Microsoft adds AI voice chat to Bing on desktop | Engadget
You can now talk to Bing on desktop, and it can even read its replies to you out loud. Microsoft has rolled out voice support for the search engine’s chatbot on Edge for PCs, which is powered by OpenAI’s GPT-4 technology. “We know many of you love using voice input for chat on mobile,” the tech giant wrote in its latest Bing preview release notes. The feature first became available on Bing’s AI chatbot for its mobile apps. Now it’s also available on desktop — you just need to tap on the mic icon in the Bing Chat box to talk to the AI-powered bot.
The feature supports English, Japanese, French, German and Mandarin at the moment, but Microsoft says support for more languages is on the way. In addition to being able to ask Bing questions simply by speaking, the chatbot now also supports text-to-speech answers and can respond to your questions with its own voice. “Using voice input, ask Bing Chat, ‘What’s the toughest tongue twister you know?,'” Microsoft suggested. And yes, it will be able to respond.
As The Verge notes, Microsoft has introduced voice support for Bing Chat on desktop shortly after it announced that it’s killing the standalone Cortana app for Windows, which serves as a voice assistant, later this year. In its announcement back then, Microsoft pointed out that users will still have access to “powerful productivity features in Windows and Edge, which have increased AI capabilities.” In particular, it mentioned Bing Chat and Microsoft 365 Copilot, which uses artificial intelligence to generate content within the company’s apps.
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