Jump to content
  • Sign Up
×
×
  • Create New...

Everything revealed including Gemini AI, Android 15 and more


Recommended Posts



Everything revealed including Gemini AI, Android 15 and more

At the end of I/O,

This is the hidden content, please
’s annual developer conference at the Shoreline Amphitheater in Mountain View,
This is the hidden content, please
CEO Sundar Pichai revealed that the company had said “AI” 121 times. That, essentially, was the crux of
This is the hidden content, please
’s two-hour keynote — stuffing AI into every
This is the hidden content, please
app and service used by more than two billion people around the world. Here are all the major updates from
This is the hidden content, please
’s big event, along with some additional announcements that came after the keynote.

This is the hidden content, please
announced a brand new AI model called Gemini 1.5 Flash, which it says is optimised for speed and efficiency. Flash sits between Gemini 1.5 Pro and Gemini 1.5 Nano, which its the company’s smallest model that runs locally on device.
This is the hidden content, please
said that it created Flash because developers wanted a lighter and less expensive model than Gemini Pro to build AI-powered apps and services while keeping some of the things like a long context window of one million tokens that differentiates Gemini Pro from competing models. Later this year,
This is the hidden content, please
will double Gemini’s context window to two million tokens, which means that it will be able to process two hours of video, 22 hours of audio, more than 60,000 lines of code or more than 1.4 million words at the same time.

This is the hidden content, please
showed off Project Astra, an early version of a universal assistant powered by AI that
This is the hidden content, please
’s DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis said was
This is the hidden content, please
’s version of an AI agent “that can be helpful in everyday life.”

In a video that

This is the hidden content, please
says was shot in a single take, an Astra user moves around
This is the hidden content, please
’s London office holding up their phone and pointing the camera at various things — a speaker, some code on a whiteboard, and out a window — and has a natural conversation with the app about what it seems. In one of the video’s most impressive moments, the correctly tells the user where she left her glasses before without the user ever having brought up the glasses.

The video ends with a twist — when the user finds and wears the missing glasses, we learn that they have an onboard camera system and are capable of using Project Astra to seamlessly carry on a conversation with the user, perhaps indicating that

This is the hidden content, please
might be working on a competitor to Meta’s Ray Ban smart glasses.

This is the hidden content, please
Photos was already intelligent when it came to searching for specific images or videos, but with AI,
This is the hidden content, please
is taking things to the next level. If you’re a
This is the hidden content, please
One subscriber in the US, you will be able to ask
This is the hidden content, please
Photos a complex question like “show me the best photo from each national park I’ve visited” when the feature rolls out over the next few months.
This is the hidden content, please
Photos will use GPS information as well as its own judgement of what is “best” to present you with options. You can also ask
This is the hidden content, please
Photos to generate captions to post the photos to social media.

This is the hidden content, please
’s new AI-powered media creation engines are called Veo and Imagen 3. Veo is
This is the hidden content, please
’s answer to OpenAI’s Sora. It can produce “high-quality” 1080p videos that can last “beyond a minute”,
This is the hidden content, please
said, and can understand cinematic concepts like a timelapse.

Imagen 3, meanwhile, is a text-to-image generator that

This is the hidden content, please
claims handles text better than its previous version, Imagen 2. The result is the company’s highest quality” text-to-image model with “incredible level of detail” for “photorealistic, lifelike images” and fewer artifacts — essentially pitting it against OpenAI’s DALLE-3.

This is the hidden content, please
is making big changes to how Search fundamentally works. Most of the updates announced today like the ability to ask really complex questions (“Find the best yoga or pilates studios in Boston and show details on their intro offers and walking time from Beacon Hill.”) and using Search to plan meals and vacations won’t be available unless you opt in to Search Labs, the company’s platform that lets people try out experimental features.

But a big new feature that

This is the hidden content, please
is calling AI Overviews and which the company has been testing for a year now, is finally rolling out to millions of people in the US.
This is the hidden content, please
Search will now present AI-generated answers on top of the results by default, and the company says that it will bring the feature to more than a billion users around the world by the end of the year.

This is the hidden content, please
is integrating Gemini directly into Android. When Android 15 releases later this year, Gemini will be aware of the app, image or video that you’re running, and you’ll be able to pull it up as an overlay and ask it context-specific questions. Where does that leave
This is the hidden content, please
Assistant that already does this? Who knows!
This is the hidden content, please
didn’t bring it up at all during today’s keynote.

This is the hidden content, please
isn’t quite ready to roll out the latest version of it smartwatch OS, but it is promising some major battery life improvements when it comes. The company said that Wear OS 5 will consume 20 percent less power than Wear OS 4 if a user runs a marathon. Wear OS 4 already brought battery life improvements to smartwatches that support it, but it could still be a lot better at managing a device’s power.
This is the hidden content, please
also provided developers with a new guide on how to conserve power and battery, so that they can create more efficient apps.

Android 15’s developer preview may have been rolling for months, but there are still features to come. Theft Detection Lock is a new Android 15 feature that will use AI (there it is again) to predict phone thefts and lock things up accordingly.

This is the hidden content, please
says its algorithms can detect motions associated with theft, like those associated with grabbing the phone and bolting, biking or driving away. If an Android 15 handset pinpoints one of these situations, the phone’s screen will quickly lock, making it much ******* for the phone snatcher to access your data.

There were a bunch of other updates too.

This is the hidden content, please
said it would add digital watermarks to AI-generated video and text, make Gemini accessible in the side panel in Gmail and Docs, power a virtual AI teammate in Workspace, listen in on phone calls and detect if you’re being scammed in real time, and a lot more.

Catch up on all the news from

This is the hidden content, please
I/O 2024 right here!

Update May 15, 2:45PM ET: This story was updated after being published to include details on new Android 15 and WearOS 5 announcements made following the I/O 2024 keynote.





This is the hidden content, please

android, news, gear,

This is the hidden content, please
,
This is the hidden content, please
io 2024, AI
#revealed #including #Gemini #Android

This is the hidden content, please

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.

Important Information

Privacy Notice: We utilize cookies to optimize your browsing experience and analyze website traffic. By consenting, you acknowledge and agree to our Cookie Policy, ensuring your privacy preferences are respected.