There’s a lot of knowledge on YouTube. Bard is learning what it is.
Much has been made of AI chatbots’ ability to summarize PDF files or long Web pages. But there’s a gigantic time-saver that Google’s Bard is beginning to deploy, and it’s worth checking out: Knowledge of the gazillion hours of YouTube video it’s already archived.
On November 21, Google took “the first steps in Bard’s ability to understand YouTube videos,” according to the list of Bard updates that Google publishes. Coming as it did the week of Thanksgiving and Black Friday, the improvement didn’t generate much notice. But after playing around with it, I have to say that there’s an enormous amount of hidden potential.
Take YouTube in general. If you’re like me, you may listen to it as a podcast, or if you’re looking for specific instructions on how to complete a task. (My wife just used it to learn how to change a headlamp bulb in her vehicle, and she was immensely proud of her accomplishment as well as the money it saved us.)
But YouTube takes time — a lot of it, especially if you’re wading through hours-long podcasts to find an opinion or a factoid, or just the piece of advice you’re looking for. You can imagine, for example, how much information was communicated over radio during the last fifty years.