This intellectual gadget is similar to glasses or rather even to a monocle. It was invented by Brian Hau-Ping Chang, a student at Stanford University (USA). The RizzGPT device, which Brian developed with a team of like-minded individuals, will help you stay composed during a date, job interview, exam, and other challenging situations.
In a social media post about the newly created glasses, the inventor urged future users of the gadget to say goodbye to “awkward dates and interviews.”
The name of the monocle includes the slang term “rizz,” which means the ability to impress, or in other words, charisma. Thus, the Chang team is convinced that this intellectual gadget will help conquer any conversation partner with clever responses.
From the title, one can also guess that the small monocle RizzGPT was developed by Stanford students based on ChatGPT This is the name of the AI chatbot from OpenAI that caused a big stir in the global network at the end of last year. It became famous for its amazing capabilities, such as writing texts and codes, translating, providing accurate answers to questions, and more. The Stanford team used the March language model GPT-4 for their monocle, which generates not only texts but also images.
How does it work?
The owner of the smart monocle will control it through a smartphone. RizzGPT is equipped with a camera, a microphone with OpenAI’s Whisper voice recognition system, an open-source Monocle AR device, and a display from Brilliant Labs. The microphone picks up what the speaker says and transmits the audio to the GPT-4 chatbot. The chatbot then generates a response that is instantly displayed on the screen.
The author of the idea claims that the glasses process questions and provide answers in just a few seconds. The owner of this useful device does not need to feel awkward while the system searches for the required answer. After all, they can clearly see both the display and their conversation partner at the same time, the publication reported. Daily Mail .
Students hope that their device will help not only couples on a nervous first date but also those who suffer from social anxiety and fear public speaking.
On his Twitter page, Brian Hau-Ping Chang wrote that he and his engineer friends dream of “a new era of background computing based on AR + AI, where everyone has their own personal assistant available 24/7.” “It’s like God is watching over your life and telling you exactly what to do next,” he added.