Google’s AI Chatbot Bard New Update Improves Summaries And Sourcing: All Details

Google Bard is now open to users in India.  (Image: Google)

Google Bard is now open to users in India. (Image: Google)

Users will see numbers alongside the response, allowing them to identify the matching block of text and easily navigate to the source.

Google’s AI chatbot Bard has received a new update aimed at improving its ability to summarize information and identify sources. With this update, users can now get detailed explanation of topics without going into excessive details. This enhancement makes it easier for users to access relevant information quickly and efficiently through the chatbot.

In addition to improving abbreviations, Google has also focused on increasing the usability of sources within Bard. The chatbot can now identify which parts of the response match specific sources. Users will see numbers alongside the response, allowing them to identify the matching block of text and easily navigate to the source.

This latest update marks the third release for Bard within months, demonstrating Google’s commitment to continually refining and enhancing the chatbot’s capabilities. The chatbot was initially rolled out in the UK and US, but Google has now removed the waiting list and opened Bard to more than 180 countries and territories, including India.

In addition to English, Bard is now also available in Japanese and Korean, with the company set to support 40 languages ​​soon.

Google said the improvements made to Bard are aimed at making sources more useful and improving summarization capabilities. The company is working on developing larger language models, which have now been included in the latest update to Bard.

Bard was first introduced in February as a tool for creatives, providing writing suggestions and assisting with tasks such as songwriting. The latest update to the chatbot reflects Google’s continued investment in the language model and commitment to improving the accuracy and usability of its AI technology.

Bard, like OpenAI’s ChatGPT, has a wide range of use cases that you can explore. For example, you can learn to write code using Bard, ask it to generate code on your behalf, translate languages, write creative pieces like poems and essays, and even That can also be used for brainstorming and debugging code. Furthermore, unlike ChatGPT, Bard has access to and processes information from the real world through Google searches.