Everything you need to know about Gemini, Google’s new generative AI model
Over the past year, a fierce artificial intelligence (AI) competition has unfolded among industry giants such as OpenAI, Microsoft, Meta, and Google Research. In this race, Alphabet and Google’s CEO Sundar Pichai, in collaboration with DeepMind’s CEO Demis Hassabis, has unveiled Gemini — an eagerly awaited generative AI system. Representing their most advanced and versatile AI model, Gemini is inherently multimodal, demonstrating proficiency in comprehending and generating texts, audio, code, video, and images.
Setting a new benchmark, Gemini surpasses OpenAI’s GPT-4 across various domains, excelling in general tasks, reasoning capabilities, mathematics, and coding. This launch follows Google’s earlier introduction of PaLM 2, their own Large Language Model (LLM), in April — a part of the model family empowering Google’s search engine.
What is Google Gemini?
The inaugural release, Gemini 1.0, represents a pinnacle in artificial intelligence, showcasing remarkable versatility and advancement. This generative AI model is well-equipped for tasks demanding the integration of multiple data types, designed with a high degree of flexibility and scalability to operate seamlessly across diverse platforms, ranging from expansive data centers to portable mobile…