If you're one of the around 1.3 million people who are Sorority (2025)X Premium subscribers — or about 0.26% of the platform's user base — you have access to Grok, X's AI chatbot similar to OpenAI’s ChatGPT, that you can use through the X app. But that access might be getting a bit more broad.
According to The Wall Street Journal, Elon Musk's AI company xAI will be releasing a standalone consumer app. It will work similar to the ChatGPT app and give users access to Grok from their phones. There doesn't seem to be a huge rush, though — Tech Crunch reports that it likely won't come to fruition until xAI closes its next funding round.
Grok is available only to X Premium subscribers, and it's unclear how that might change with a standalone app. Will you have to have an X account to use it? Will you have to be a premium subscriber? Who knows! But this comes at a time in which X is allegedly experimenting with making access to Grok free. As with most changes under Musk's tutelage, we'll probably just have to wait and see.
Topics Artificial Intelligence X/Twitter Elon Musk
Wordle today: The answer and hints for December 9Running into My Dead Mother at 7Poetry Is a Volley between the Living and the Dead by Craig Morgan TeicherInternational Dog Day deals: Save 50% at Petco through DoorDash or up to 35% at Wild OneBored Ape NFT investors sue Yuga Labs after NFT values crater'May December' versus 'AllRedux: A PinScientists discover unknown prehistoric world — on EarthInternational Dog Day deals: Save 50% at Petco through DoorDash or up to 35% at Wild OneMystical, Squishy, Distinctly Unsettling by The Paris ReviewRedux: In Memoriam, Susannah Hunnewell by The Paris ReviewTwitch will soon let you block banned users from seeing your streamMasked and Anonymous by Lucy SanteSpend $80 on P&G products and get a $20 Amazon creditNintendo Switch OLED vs. Steam Deck OLEDMystical, Squishy, Distinctly Unsettling by The Paris ReviewModernism’s Debt to Black Women by Cody DelistratyThe Print Bar in Australia: Everything you need to knowMystical, Squishy, Distinctly Unsettling by The Paris ReviewYes, WFH sex is a thing. No, it isn't a big deal. Six Photos from W. G. Sebald’s Albums by Nick Warr Dare to Leave a Trace: On A City of Sadness by Michelle Kuo The Displaced Person: A Syllabus by Robert Glück Good Manners by Hebe Uhart In the Beginning by J. D. Daniels Fun by Jeremy Atherton Lin “It’s This Line / Here” : Happy Belated Birthday to James Schuyler by Ben Lerner Correction by The Paris Review What If We’re All Self Writing about Understanding by Yiyun Li The Cat Book by James Frankie Thomas Essay on the Sky by Vincent Katz Making of a Poem: Farid Matuk on “Crease” by Farid Matuk Ten Years without Gabriel García Márquez: An Oral History by Silvana Paternostro Ripping Ivy by Mary Childs I’m High on World of Warcraft by Patrick McGraw The Locker Room: An Abercrombie Dispatch by Asha Schechter We’re More Ghosts Than People by Hanif Abdurraqib The Paris Review’s Favorite Books of 2023 by The Paris Review Cooking with Franz Kafka by Valerie Stivers
3.0268s , 8199.3359375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Sorority (2025)】,Unobstructed Information Network