I lived with AI in my browser for two weeks here’s what happened – Laptop Mag

AI chatbots have spared no one. Within a few months, theyve made their way into search engines, photo editors, and spreadsheets; the lists endless. Their next target is what most of us spend hours on each day: Web browsers.

Though the web itself has evolved beyond measure, browsers have looked and worked the same for years. We go through an immense volume of content and correspondence, often without context, and browsers do little to help us better navigate and understand it. Unlike the rest of our apps and devices, web browsers have yet to embrace automation. Now, the ChatGPT-fueled AI wave has spurred a handful of browser makers to wonder if AI could lend us a hand.

Earlier this year, Microsoft, which also backs the firm behind ChatGPT, rolled out the Bing AI chatbot to the Edge browser. Others soon followed. From Opera to alternate, niche brands like SigmaOS have raced to add an AI sidekick to their eponymous browsers. Heck, even Samsungs planning to integrate ChatGPT inside its internet browser on Galaxy devices.

The question is, do you need AI in your browser? I lived with Edge and Opera for a couple of weeks to find out.

Each browser AI assistant so far functions more or less the same way. It lives as a sidebar and allows you to chat with a ChatGPT-powered bot and fetch answers on any topic. You can ask specific questions, generate text for emails and social media posts, and summarize articles. Plus, the bot can read the contents of the web page youre browsing so that you can request further insights or context about it.

Microsoft Edge offers the most elaborate layout, however. When you click the big blue Bing AI option at the top-right corner, it opens up a multi-tab sidebar with dedicated sections for Chat, Compose, and Insights.

The first tab functions like any typical chatbot, albeit with access to your current web page. Besides the usual queries, this lets you simply punch in, for example, summarize this, and the chatbot will spurt out a few bulleted highlights after sifting through the website for a minute or two. What I found handy was the set of follow-up suggestions Bing AI presented beneath each response, which cut back the effort I had to put in to fetch the information. Once it summarized the review of an e-ink tablet, it checked with me if Id like to know how an e-inks screen works.

The second, Compose, as the name suggests, lets you auto-generate text for any purpose. All you have to do is give a prompt. In case youre looking for a specific output, youll also find filters to set the tone, format (like a blog post or an email), and length. The Add to Site button pastes the draft to a selected text box so that you dont have to copy it yourself.

The third tab is where I spent most of my time. It stitches together a dossier of the link you are on. Apart from a summary and highlights, it shows you the websites trust rating, related searches to dive deeper, and listings of a product on other platforms (if you are shopping). It worked well when I wanted to skim an article or read other related stories. On a phone review, for example, I could visit videos about it right from the Bing AI sidebar. Although I was disappointed to discover that it didnt surface its e-commerce link and price.

Operas Aria browser chatbot does a few tasks better. For me, its best quality is that you dont have to pull out the sidebar to use it. You can either launch a Spotlight-search bar with a keyboard shortcut and enter your query there or select a text, which is when the browser brings up three, hovering options: Explain briefly, Explore topic, and Translate.

Though this menu sounds fairly insignificant, it saves up a lot of time if you actively use the browser chatbot. Bing AIs Insights often missed the exact phrase or word on a web page I wanted to explore more and, as a result, I had to type a question or paste it in the chat manually. Operas quick search bar also feels a lot more natural while Im knee-deep in research, as opposed to moving a cursor all the way to the corner on Edge.

While these AI sidebars were productive and replaced the one option I probably used to click the most: the Search with Google option in the right-click menu, they are also vastly limited and passive at the moment. Thats both an upside and a downside.

On one hand, that means they dont interfere with your existing browsing experience, and are there when you need them. At the same time, I wished they were more proactive, and gave me suggestions or insights as Im scrolling. Even though Operas approach is faster, it still opens a sidebar I have to shift my vision to, and Id rather prefer a mini hovering window in the center itself.

The most surprising omission was that these AI functions cant perform any browser actions like sifting my browsing history to unearth what Ive read about a topic in the past, and offer that as context if I search for it again. In their current form, therefore, unfortunately, they feel no more than a ChatGPT wrapper.

A bigger worry for me is what these rampant AI assistants mean for privacy. Both Microsoft and Opera say they store conversations for a month before deleting them. Your data is also anonymously stored on OpenAIs servers, which by default trains its models on it, but you can go into settings and disable that. Security researchers have been able to trick chatbots like Bing AI into asking people for their private information, including your email inbox and bank account.

Browsers have always functioned as windows to the web. With new AI features, though, companies are hoping to take a step further. Instead of you choosing what your online experience looks like, AI chatbots limit the internets scope to their knowledge and the chat windows borders. Though I found it helpful on occasion, these updates seem rushed and have little utility. Id rather just open another tab.

Back to Ultrabook Laptops

Read the original here:

I lived with AI in my browser for two weeks here's what happened - Laptop Mag

Related Posts

Comments are closed.