10 Catchy Titles About AI and Music Industry

Published On Sat Nov 16 2024
10 Catchy Titles About AI and Music Industry

Micro Center News: This Week in AI: The Beatles Might Win Another ...

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The Beatles Might Win Another Grammy

Beatles Grammy NominationThe Fab Four are up for album of the year, and yes it's still 2024. Last year, the band released its "last" song made by all four members, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, John Lennon, and George Harrison. The piece, "Now and Then," started as a demo tape Lennon wrote half a century ago on a grainy recording that until now was nearly unusable.

Thanks to artificial intelligence technology created in part by "Lord of the Rings" movie maker Peter Jackson, producers were able to isolate and enhance Lennon's voice in the recording. The result was "crystal clear," as McCartney said in a documentary about the song.

Now, the song is up for two Grammys, competing with the likes of Taylor Swift, Beyonce, and Chappel Roan for "record of the year." The Beatles are also competing with Green Day, Pearl Jam, and others for "best rock performance."

Security CamerasIf you haven't heard the song, it's worth a listen. And if you haven't seen the documentary on how it was recorded, get some tissues ready. It was only a matter of time.

Google Launches Gemini App to Compete with OpenAI's ChatGPT

Nearly since its launch, OpenAI's ChatGPT app has been a big hit on mobile app stores. Now, Google has launched its Gemini app to compete. Like ChatGPT, you can interact with Gemini by typing in text like a message, turning on your device's microphone to talk, or taking a photo. You need a Google account for Gemini to work, though it is free.

Perplexity AI AppIf you pay $20 per month for Google's "Gemini Advanced" tier, you get access to the company's more advanced technologies, including the AI built into Gmail, Docs, and other Google services.

Perplexity Introduces Ads on Its AI Search and Answers App

Perplexity, a startup whose app is marketed as AI for search and answers, has begun experimenting with ads on its service. The new ads, reported on by TechCrunch, appear as sponsored "follow-up questions" to a search. The startup's foray into advertising comes after it faced criticism from media executives who said the startup repurposed unique news stories and other articles written for their publications.

AI Advancements in Smartphone Cameras

One industry where AI has become particularly popular is with smartphone cameras, where image-processing software from Apple, Samsung, and Google have helped create images with stunning levels of detail, lighting, and effects. It's also led many people to worry that the line between computer-generated imagery and real life is beginning to blur. Apple, Google, Meta, Adobe, and others have attempted to solve this by adding data to images effectively helping to identify when they've been manipulated by an AI.

Zerocam Offers AI-Free Photos

Halide iPhone ProcessingAnother answer is coming from apps like Zerocam, which offers what The Verge calls "a barebones app" that promises "shoot in RAW and process your photos to remove all artificial effects, delivering soft, pleasant-to-eye images." Zerocam allows users to take five photos for free each day. For more, the company offers a subscription at $1 per month or $11 per year.

The Wall Street Journal Experimenting with AI-Generated Article Summaries

One of the world's largest newspapers is experimenting with AI-generated article summaries, The Verge reported earlier this week. The summaries, called "Key Points," offer bullet point breakdowns of news stories from an AI tool, whose output is "reviewed by a journalist before publishing."