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Photo/AI Pin website

1. AI Pin received mixed reviews after its launch

Humane's AI Pin, a screenless wearable device, has been met with criticism from reviewers, who say it is an unfinished product that fails to live up to its promises. The device, which costs $699 plus a $24 monthly subscription fee, is designed to allow users to escape the shackles of their smartphones. However, critics say it is poorly designed and difficult to use.

2. OpenAI releases new GPT-4 Turbo model to paid ChatGPT users

OpenAI has released its new GPT-4 Turbo model to paid ChatGPT users. The new model offers improved writing, math, logic reasoning, and coding capabilities. GPT-4 Turbo is trained on data that includes information up to April 2023, which is a significant improvement over the previous GPT-4 model.

3. Elon Musk's xAI company shows off Grok-1.5 Vision

Elon Musk's xAI company has released a teaser for its Grok-1.5 Vision product and is hiring for a number of positions in the Bay Area. The company is focusing on multimodal visual information processing and is positioning Grok-1.5 Vision as a competitor to OpenAI's GPT-4.

4. Apple reportedly plans to use AI chips to upgrade Mac lineup

Apple is reportedly planning to overhaul its entire Mac lineup with new AI-powered M4 chips. The company is hoping to use the new chips to boost its flagging computer business. The next-generation M4 chips are expected to be available in at least three different versions and will be used to upgrade all of Apple's Mac models.

5. Amazon appoints AI expert Andrew Ng board of directors

Amazon has announced that it has appointed AI expert Andrew Ng board of directors. Ng is the founder of DeepLearning.ai and co-founder of online education platform Coursera. He is a leading figure in the field of AI and has previously worked for Google and Baidu.

6. First AI programmer, Devin, caught fabricating skills

Devin, the first AI programmer to make waves in Silicon Valley, has been caught fabricating his skills. A programmer blogger analyzed Devin's videos frame by frame and provided evidence that Devin is not as skilled as he appears to be. The blogger alleges that Devin's tasks are not random but carefully selected and that they do not match real customer needs. The blogger also found that Devin repeatedly created bugs and then fixed them in order to make himself look good.

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Editor: Alexander