Arguably essentially the most attention-grabbing characteristic of LAMs in the R1 is an experimental “teach mode,” which will arrive by way of an update at a later date. Simply point the R1’s digital camera at your desktop display or telephone and carry out a task you’d want the R1 to learn—Lyu’s example was eradicating a watermark in Adobe Photoshop. (Hooray, stealing copyrighted images!) You’re essentially coaching your personal “rabbits” to learn how you do niche duties you’d somewhat automate. Once your rabbits study the task, you presumably can then press the button and ask your R1 to do something you alone have taught it. At least, that was my takeaway after my first chat with the founder of Rabbit Inc., a brand new AI startup debuting a pocket-friendly gadget known as the R1 at CES 2024.