![]() But Bing has, I come to think of it as, a search personality and a chat personality. What is the other half of Bing’s split personality? I mean, I didn’t know it had more than one personality. And I started chatting with Bing again, but this time in a different way.Īnd by doing so, I encountered what I now believe to be the other half of Bing’s split personality. And I said what I thought about it at the time, which was that it was a very impressive and often helpful, if occasionally erratic, search engine.Īnd then I went and made Valentine’s Day dinner and had a lovely time with my wife. ![]() So a couple days ago, you and I talked about Bing, the search engine for Microsoft and this new I technology that had been built into Bing that was made by OpenAI, the makers of ChatGPT. and I think important, that it kind of felt like journalistic malpractice to not do a follow-up and explain and disclose what happened. The reason you’re back is because you had an experience with this new search engine that was so unsettling. Two days ago, you came on to talk about this new technology, a search engine powered by artificial intelligence, released by Microsoft. It’s been a wild 48 hours since our last conversation. Today, the follow up episode we didn’t plan to make. Soon after, Kevin met the dark side of that technology. On Wednesday, my colleague, Kevin Roose, came on the show to describe a major breakthrough in how we use artificial intelligence to search the internet. Please review the episode audio before quoting from this transcript and email with any questions.įrom “The New York Times,” I’m Michael Barbaro. While it has been reviewed by human transcribers, it may contain errors. This transcript was created using speech recognition software. Our technology columnist encounters the darker side of Bing’s A.I. Kruse said we’ll have to wait and see how fast the weather warms up and how many more storms we see as spring approaches.Transcript The Online Search Wars Got Scary. “In 1982-1983 … it stayed very stormy and very wet very late into May,” ![]() “It really depends on how the character of the spring unfolds,” Kruse said. However, Kruse said that’s not a guarantee. This year, it’s 16.6 inches.Īnd while more storm water is good for the drought, it could mean the potential for flooding by the time things warm up this spring.įor comparison purposes, ahead of the flooding in 1983 that left State Street in Salt Lake City a literal river, Utah registered 15.8 inches of storm water, less than the 16.6 inches we’re sitting at now. Kruse said at this time last year the statewide storm water average was 9.6 inches. ![]() With an inch an hour of snow Tuesday night and Wednesday morning, snow totals will pile up. Utah’s snowpack levels are already incredible, ranging from 118- to 194% across the state.Īccording to Eubank, the intensity of the snowfall is what makes this storm a concern. UDOT is urging people to leave work early on Tuesday if possible and to avoid road travel on Wednesday morning.Įubank tells KSL NewsRadio, it will be heavy snow that will make its way to unlikely places like St. “It’s on par with some of the other big storms we’ve had this year. “It is a significant storm, ” said Eubank. Early Tuesday morning, UDOT road signs warned drivers in Davis County to prepare for road snow as early as 11 a.m.Ĭonfirmed by KSL meteorologist Kevin Eubank, evening commutes will be affected.
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