Neo, founded by investor Ali Partovi, will get free software, mentoring for budding companiesĀ in its AI track
(Bloomberg) — Neo, the startup accelerator founded by Silicon Valley investor Ali Partovi, is forging a partnership with OpenAI and Microsoft Corp. to give free software and advice to companies in a new track focused on artificial intelligence.Ā
Companies accepted to Neoās AI cohortĀ will receive credits to use Microsoftās Azure cloud as well as OpenAIās GPT language generation tool, Dall-E image creation program and other tools, the companies announced Tuesday. The startups also willĀ get access to researchers and mentors at Microsoft and OpenAI.Ā
SinceĀ OpenAI releasedĀ its ChatGPT chatbot in November, as well as its latest language model āĀ GPT-4 āĀ last week, interest has soared amongĀ startups and established companies seeking to build the technologies into their own products. Microsoft, which recently boosted its investment in OpenAI by a reported $10 billion, is widely testing a new Bing search engine that uses GPT-4 and is overhauling its Office software. On Tuesday, Alphabet Inc.ās GoogleĀ grantedĀ the public access to its ChatGPT competitor, the conversational AI service it calls Bard.Ā Startups working in generative artificial intelligenceĀ āĀ so called because the tools are used to createĀ new content āĀ saw funding hitĀ $2.65 billion in 2022, a 71% increase from the prior year, according to CB Insights.Ā
Partovi, Neoās chief executive officer, was an early investor in companies includingĀ Facebook and Dropbox Inc., and in 1998 sold his startup LinkExchange to Microsoft, where he gotĀ his first taste of the technology industry as an intern in the early years of Windows. Partovi sees these new AI tools as having similar importance as the jumping-off point for other applications and companies.
āAs impressive as these innovations are, theirĀ greatest potential lies in how theyāll enable the next generation of startups āĀ the things that other people will build on top of them that we havenāt seen yet,ā he said.
Read more: The Tech Behind Those Amazing, Flawed New Chatbots
Neo, which is also a venture firm, has invested 46%Ā of its capital to back CEOs who are women or members of underrepresented groups, Partovi said. That focus on diverse companies and founders will be critical forĀ the development of AI.
āThis is not just about an industry or about money āĀ itās about in many waysĀ the future of humanity, and including diverse voices in that conversation is necessary for getting it right,ā he said.
Partovi expects about 10 or 12 AI startups among theĀ 20 companies that Neo will accept for the new trackĀ of its accelerator program.Ā
One of them is run byĀ Justin Fineberg, a co-founder whoās built a 250,000-person following on social media by talking about how businesses can use AI.Ā Finebergās company, whichĀ is about aĀ month old, isĀ called CassidyAI. Itās working on software tools that let customers build AI assistants for their specific company without having to know how to write programming code.
āWhen youāre an early stage startup in the AI space and youāre able to work directly with the biggest names āĀ Microsoft and OpenAI āĀ that really gives you a pretty competitive advantage,ā Fineberg said.Ā
(Updates to include mention of Google rival Bard in third paragraph. A previous version of this story corrected the tools available.)
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