Google has announced the expansion of its conversational AI service, Bard, with the inclusion of Swahili as the first African language among 40 new languages installed.
Swahili, according to UNESCO, is among the 10 most widely spoken languages in the world, with more than 200 million speakers.
In the announcement made on Thursday, Bard is now the AI-powered chatbox with most languages in the world, and with the most widely spoken languages, including Swahili, Chinese, German, Spanish, Arabic, Hindi, and Spanish. Bard will now be available in 59 new countries and territories.
The expansion, according to Google, includes new features that “allow users to better customize their experience, boost their creativity, and get more done.”
“The new chatbot has the ability to interact in conversational dialogue form, allowing users to ask questions and receive detailed answers, similar to ChatGPT. It draws on information from the web to provide responses,” the statement said.
“Users can now access Bard in their preferred language with text-to-speech also enabled in 8 languages. We’re excited that this is Bard’s largest expansion to date – we see its global availability as a great democratizer of knowledge,” Google Head of Communications and Public Affairs, Dorothy Ooko said.
“That’s why we created Bard: to help you explore that curiosity, augment your imagination and ultimately get your ideas off the ground — not just by answering your questions, but by helping you build on them.
“The launch of Bard in Swahili is a major milestone as it allows Bard to reach even more people in Africa, where approximately 150 million people speak Swahili.
“This makes Bard more accessible to everyone in the region, and we believe that it has the potential to be a powerful tool for creativity and learning,” she added.