10 Creative Ways to Personalize AI Assistants

Published On Sat Jun 15 2024
10 Creative Ways to Personalize AI Assistants

This ChatGPT-powered robot koala bear is giving me serious Five Nights at Freddy's vibes

AI assistants have an image problem. While chatbots and virtual assistants like ChatGPT and Copilot might have their uses, there's something cold and unforgiving about a blinking cursor and a text response. Surely we could personalize them a little, and soften those hard, robotic edges?

What if, for example, you put one inside a cute little koala bear stuffed toy? Wouldn't that be lovely?

This ChatGPT-powered robot koala bear is giving me serious Five Nights at Freddy's vibes

Reddit user Spiritual_Aside_7859 has created a Raspberry Pi-powered and ChatGPT-enabled stuffed koala bear (via Tom's Hardware), complete with motorized animations and some cheerful LED lights. If all of that sounds adorable, well, wait until you see it in motion.

The Tech Behind the Koala Bear

ChatGPT Taught Me How To Build A Robot From Scratch - YouTube

The project makes use of a Raspberry Pi in tandem with an Arduino Uno R4 to interface ChatGPT with the onboard hardware. That includes an ultrasonic sensor to detect when objects are nearby and become aware of people in the room. Combine that with a mini OLED monitor jammed into the koala's eye-socket for "suspicious looks" and what you have here is less of a cuddly companion, and more something that looks like it may chase you down the corridor in the dead of night.

The bear is able to speak via ChatGPT's responses to text prompts, verbalized with the use of a text-to-speech app, although Spiritual_Aside_7859 is taking suggestions as to how the project overall could be improved. Current future plans for the death koala—I mean ambitious project—include improving speech recognition and adding a mouth display. Worryingly, Spiritual_Aside_7859 says that the bear does have a form of speech recognition integration already, but it seemed to only hear them twice.

This ChatGPT-powered robot koala bear is giving me serious Five Nights at Freddy's vibes

Buggy implementation, or feigned ignorance to induce a false sense of security? My money's on the latter.

The Haunting Koala

What with that terrifyingly janky head movement—and a determination to make the bear appear both curious and disapproving towards humans—what's been created here seems to be less of a creative mix of AI and robotics and more something designed to scare small children. And terrify adults. At this point I can only hope that it doesn't become capable of proper movement, as this project strikes as being a Roomba integration away from something that will haunt my dreams for some time to come.

In Other News:

Paris Fury shares video of two-year-old daughter swearing. Broadly there are two types of modern television viewers: right-minded folks who care about high definition and the savages who claim not to. Around the advent of Sky+ there was a running battle in my family home over the space used by programmes recorded to the set-top box.