What is Google Gemini? Everything you need to know about Google’s next-gen AI
OpenAI has been dominating the world of artificial intelligence (AI) and chatbots lately, with its GPT-4 large language model (LLM) powering ChatGPT and taking the world by storm. The company got an early lead and everyone else has been playing catch-up ever since.
Yet OpenAI has a fresh challenger in the form of Google Gemini. This new arrival burst onto the scene in December 2023 and stunned onlookers with its impressive capabilities (even if the demos were somewhat exaggerated). We’ve been waiting for months to see what Google has up its sleeve, and the results look pretty spectacular.
But is it enough to defeat GPT-4? What can it do right now, and what about in the future? And if you want to use Gemini, how exactly do you do that? We’ve taken a deep dive into the world of Gemini to find the answers to all these questions and more. If you’re curious about Google’s latest AI efforts, this is the place to be.
Gemini is Google’s latest large language model (LLM). What’s an LLM? It’s the system that underpins the types of AI tools you’ve probably seen and interacted with on the internet. For example, GPT-4 powers ChatGPT Plus, OpenAI’s advanced paid-for chatbot.
In Google’s case, Gemini will be woven into a wide array of tools, such as the Bard chatbot, Google Search, YouTube, and more. In other words, Gemini isn’t a chatbot itself, but the “brain” that makes it (and other tools) tick.
Google also specified that it has created three variants, or “sizes,” of Gemini: Nano, Pro and Ultra. Nano is now inside the Pixel 8 Pro and destined for other mobile devices, while Gemini Pro has already found its way into Google Bard. Ultra, meanwhile, is designed for “highly complex tasks,” although it will also come to Bard once Google has completed extensive testing and safeguarding.