Gemini is expanding fast, but it’s still missing in places where it could truly shine. Here are six spots Google’s AI needs to show up next.
Authored by embedded ML specialists with extensive experience in ESP32 voice recognition architecture, TinyML optimisation, ...
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Internxt cloud storage review
As of October 2025, there's an 80% discount on 5TB of Internxt's lifetime cloud storage available, with the final cost being ...
Google’s Robby Stein, VP of Product at Google, explained that Google Search is converging with AI in a new manner that builds on three pillars of AI. The implications for online publishers, SEOs, and ...
Sponsored results in Google Search are getting less screen time with a new update that makes them much more obvious. Users will even be able to hide sponsored ads in Google Search. According to a blog ...
Google unveiled Nano Banana in Google Search and Notebook LM. It will release the AI image editor in Photos soon. The tool offers new styles for illustrations and Briefs. Nano Banana, Google's ...
Google Lens now supports the Nano Banana, the image generation feature from the Gemini app, within Google Search. Google said, “we’re bringing Nano Banana to Google Search.” Open the Google Lens ...
In order to avoid paying billions of dollars in fines for violating the European Union's Digital Markets Act, Google is considering changing how search results are displayed, Reuters reports. EU ...
Google's Gemini 2.5 Flash AI image generation model was known as Nano Banana during pre-release testing when it first went viral. The name stuck after Google released Nano Banana in late August. The ...
Google is globally launching a new “Sponsored results” label across desktop and mobile, grouping text and Shopping ads under a clearer header. The update marks one of Google’s most visible ad labeling ...
Google now lets you collapse and hide all sponsored ads on a results page. The catch is you need to see the ads first, as the option appears at the bottom of the new "Sponsored" section. Google Search ...
On ‘Bold Names,’ Liz Reid, head of search at Google, shares why she believes AI will expand, not erode, how people explore the web. Photo: Annie Zhao Liz Reid, the Google search boss, has a tough job.
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