
"The rise of generative AI in recent years has caused a massive strategic reorientation across the tech industry, as companies have scrambled to launch their own AI-powered products and services. Perhaps most memorably, Meta -- which three years ago changed its name from Facebook to signal its shift toward the metaverse (remember that thing?) -- announced that 2023 would be its "year of productivity," focused in large part on a pivot toward AI."
"In addition to the name change, the company is also launching a new AI assistant, dubbed Superhuman Go. Its primary function is to orchestrate several different agents and adaptively determine which one is best suited to assist users with a particular writing or editing task. Superhuman Go is part of the company's new Superhuman suite, available now to all paid users, which also includes Grammarly -- it's not being retired, just absorbed into the new Superhuman product portfolio."
Grammarly changed its name to Superhuman and launched Superhuman Go, an AI assistant that orchestrates multiple agents to assist with writing and editing tasks. Superhuman Go adaptively selects the agent best suited to a given task. The Superhuman suite is available now to paid users and includes Grammarly, Coda (an AI-powered workplace productivity and collaboration platform acquired in December), and Superhuman Mail, a new email feature that leverages AI agents. The rebrand emphasizes augmenting human creativity and productivity through AI rather than replacing people. The shift reflects broader industry trends toward generative AI and AI-driven productivity tools.
Read at ZDNET
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