Google
could
preview
its
own
take
on
Rabbit’s
large
action
model
concept
as
soon
as
December,
reports
The
Information.
“Project
Jarvis,”
as
it’s
reportedly
codenamed,
would
carry
tasks
out
for
users,
including
“gathering
research,
purchasing
a
product,
or
booking
a
flight,”
according
to
three
people
the
outlet
spoke
with
who
have
direct
knowledge
of
the
project.
Powered
by
a
future
version
of
Google’s
Gemini,
Jarvis
reportedly
only
works
with
a
web
browser
(it’s
tuned
specifically
for
Chrome).
The
tool
is
aimed
at
helping
people
“automate
everyday,
web-based
tasks”
by
taking
and
interpreting
screenshots
and
then
clicking
buttons
or
entering
text,
The
Information
writes.
In
its
current
state,
it
apparently
takes
“a
few
seconds”
between
actions.
The
biggest
AI
companies
are
all
working
on
models
that
do
things
like
what
The
Information
is
describing.
Microsoft’s
Copilot
Vision
will
let
you
talk
with
it
about
webpages
you’re
viewing.
Apple
Intelligence
is
expected
to
be
aware
of
what’s
on
your
screen
and
do
things
for
you
across
multiple
apps
at
some
point
in
the
next
year.
Anthropic
debuted
a
“cumbersome
and
error-prone”
Claude
beta
update
that
can
use
a
computer
for
you,
and
OpenAI
is
reportedly
working
on
a
version
of
that,
too.
The
Information
cautions
that
Google’s
plan
to
show
Jarvis
off
in
December
is
subject
to
change.
The
company
is
reportedly
considering
releasing
it
to
some
small
number
of
testers
to
find
and
help
the
company
work
out
bugs.
(Originally posted by Wes Davis)
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