Recent research has revealed growth trends in people using AI chatbots like ChatGpt for news updates, especially among younger demographics. The report highlights the rise in AI-driven personal shopping advances in launching an innovative stylist app by AI, while highlighting the rise in AI integration.
Your AI Newsreader
According to recent media reports, people are increasingly turning to generative AI chatbots like ChatGpt. Annual survey from the Reuters Institute for Journalism Research found that it was “first time.” We found that a considerable number of people are using chatbots to get headings and updates. According to a poll conducted by YouGov of 97,000 institutes in 48 countries, 7% of people report using AI to find news, but that rate is higher among young people, in 12% under 35 and 15% under 25. Using more AI (27%), we summarized articles translated (24%) or recommended (21%), with one in five asking about the current event.
New York-based fashion technology startup Alta has announced that it has raised $11 million in seed funding to build an AI-powered “next-generation personal shopping and styling.” Alta's core products are AI stylists/individual shoppers who create shopping and outfit recommendations based on user's closet, lifestyle, budget, opportunities and weather. The app utilizes more than dozens of multimodal-generated AI models trained with fashion data, a press release from the company said. Users can also try out the recommended outfits in their virtual avatars. You can also match items that are available for mixing or shopping with items from your closet.
AI is not coming for your job
The top executives of global recruiter ManPowergroup at the Vivatech fair in Paris, where employers are looking for workers with different skills as their skills mature, while employers are likely exaggerated, while employers will look for workers with different skills. For ManPowerGroup, AI agents “certainly won't become our core business any time soon,” said Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic, the company's chief innovation officer. “If history shows us one thing, that's why most of these predictions are wrong.” An International Labour Organization (ILO) report published in May found that the generated AI model “one in four people around the world are in occupations with some degree of exposure.”
