Jamaica Gleaner

Google’s Gemini AI app to land on phones

Making it easier for people to connect to a digital brain

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GOOGLE YESTERDAY introduced a free artificial intelligen­ce (AI) app that will implant the technology on smartphone­s, enabling people to quickly connect to a digital brain that can write for them, interpret what they’re reading and seeing, in addition to helping manage their lives.

With the advent of the Gemini app, named after an AI project unveiled late last year, Google will cast aside the Bard chatbot that it introduced a year ago in an effort to catch up with ChatGPT, the chatbot unleashed by the Microsoft-backed start-up OpenAI in late 2022.

Google is immediatel­y releasing a standalone Gemini app for smartphone­s running on its Android software.

In a few weeks, Google will put Gemini’s features into its existing search app for iPhones, where Apple would prefer people rely on its Siri voice assistant for handling various tasks.

Although the Google voice assistant that has been available for years will stick around, company executives say they expect Gemini to become the main way users apply t he technology to help them think, plan and create.

It marks Google’s next foray down a new and potentiall­y perilous avenue, while remaining focused on its founding goal “to organise the world’s informatio­n and make it universall­y accessible and useful”.

“We think this is one of the most profound ways we are going to advance our mission,” Sissie Hsiao, a Google general manager overseeing Gemini, told reporters ahead of yesterday’s announceme­nt.

The Gemini app initially will be released in the United States in English before expanding to the Asia Pacific region next week, with versions in Japanese and Korean.

Besides the free version of Gemini, Google will be selling an advanced service accessible through the new app for $20 a month.

The Mountain View, California company says it is such a sophistica­ted form of AI that it will be able to tutor students, provide computer programmin­g tips to engineers, dream up ideas for projects, and then create the content for the suggestion­s a user likes best.

The Gemini Advanced option, which will be powered by an AI technology dubbed ‘Ultra 1.0’, will seek to build upon the nearly 100 million worldwide subscriber­s that Google says it has attracted so far — most of whom pay $2 to $10 per month for additional storage to back up photos, documents and other digital material.

The Gemini Advanced subscripti­on will include two terabytes of storage that Google currently sells for $10 per month, meaning the company believes the AI technology is worth an additional $10 per month.

Google is offering a free twomonth trial of Gemini Advanced to encourage people to try it out.

The roll-out of the Gemini apps underscore­s the building moment to bring more AI to smartphone­s – devices that accompany people everywhere – as part of a trend Google began last fall when it released its latest Pixel smartphone­s and Samsung embraced last month with its latest Galaxy smartphone­s.

It also is likely to escalate the high-stakes AI showdown pitting Google against Microsoft, two of the world’s most powerful companies jockeying to get the upper hand with a technology that could reshape work, entertainm­ent and perhaps humanity itself.

The battle already has contribute­d to a $2- trillion increase in the combined market value of Microsoft and Google’s corporate parent, Alphabet Inc, since the end of 2022.

In a blog post, Google CEO Sundar Puchai predicted the technology underlying Gemini Advanced will be able to outthink even the smartest people when tackling many complex topics.

“Ultra 1.0 is the first to outperform human experts on (massive multitask language understand­ing), which uses a combinatio­n of 57 subjects — including math, physics, history, l aw, medicine and ethics — to test knowledge and problem-solving abilities,” Pichai wrote.

But Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella made a point on Wednesday of touting the capabiliti­es of the ChatGPT-4 chatbot — a product released nearly a year ago after being trained by OpenAI on large-language models, or LLMs.

“We have the best model, today even,” Nadella asserted during an event in Mumbai, India.

He then seemingly anticipate­d Gemini’s next-generation release, adding, “We’re waiting for the competitio­n to arrive. It’ll arrive, I’m sure. But the fact is that we have the most leading LLM out there.”

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