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AI

The Rabbit R1 Will Offer Up-To-Date Answers Powered By Perplexity's AI (engadget.com) 18

Despite many questions going unanswered, a startup called Rabbit sold out of its pocket AI companion a day after it was debuted at CES 2024 last week. Now, the company finally shared more details about which large language model (LLM) will be powering the device. According to Engadget, the provider in question is Perplexity, "a San Francisco-based startup with ambitions to overtake Google in the AI space." From the report: Perplexity will be providing up-to-date search results via Rabbit's $199 orange brick -- without the need of any subscription. That said, the first 100,000 R1 buyers will receive one year of Perplexity Pro subscription -- normally costing $200 -- for free. This advanced service adds file upload support, a daily quota of over 300 complex queries and the ability to switch to other AI models (GPT-4, Claude 2.1 or Gemini), though these don't necessarily apply to the R1's use case.
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The Rabbit R1 Will Offer Up-To-Date Answers Powered By Perplexity's AI

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  • Of course (Score:3, Interesting)

    by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Friday January 19, 2024 @10:12PM (#64174425)

    >"one year of Perplexity Pro subscription normally costing $200 "

    Of course! Everything now has to have some never-ending subscription. Granted, it is optional in THIS case, but you know over time, more and more of what is useful or wanted will be under some type of continuous payment model.

  • Actually this a pro subscription option is a positive sign, they need a permanent income to pay their employees and servers, and the rabbit price seemed suspiciously low, now i feel more inclined to support them!

    • To me it is the exact opposite. Hidden costs and subscriptions means you aren't buying something, you are just kinda leasing a service. Generally, I find it sleazy and/and misleading and/or unfriendly. Of course, there are exceptions. But when I am buying something like a washer, router, vacuum cleaner, stereo, car, camera, headphones, flash drive, etc, I want a product that completely works, not a subscription "service" with no idea what the actual cost of ownership will be.

    • by Chelloveck ( 14643 ) on Saturday January 20, 2024 @12:23PM (#64175105)

      Suspiciously low? This hunk of plastic doesn't actually *do* anything. It's the front-end to a web-based service. Its one big claim to fame is that has a dedicated hardware button to get its attention rather than it listening for you to say the magic word. Everything else could be done better and more cheaply with a phone app, and you could probably repurpose a Bluetooth remote camera shutter trigger to give you the dedicated button if that was so important to you.

      This has all the hallmarks of a product made for the sole purpose of riding the current buzzword hype long enough to sell the company and move on to the next buzzword.

  • I thought it was a joke product like the Pomegranate phone.

    You know when they say things look too good to be true...

  • My phone can do what it says it will do !!!! Orange brick is right !!!
  • Find out that AI is generally crap that is.

Truly simple systems... require infinite testing. -- Norman Augustine

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