Google IO 2024 unfolded late on Tuesday, Indian time, igniting with an insightful keynote by Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai. The event spotlighted how Google's Gemini AI has been primed for diverse app integrations. Alongside, the unveiling of Google's novel generative AI video model VEO, Project Astra, Gemini 1.5 Flash, and the powerful Gemini 1.5 Pro was shared.
Pichai initiated 'Gemini for All', asserting their will for widespread benefit. Let's explore these Google IO 2024 announcements in depth.
The new 'Ask Photos' feature, rolling out soon, will revolutionize how users search within Google Photos. Imagine sifting through memories with a question and discovering your daughter's swing progression with ease.
The Gemini 1.5 Pro provides users with a previously exclusive million token access, now expanded to two million for developers and consumers alike.
Source: aajtak
Gemini Advanced will offer a million tokens with availability in 35 languages. This expansion ensures all have access. Gemini is also set to be integrated into Gmail, allowing users to summarize emails with finesse.
Gemini AI's integration with Google Search promises to assist with an AI Overview, leading to a soon-to-be-released AI-Organised Search Page that users can tailor to their preferences.
The light-footed Gemini 1.5 Flash caters to devices with crucial latency needs. Like its Pro counterpart, it's designed to outperform in speed and cost-efficiency, supporting a million tokens.
Project Astra, heralded by Google, promises a universal agent by Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis to streamline daily tasks, including an advanced visual search.
The Generative Video AI model, Veo, announced by Google, translates text prompts into diverse cinematic style 1080p videos. These edi-table creations mark a new era of video content.
Google also introduced the 6th generation of TPUs, named Trillium, poised to deliver performance 4.7 times better than previous generations. Sundar Pichai revealed it was developed in partnership with Nvidia and will be available to cloud consumers by year's end.