On Tuesday, Adobe introduced an artificial intelligence assistant within its Reader and Acrobat applications, capable of producing summaries of PDFs and other documents, as well as answering questions about them. The assistant, currently in beta, is accessible on Acrobat with features set to roll out on Reader gradually. Adobe plans to unveil a subscription plan for the tool post-beta.
Adobe has unveiled an AI assistant with the ability to search for and summarize PDF documents.
Designed to aid users in digesting lengthy PDF documents, the AI assistant generates concise overviews and facilitates interactive Q&A sessions about the content through a conversational interface. Additionally, it can suggest potential questions about the document. The assistant can generate citations for users to verify the source of its answers and produce text for various formats like emails, presentations, and reports.
While other AI models like ChatGPT offer PDF readers for document analysis, they typically require users to upload PDFs. Adobe’s AI assistant is an integrated feature within its applications.
In an interview on CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street,” Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen emphasized that the tool aims to democratize access to the vast number of PDFs in circulation. He illustrated scenarios where users can quickly grasp summaries, engage in conversations, and correlate information across documents within their enterprise.
Addressing concerns about competition from OpenAI’s new tool, Sora, which generates high-definition video from text prompts, Narayen mentioned that Adobe is also advancing its video models responsibly to enhance tools and workflows.
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