI file management tool project “Project Tailwind” at its I/O developer conference, which was described as a future notebook and a private artificial intelligence model that can Uploaded document training. Users can ask AI questions and get feedback on documents. Google is pitching it as a learning tool, and it’s still in the “early” stages, with waitlist testing only available in the US.
Positioned as a personalized tutor or writing companion, Project Tailwind has great appeal and potential for users who regularly work with large volumes of text. Josh Woodward, senior director of product management at Google, gave part of his presentation: “The way it works is you can simply pick files from Google Drive, and it effectively creates a personalized and private An artificial intelligence model that has expertise on the information you provide”.
Google has reportedly launched “Project Tailwind,” a new AI-first tool that’s effectively a notebook of the future that helps you research information as you write it.
In addition to integrating new AI in Google Search and Workspace products such as Docs and Gmail, Google has also launched “Project Tailwind.”
Google describes Tailwind as an “AI-first notebook” that can extract information from documents you upload or from documents in Google Drive.
Users can ask the AI questions in natural language and get help within the context of their documents, including annotations. There are also New Idea, Reading Quiz, and Summary buttons. In effect, this creates study guides that are not based on information from the web, with buttons for “new idea”, “reading quiz” and “summary”. In effect, this can create study guides that are not based on information from the web.
The waitlist for “Project Tailwind” is now open, but it’s currently only available in the US. Google says it’s still in the “early days.”
Manuscript source: Zhongguancun Online
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