At its recently held Google I/O conference, Google announced its adoption of WebGPU, a brand new technology allowing web applications to better access the artificial intelligence software that is rapidly gaining attention. App developers now have the opportunity to use their phone and laptop hardware to process and gain from AI faster, without having to worry about network issues or data protection.
This development is the result of WebGPU’s background and years of research by prominent players such as Google, Apple, and Microsoft. This growing popularity of AI technology in recent times has been fueled by the introduction of programs like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google’s Bard, in addition to industry-leading products such as Adobe’s Photoshop and Microsoft’s Bing.
Matt Waddell, who looks after Chrome’s developer and consumer-related tasks, has explained the vast potential of WebGPU, who mentioned the capability of apps like Stability AI’s Stable Diffusion software to transform text prompts into images. His team demonstrated a web application running this software at the event.
To further strengthen the base of web capabilities, Chrome also announced its partnership with Firefox, Safari, and Microsoft Edge to create Baseline. It is a new technology which will flag out web features that all browsers support for easy and hassle-free development. These advances, along with WebAssembly capabilities, will allow software written in Kotlin language to run in web browsers with great speed.
Google has been working hard to catch up to the exciting AI world of today, as CEO Sundar Pichai had proclaimed Google an AI-first company in 2016. From healthcare businesses and AI-powered product within the creative space, WebGPU looks like a promising technology with many unique advantages. With the numerous updates and novel approaches to gaining from AI, it is clear that Chrome is setting the pioneer for next-level innovation within the industry.