Elon Musk’s AI chatbot Grok is getting its own iOS app and dedicated website, making it more accessible to users.
The app is described as a “truthful, useful, and curious” assistant that can answer questions, generate images from text, and perform detailed analysis of uploaded photos. Masu.
The chatbot, which recently became available to all users, excels at photorealistic rendering and allows users to create images from a wide range of content.
Did you read it long? Making it even simpler…
What’s the story?
Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence company xAI is currently testing a standalone iOS app for its chatbot Grok. Previously only available to X users.
The iOS app is being tested in Australia and several other countries.
The new platform provides access to real-time data from the internet and X, as well as generative AI features such as text rewriting and long paragraph summarization.
Tools for Q&A and image generation
In addition to rewriting and summarizing text, the Grok app also allows for Q&A sessions. You can also generate images from text prompts, which makes it even more useful.
Grok’s listing describes the app as “an AI-powered assistant designed for maximum authenticity, usefulness, and curiosity.”
We encourage users to ask questions, create impressive images, and upload photos to better understand their world.
xAI launches dedicated Grok website
To make it more accessible, xAI is also working on creating a website specifically for Grok chatbots.
The site, called Grok.com, currently displays a “coming soon” message when users try to log in with their xAI account.
This initiative will make it easier for users to use AI assistants across a variety of platforms.
Grok’s image generation model excels at photorealistic rendering
Recently, xAI expanded the access of the Grok chatbot beyond paying X subscribers.
The company began testing a free version of the chatbot in November and rolled it out to all users earlier this month.
The company emphasizes that Grok’s image generation model is particularly good at “photorealistic rendering” without imposing significant limitations on image generation capabilities.
In this way, users can generate images using photos of celebrities or copyrighted content.