Google He made the pair debuted Novel Super Bowl ads that present artificial intelligence as technology, which is just as crucial for people’s lives as a telephone or computer on which they gain access to it. But, like some other Google Super Bowl ads, the company is once again trying to get tissues between plays.
First advertisement, entitled “Dream Job”He presents a man using Gemini’s live voice mode on his pixel phone to prepare for the interview. After Gemini asks him to talk about “work that is the most important for you”, the man begins to describe in detail what he learned after becoming a parent.
Mostly the man basically just talks to himself all the time. Gemini takes place in the rear seat in most of the ads, because it simply shows listening and suggestions between the scenes of a man raising his daughter, who even shows a family dog on the door of death.
Next advertisement, Called Party BlitzSimilarly, Gemini emphasizes on pixels, but he takes on a much more carefree tone. The man uses AI Chatbot’s voice mode to learn more about football and come up with phrases that he can employ to impress the family of his date before they merge into a great game, how to shout “pass intervention!” on television. A bit petty, but at least he doesn’t employ a dying dog to jerk in the heart.
Despite the change of tone, it seems that Google really tries to set his assistant AI as a helpful, conversational partner with whom you can interact every day, thanks to which conducting regular search on Google seems mundane.
