phone

Dr John Chiverton writes for the Conversation about how new phones are being launched with features enabled by AI.

John Chiverton

3 minutes

New phones are being launched with features enabled by artificial intelligence (AI). The latest of these was Google鈥檚 . Samsung鈥檚 Galaxy S24 phone, released at the beginning of 2024, also features .

The hidden story behind devices like these is how companies have managed to migrate the processing required for these AI features from the cloud to the device in the palm of your hand.

In the Google Pixel 9 phone, a feature called Magic Editor allows users to using generative AI. What this is the ability to reposition the subject in the photo, erase someone else from the background, or adjust the grey sky to a blue one. It is done by providing suitable prompts and letting the app do the rest.

The phone鈥檚 generative AI features also allows you to add people or objects to your pictures by typing in a text prompt.

Of course, users have always been able to do this using photo editing software, but making the result look natural and not as if it has been obviously edited, takes some skill. Magic Editor promises to use AI to perform these complex photo edits with 鈥渟imple and intuitive actions鈥.

Another feature called 鈥淎dd Me鈥, allows users to take a group photo without having to hand your phone to a stranger. The phone鈥檚 owner simply takes a photo of the group, then hands it to a friend and steps into the same place they鈥檝e just taken a snap of. The phone then stitches the two shots together.

Another feature called 鈥淏est Take鈥 can be used to select the best elements from a series of very similar images and combine them all into one picture. Google鈥檚 chatbot technology powers a digital assistant and other features on the phone.

Features on phones have come a long way since ; or when phones started to have their own integrated cameras.

2001 BBC Archive: First Smart Phone (Cameras on phones)

To the edge

Traditionally, the processing required for such AI-based functions has been too demanding to host on a device like a phone. Instead, it is offloaded to online cloud services powered by large, powerful computer servers.

However, companies are increasingly recognising the need to perform much of the processing to customer devices, potentially putting greater control in the hands of consumers.

This involves migrating significant amounts of AI computational processing to what companies call the . The edge describes what are typically consumer devices like phones with reduced processing performance.

The difference between how cloud-based and edge-based AI work:

In order to do this, the power demands for processing need to be reduced. Companies have achieved this migration with specialised microprocessors that are specifically tailored to AI-based processes.

For instance, Google鈥檚 Tensor AI processors, referred to as Tensor Processing Units (TPU)s appear to be central to the features available on their Pixel mobiles. The edge based processors are capable of efficiently applying AI models to data acquired or stored on mobile devices .

These TPUs include networks of components , which enable large amounts of data to be processed simultaneously. This efficient design saves power and computation time.

This is crucial because of the huge number of calculations that need to be performed to make a single AI decision. This is something that processors, such as Google鈥檚 TPUs, have become much better at in the last few years.

Indeed, the initial TPUs, first designed in 2015, were created to help speed up the computations performed by large, cloud-based servers during the training of AI models. In 2018, the first designed to be used by computers at the 鈥渆诲驳别鈥 were released by Google. Then, in 2021, the first TPUs designed for phones appeared 鈥 again, for the Google Pixel.

There鈥檚 huge competition to integrate greater amounts of AI . That means we鈥檙e likely to see even more innovative technology arrive on the market in coming years.The Conversation

, Senior Lecturer in Electronic and Computer Engineering,

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .

More articles from the Conversation........