Another new Meet feature lets Duet “attend” a meeting on your behalf. On a meeting invite, you can click an “attend for me” button, and Google can auto-generate some text about what you might want to discuss. Those notes will be viewable to attendees during the meeting so that they can discuss them.

  • djmarcone@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    This is cool, but, if you can get by with this then did you really need to attend the meeting in the first place?

    And once everyone but the meeting caller sends the bot… Good luck with that.

  • Mr PoopyButthole@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    What’s funny is that this could only help if just one or two people use it in a given meeting. But if 4/6 people were to use it, then most of the meeting’s purpose is gone, and the notes are about nothing.

    I feel like these LLM transcription summaries are better for quick reviewing of info.

    The real dream is that when a boss has a long shpeil to dump on everyone, they could just ramble on to a conference room of bots and then it turns their whole “talk” into the paragraph email it should have been.

  • blindsight@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I need to try this note taking feature. I have monthly meetings when I’m home solo parenting two young kiddos… Automated meeting notes that I can review when I’m child free would be amazing.

    I think this will be great. Can’t possibly have any intended consequences.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    1 year ago

    🤖 I’m a bot that provides automatic summaries for articles:

    Click here to see the summary

    At its Cloud Next conference today, Google revealed a handful of new AI-powered features coming soon to Meet.

    And when the meeting is over, you can save the summary to Docs and come back to it after the fact; it can even include video clips of important moments.

    These AI-enabled features could be a way to free up people from being dedicated meeting-note scribes and make it easier to catch up both during and after calls.

    Microsoft and Zoom also clearly think this is a good idea: they’ve rolled out AI-powered meeting summaries of their own.

    But the recaps will only be useful if they can accurately capture what happened during a meeting, and given that AI is prone to making mistakes, Google might have a lot to prove to earn that trust.

    “Now we’re spending that same deep energy we spent over the last few years to get to enterprise-grade to be the best cutting-edge video conferencing product on the market.”


    Saved 82% of original text.