Skip to main content

Microsoft releases Project Malmo, its education-focused ‘Minecraft’ AI tool

Microsoft has released Project Malmo, a platform that uses Minecraft as an environment for advanced research into artificial intelligence. The system was previously only open to scientists invited to take part in a private preview, but is now available via GitHub.

Project Malmo, previously referred to as Project AIX, has been spearheaded by a team working at a Microsoft research lab based in the English city of Cambridge. The platform is intended to facilitate research into general artificial intelligence, rather than systems that are designed to solve a singular problem.

Recommended Videos

Minecraft is ideally suited to the task, as it’s built upon a sandbox structure where players can go wherever they like and do whatever they want. By placing an AI in that environment and seeing how they respond, researchers can learn about how to “teach” their creation to respond to a wide range of different situations.

Moving from a specific intelligence to a general intelligence is a necessary stepping stone as we attempt to progress from AIs that can play board games to AIs that can perform a greater function in society. Even if an AI is only going to be tasked with folding laundry or stacking supermarket shelves, it’s crucial that they have a working knowledge of how to behave in the wider world.

One big advantage of Project Malmo over similar systems is that it allows researchers to compare their work against other projects that are using the same environment, according to a blog post announcing its release.

Microsoft hopes that Project Malmo will engage a broad range of users, and that its links to Minecraft will help entice more novice coders. To get started, download the package hosted here and launch the PC version of the game with the mod installed.

Brad Jones
Brad is an English-born writer currently splitting his time between Edinburgh and Pennsylvania. You can find him on Twitter…
Perplexity to introduce sneaky ads alongside its AI answers
Someone holding an iPhone 14 Pro, with Perplexity AI running on it.

It was only a matter of time. "Answer engine" startup Perplexity AI announced on Wednesday that it will begin experimenting with inserting advertisements into its chatbot responses starting next week.

Rather than a standard ad you might be familiar with, however, the platform will instead start showing ads to users in the U.S. in the form of "sponsored follow-up questions and paid media positioned to the side of an answer," from the company's advertising partners. Those include Indeed, Whole Foods, Universal McCann, and PMG.

Read more
iOS 18’s best AI tools arrive in December, but Siri has a longer wait
Apple Intelligence on iPhone 15 Pro.

The Apple Intelligence toolkit has witnessed a staggered mix of delayed features and underwhelming perks. But it seems that the most promising set of those AI tools that Apple revealed at WWDC earlier this year is right around the corner.

In the latest edition of his PowerOn newsletter, Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman writes that the iOS 18.2 update will start rolling out via the stable channel in the first week of December.

Read more
One of the hottest AI apps just came to the Mac (and it’s not ChatGPT)
the Perplexity desktop app

Perplexity announced Thursday the release of a new native app for Mac that will put its "answer engine" directly on the desktop, with no need for a web browser.

Currently available through the Apple App Store, the Perplexity desktop app promises a variety of features "exclusively for Mac." These include Pro Search, which is a "guided AI search for deeper exploration," the capability for both text and voice prompting, and "cited sources" for every answer.

Read more