Google Gemini AI Release: Google launches the most powerful AI model Gemini, will retire ChatGPT!

Google Gemini AI: It would not be wrong to call Artificial Intelligence (AI) the future of technology. AI is going to have a big role in the technology of the future, the news of which was given by OpenAI’s ChatGPT a year ago. Chatbot exposed the power of AI to the world. But Google has now gone one step further, as the company is claiming. Google has released its new AI model Gemini, which is said to be the most powerful and capable AI model till date. Let us know about it.

American search engine company Google has claimed to have taken a big leap in the world of Artificial Intelligence. The company has released its new AI model Gemini. The company has launched it to compete with ChatGPT which was launched by OpenAI in November last year. Let us tell you that Google’s parent Alphabet had created a unit for research on special AI, which is named Google Deepmind Unit. Now this unit has introduced its first model in the form of Gemini AI.

What Google has highlighted about Gemini AI is its multitasking power. This Artificial Intelligence model can do multiple tasks at the same time. That means for the user, it can work on images, videos, text, code at the same time. This is said to be the biggest plus point of Gemini that it can not only create but also read text, code and images, and that too at the same time. However, this is not possible in ChatGPT because it works only on text. With ChatGPT, the user can neither create images nor read the images.

Another special thing is that Google has introduced three models. Gemini Ultra, Gemini Pro, and Gemini Nano. Gemini Ultra is the top size model designed for the toughest jobs. The Pro model is designed for scaling to a larger range of tasks. Whereas Nano has been designed for on device tasks like mobile devices etc.

Gemini AI is said to be based on the Massive Multitask Language Understanding (MMLU) model. It is capable of producing better results than human experts on benchmarks. It uses information from 57 subjects such as mathematics, physics, history, law, medicine and ethics for problem solving.