Unfortunately, the LAM has not proven itself useful. I can’t get it to scan a handwritten spreadsheet, convert it and email it to me like Jesse did in the demo. It often gets my location wrong as well. I like the novelty of using if for the Magic Camera to see what wacky interpretation of reality it comes out with. It’s a fun toy, but not a useful one at this point.
I mainly use mine for music control and answering questions. As well as doordash. We will have to see abt LAM tho, I’m excited to see what the rabbit team can do.
I don’t quite understand who does written spread sheets myself, but I do run into tables in the wild I would like digital. I just made a video about it and grabbing one the other day granted took a moment to get it to do it right but once it got going good it was cool.
This is a duplicate post really, but I use it daily to dive into info and discuss things about 30+ questions a day. As well as inquire about news updates, probe into various subjects, take my verbal ideas into MJ prompts or better yet recently have R1 help me set-up better scenes for my MJ Prompts!
I use it to ask questions - like really random questions.
I tried to use it to simply this long message I wrote by taking a picture of it and saying to make this message shorter and easier to read, but that didn’t work.
I want to use it for DoorDash and plan a vacation with it!
A doorstop.
In all seriousness - I played around with it for an hour after receiving it. At some point that day my cat knocked it off my desk and I’ve not bothered picking it back up yet.
Sadly I feel the same way (don’t have a cat) but I came here to pick up some tips rather than hoist it straight to the recycle pile just yet. I want my son to learn more AI tools and uses so hoping he can enjoy this but so far we are struggling to get anywhere near the use vs CGPT on a mobile.
I use mine for converting recipes from imperial measurement to grams but it’s struggling to do something that ChatGPT does easily.
Thanks for showing how to do that.
Hello, Janus from Denmark here.
I received mine earlier this week.
I personally mainly use it for quick questions (e.g. weather, and other factual things) and as a Spotify remote control.
My kids, though, (10 and 12) love using the translation feature to practice French and taking pictures with the magic camera — or asking questions to things they photograph. Or asking Wolfram Alpha math questions. So for them it’s mainly a learning device.
We’re pretty well entertained so far and look forward to the continuing flow of new features…
(we mainly bought it not due to being AI evangelists but because we like teenage engineering gadgets and this looked like a fun and potentially useful one…)
Not getting much use out of this to be honest. I tried the Doordash integration, but it doesn’t work in Canada. I tried to get it to plan a trip for me as in the demo, but the results were pretty bad. Not sure how I can use this thing until it becomes more capable.
I use the Magic Camera frequently and ask Suno to write silly songs about my cat, but I also use it to ask general knowledge questions, check the weather, and generate images. I like it for what it can do and look forward to what it will be able to do with each update.
Hello, James here. It is not able to do anything useful really. However, i have asked it to translate English to Bengali. Simple sentences. And it seems to manage well.
Absolutely nothing. You can’t turn it on without waiting over an hour for the the little wheel to stop spinning, then if you take it off charge it dies before you get around to using it. There is nothing that can be done with this thing.
Funny enough, I asked CGPT to give us 4 top useful personal & business usage:
-
Time Management and Scheduling:
Personal Use: The Rabbit R1 helps organise daily tasks, set reminders, and manage personal calendars efficiently. You can sync it with other devices to ensure you’re always on top of your schedule.
Business Use: It’s invaluable for scheduling meetings, setting deadlines, and coordinating team calendars. The ability to share schedules with colleagues streamlines project management and collaboration. -
Task Automation:
Personal Use: Automate routine household tasks like setting up reminders for bills, creating shopping lists, or even controlling smart home devices.
Business Use: Automate repetitive office tasks such as data entry, report generation, and email responses, thereby saving time and reducing errors. -
Communication and Collaboration:
Personal Use: Stay connected with friends and family through its integrated communication tools, like messaging and video calls. It also allows easy sharing of photos and updates.
Business Use: Enhance team collaboration with instant messaging, file sharing, and video conferencing features. It’s especially useful for remote teams needing real-time communication. -
Information Management:
Personal Use: Organise personal documents, notes, and media files efficiently. The search and retrieval functions make it easy to find information quickly.
Business Use: Store and manage business documents, track project progress, and analyse data. The robust information management capabilities ensure that critical business information is always accessible and secure.
Why not
I have been using it as my “google” for the last few days. Its been really great for continuous lines of conversation.
Its been a really fun gadget for the magic cam and suno.
I have used it to summarise my work emails.
I used it to record a meeting and pull out a really great 5 point summary of a 50 minute meeting (I wish it was more points!).
Its been recounting a continuous story for my daughter each night.
Thats just the first 3 days.
It is a very cheap AI test object/toy for me. Cannot beat my old Google voice searches as of today (on a outdated Android phone), but maybe in the future. That is my vision for the r1 and the young development team
My exact experience… my kids/daughter loves it! I have found it’s a neat little device. The expectations of many of these users for a non-subscription $200 device are a bit much.
Great aesthetic, better and better updates. I think it’s fun!
Thus far I have gone through a few ‘phases’ with mine. Lol.
The, ‘I wonder what it will reply to THIS goofy question?’ phase, to the ‘Hey Rabbit! What you lookin at?’ phase, and concurrently the ‘Let’s take nice magic pics’ with ‘Let’s pull the magic levers as see what malarkey comes out!’ phases, and then, in a vain attempt to teach it about me, I went into the, ‘Please take a note…’ phase.
Right now I’m well into the, ‘I wish it would… oh yeah… eventually the LAM should take care of that’ phase.
At the end of the day, any frustrations are assuaged by the fact that I have paid for an ‘early access’ device. Not much different from purchasing an early access game on Steam. Being a part of the dev process is a sizeable part of what I slapped down my dineros for.
I bought R1 as my introduction to AI. It’s a tool for me to learn, and every update has the potential of teaching me something new. This is good. So far I’ve just played with it, but that’s fine. What I like is that a question I might otherwise Google, but would have a hard time figuring out how to phrase it so I don’t get a million responses to filter through, can be done in natural speech. Also, something that might require me to look through multiple links on Google can be synthesized by R1. For example, this year is the 30th Anniversary of the Brickyard 400 NASCAR race, but for the past few years it was not run as the Brickyard 400 and was put on a road course instead of the traditional oval racing. So I asked R1 how many of the races have run on the oval at Indianapolis, and it immediately told me the answer was 26. That likely would’ve been time consuming to find on Google.
I’m in Canada too, so waiting patiently for actions
I use it for news updates, general inquiries, and generating ideas.