High-tech giant Microsoft has announced that Elon Musk’s AI startup Xai Grok 3 will be adding its Grok 3 to its Azure platform.
Grok 3 and Grok 3 Mini are available from the AI Foundry Platform on Azure. This allows developers to design, manage, customize and support enterprise-ready AI agents and apps.
Xai’s flagship model, Grok 3, is made up of LLMS, focusing on promoting AI innovation and accelerating scientific discovery. The company said the model is trained on Xai’s Colossus Supercluster with 10 times the calculation power of previous major models.
In a statement, Microsoft said the model excels in mathematics, teaching follow-up, coding, reasoning and world knowledge, and has deep domain expertise in many fields, including medical and science. Grok and Microsoft are touted that the model has medical diagnostic support and can provide scientific research support.
Grok will be available through a two-week free preview, and then the input price for 1 million tokens for Grok 3 (Global) and Grok 3 (Global) will be available for $3. The output price is $3.30 for the Grok 3 (Datazone), $1 million for the Grok 3 (Global) and $15 for the Grok 3 (Datazone) and $16.50 for the Grok 3 (Datazone). The model can also be accessed on GitHub.
Microsoft’s Foundry platform hosts other AI models, including models from Nvidia, Meta, Cohere and Openai.
“This collaboration combines Xai’s cutting edge model with Azure’s enterprise-ready infrastructure to give developers access to Grok 3’s advanced capabilities in a secure and scalable environment. The GROK model enables a variety of enterprise scenarios with advanced capabilities in inference, coding and visual processing,” Microsoft said in a statement.
Bigger trends
November, Musk posted on x Users should “try sending X-rays, PET, MRI, or other medical images to GROK for analysis. This is still early on, but it is already very accurate and will be very good.”
The billionaire tech giant said chatbot users can upload medical images to generate diagnosis. He then asked users to let the AI maker know that Grok “gets it right or needs work.”
Skeptics relay concerns With a focus on AI model generation diagnostics, European privacy regulators are questioning potential violations of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) through the way GROK processes data.
On April 11, the Irish privacy watchdog, the Irish Data Protection Commission (DPC), began an investigation into how X trains Groks using personal data from Europeans. In particular, we investigated whether mask platforms train Genai models using posts created in X. This inquiry determines compliance with GDPR rules.
Xai has begun to lay that foundation.”I’ll wake up“GROK-1 chatbot in November 2023.
“Grok is designed to answer questions a little more witty and have a rebellious streak, so don’t use it if you don’t like humor,” Xai said. Grok launch announcement.