After a few seconds, you’ll see four suggested images. Click any of them to learn more and find options to share, download, or save them to a collection within Edge. Recently generated images appear further down in the sidebar so you can return to them if needed. explore ideas Tab for more inspiration.
All of this is free to use, but you only get a certain number of “boosts” each month, which speeds up the AI art generation process.If you run out of boosts, you get even more through the Microsoft Rewards scheme can do. Otherwise, you’ll have to wait more patiently for the photos to come back.
Other browsers
Microsoft Edge is arguably ahead of the curve when it comes to in-browser AI tools, but other developers are on board. Opera has completely redesigned the browser to fit its generative AI capabilities. It’s called Opera One and is now available as an early access developer version.
At the moment there isn’t much to see in AI ways except for the integration of ChatGPT and ChatSonic’s alternative ChatSonic in the left sidebar. So expect more features to be added over time.
Meanwhile, the Brave browser just launched a new feature called Summarizer. Harness the power of AI to provide concise, informative and direct answers to your questions based on text extracted from web search results. The idea is that you get the response you want faster and with fewer clicks.
For example, you might want to know the difference between two different types of drinks, or you might want details about what happened at a particular historical event. Summarizer should be able to provide a quick overview without actually opening a web page. Summary sources are listed below.
