Bing: Microsoft is increasing chat limits on AI-powered Bing again – Times of India

Microsoft launched AI-powered Bing Chat earlier this year but soon after the company opened the preview to some users in the waiting list, reports suggested that the chatbot in Microsoft’s web browser went off the rails. The company then limited the chat sessions and total number of chats but has been gradually increasing the limits since then.
Microsoft has once again increased AI-powered Bing Chat’s turn limit to 30 chats per session and 300 chats per day.
“Good news, we’ve increased Bing Chat turn limits again to 30 per conversation and 300 per day,” Microsoft CVP of Search & AI, Jordi Ribas tweeted. It is to be noted that when the tool made its debut, there were no limits on it.
This also suggests that the chatbot is now more powerful and better trained in handling difficult questions.

Bing Chat improvements
The development comes a week after Microsoft announced improvements in Bing Chat.
“We’ve taken steps to help Bing Chat give better answers if you’re asking questions about sports topics—including games, schedules, stats, and standings across a variety of sports,” the company said.
According to Microsoft, Bing Chat is now more proficient in solving math problems by adding support for LaTeX markup.
“We shipped support for LaTeX markup—allowing Bing chat to correctly display complex mathematical expressions. This makes Bing chat an even more useful tool for learning math concepts or writing technical research papers,” the company noted.

The company was also able to reduce end-of-conversation triggers, and “took steps” that will enable the chatbot to give better answers about news. Last month, Microsoft said it was working to use more visual elements to help make chat answers more complete.
In March, Microsoft added “AI-generated stories” for some user searches on its Bing search engine. Bing will let users craft AI-generated stories that will provide them with multiple ways to consume “bite-sized information through text, images, video, and audio”.

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