Microsoft’s AI-powered Bing Chat coming to mobile browsers
To mark the sixth month anniversary of Bing Chat, Microsoft is bringing new AI-powered Bing in third-party browsers on the web and mobile soon. In the last six months, Microsoft has been busy rolling out AI-powered features almost everywhere.
Microsoft claims that to date it has seen over 1 billion chats and over 750 million images in Bing in the last six months. By removing the requirement for users to install a specific browser to access these AI-services, Microsoft aims to onboard more users from both the desktop and mobile ecosystems.
Microsoft on Monday announced it plans to launch Bing Chat for third-party browsers on the web and mobile. This means Safari and Chrome users will soon be able to use Bing AI Chat.
In late July, Microsoft confirmed its ChatGPT-like Bing Chat was being tested in third-party browsers like Chrome and Safari for select users.
“This next step in the journey allows Bing to showcase the incredible value of summarized answers, image creation and more, to a broader array of people,” says the Bing team in a blog post. “You’ll get most of the great benefits of Bing and we’ll continue to optimise along the way to meet your needs across different browsers,” it read.
The new AI-powered Bing Chat is also receiving several new features as part of its six-month anniversary. This includes an enhanced Bing Chat with support for longer conversations and chat history, available exclusively on the Edge browser. Microsoft is also introducing a dark mode for Bing Chat and Bing Chat Enterprise on desktop and mobile to reduce power consumption and be easier on users’ eyes.
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