Space News from SpaceDaily.com
Google unveils latest AI model, Gemini 2.0
San Francisco, Dec 11 (AFP) Dec 11, 2024
Google on Wednesday announced the launch of Gemini 2.0, its most advanced artificial intelligence model to date, as the world's tech giants race to take the lead in the fast developing technology.

CEO Sundar Pichai said the new model would mark what the company calls "a new agentic era" in AI development, with AI models designed to understand and make decisions about the world around you.

"Gemini 2.0 is about making information much more useful," Pichai said in the announcement, emphasizing the model's enhanced ability to understand context, think multiple steps ahead and take supervised actions on behalf of users.

The developments "bring us closer to our vision of a universal assistant," he added.

The release sent shares in Google soaring by more than four percent on Wall Street a day after the stock already gained 3.5 percent after the release of a breakthrough quantum chip.

The tech giants are furiously taking steps to release more powerful AI models despite their immense cost and some questions about their immediate usefulness to the broader economy.

An AI "agent," the latest Silicon Valley trend, is a digital helper that is supposed to sense surroundings, make decisions, and take actions to achieve specific goals.

The tech giants promise that agents will be the next stage of an AI revolution that was sparked by the 2022 launch of ChatGPT, which took the world by storm.

Gemini 2.0 is initially being rolled out to developers and trusted testers, with plans for broader integration across Google's products, particularly in Search and the Gemini platform.


- No Nvidia -


The technology is powered by Google's sixth-generation TPU (Tensor Processing Unit) hardware, dubbed Trillium, which the company has now made generally available to customers.

Google emphasized that Trillium processors were used exclusively for both training and running Gemini 2.0.

Most AI training has been monopolized by chip juggernaut Nvidia, which has been catapulted by the AI explosion to become one of the world's most valuable companies.

Google said that millions of developers are already building applications with Gemini technology, which has been integrated into seven Google products, each serving more than two billion users.

Gemini 2.0's powers are expected to come in early 2025 to Google's search application, still the company's main money-maker.

The first release from the 2.0 family of models will be Flash, offering faster performance while handling multiple types of input (text, images, video, audio) and output (including generated images and speech).

Gemini users worldwide can already tap into a chat-only version of Flash, the company said, with testers given access to a multimodal version that can interpret images and surroundings.

Google also said it was experimenting with a product that can use software apps, websites and other online tools, much like a human user. OpenAI and Anthropic have unveiled similar features.

The company also teased a new version of Project Astra, a smartphone digital assistant like Apple's Siri that responds to images as well as verbal commands.

arp/des

Google


ADVERTISEMENT




Space News from SpaceDaily.com
Blue Ring mission to expand commercial GEO space domain awareness
Looking inside icy moons
BepiColombo nears Mercury orbital arrival after seven year journey

24/7 Energy News Coverage
High-power optical vortex beams targeted for future light-matter research across Europe
Optical technique enables generation of hypersound waves in perovskite crystals
Successful fabrication of nuclear fuel assemblies boosts Barakah plant supply chain

Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
US Ukraine proposals 'not a real plan': Germany
Russian says key city falls;. Missiles kill 10; Zelensky tries to revive peace efforts
UK and MBDA announce major anti-drone laser contract

24/7 News Coverage
Antarctica's Retreating Ice Reveals Nutrient-Rich Peaks Boosting Ocean Carbon Uptake
Biobased building material developed to enable large-scale marine restoration
Wild cat species in Guatemala adapt hunting heights to avoid food competition


All rights reserved. Copyright Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.