Rabbit is also working on an AI-native operating system to replace the current app-based ecosystem. The company's approach, LAM, aims to simplify human-computer interaction by allowing users to state their intentions to an agent capable of operating interfaces on their behalf. Rabbit's CEO, Jesse Lyu, compared this to the transition from the command line terminal to the graphical user interface, making apps invisible and irrelevant to users by providing a more convenient interaction layer. The company has already made significant improvements to the system based on feedback from early adopters and plans to continue this iterative process.
Key takeaways:
- AI startup rabbit inc. has announced the beta version of its teach mode agent system, which allows users to create and instruct their own AI agents to automate actions on different digital interfaces.
- The teach mode learns to perform tasks by studying how users perform them, and can intuit subtle variations of lessons to perform similar but slightly different tasks.
- Rabbit is also working on an AI-native operating system to replace the current app-based ecosystem, aiming to simplify human-computer interaction by allowing users to state their intentions to an agent which operates the interfaces on their behalf.
- Since launching its first product, rabbit has issued more than 20 over-the-air software updates, continuously improving its core agent technology and leading the company’s future innovation.