Skip to main content

Google strikes back with its own lightweight AI model

Google Gemini on smartphone.
Google

Google announced Thursday that it is releasing Gemini 1.5 Flash, it’s snack-sized large language model and ChatGPT-4o mini competitor, to all users regardless of their subscription level.

Recommended Videos

The company promises “across-the-board improvements” in terms of response quality and latency, as well as “especially noticeable improvements in reasoning and image understanding.”

Google initially released Gemini 1.5 Flash in May as a lighterw-eight version of its flagship Gemini 1.5 Pro model. It’s designed to perform less resource intensive inference tasks faster and more efficiently than Pro does, much as Claude 3.5 Haiku, Llama 3.1-8B and ChatGPT-4o mini do for their respective parent models.

Flash’s context window is drastically expanding with this update, growing from a paltry 8K length to 32K (roughly 50 pages of text). Granted, that’s a 4x increase in size, but even at 32K, Gemini Flash’s context window is still just a quarter the size of GPT-4o mini’s 128K window (or, about a book’s worth).

A slide showing Google Gemini 1.5 Flash features.
Google

What’s more, Google plans to “soon add” the ability to upload text and image files, either from Google Drive or the local hard drive, direct to the context window. This feature was previously restricted to the subscription tiers.

The company also announced updates on its efforts to reduce instances of hallucinations within its models. Google plans to include “links to related content for fact-seeking prompts in Gemini,” essentially providing links to the sources it cites.

The AI will do this for both traditional search and for associated Workspace apps as well. If the AI uses information gleaned through its Gmail integration, it will provide links back to the relevant emails.

These updates are available immediately to nearly all Gemini users on both web and mobile and in 40 languages. Teens who meet the minimum age requirements needed to manage their own Google accounts will receive access next week.

Andrew Tarantola
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Andrew Tarantola is a journalist with more than a decade reporting on emerging technologies ranging from robotics and machine…
Samsung might put AI smart glasses on the shelves this year
Google's AR smartglasses translation feature demonstrated.

Samsung’s Project Moohan XR headset has grabbed all the spotlights in the past few months, and rightfully so. It serves as the flagship launch vehicle for a reinvigorated Android XR platform, with plenty of hype from Google’s own quarters.
But it seems Samsung has even more ambitious plans in place and is reportedly experimenting with different form factors that go beyond the headset format. According to Korea-based ET News, the company is working on a pair of smart glasses and aims to launch them by the end of the ongoing year.
Currently in development under the codename “HAEAN” (machine-translated name), the smart glasses are reportedly in the final stages of locking the internal hardware and functional capabilities. The wearable device will reportedly come equipped with camera sensors, as well.

What to expect from Samsung’s smart glasses?
The Even G1 smart glasses have optional clip-on gradient shades. Photo by Tracey Truly / Digital Trends
The latest leak doesn’t dig into specifics about the internal hardware, but another report from Samsung’s home market sheds some light on the possibilities. As per Maeil Business Newspaper, the Samsung smart glasses will feature a 12-megapixel camera built atop a Sony IMX681 CMOS image sensor.
It is said to offer a dual-silicon architecture, similar to Apple’s Vision Pro headset. The main processor on Samsung’s smart glasses is touted to be Qualcomm’s Snapdragon AR1 platform, while the secondary processing hub is a chip supplied by NXP.
The onboard camera will open the doors for vision-based capabilities, such as scanning QR codes, gesture recognition, and facial identification. The smart glasses will reportedly tip the scales at 150 grams, while the battery size is claimed to be 155 mAh.

Read more
OpenAI releases a new AI model, but it’s eye-wateringly expensive
OpenAI's new typeface OpenAI Sans

OpenAI has released its latest model, o1-pro, an updated version of its reasoning model o1 -- but it's not going to come cheap.

"It uses more compute than o1 to provide consistently better responses," OpenAI said in its announcement. The company went on to say it offered new features including: "Supports vision, function calling, Structured Outputs, and works with the Responses and Batch APIs. "

Read more
You can now have secret chats with Google’s Gemini in incognito mode
Launching Gemini Deep Research query on Chrome desktop.

You can now have a quick chat with Gemini on your web browser without having to sign in first. And, to speed up the process, the Gemini website even takes you directly to the chat window instead of showing you a landing page first.

This move, spotted by 9To5Google, is pretty smart as it allows unconvinced users to try out the product with no strings attached. With any luck, they'll enjoy the experience and decide to sign up to get access to more of the features.

Read more