Artificial intelligence has become the wonder technology of this year. But since it comes in many different flavors from many different companies, this may be the case Really misleading. Not only do you have the ChatGPT bot created by OpenAI, but you also have the large three – Google, Apple and Microsoft – preparing their own versions.
Google’s latest attempt is called Gemini, and it’s no less confusing than the others.
When I first started researching Gemini, I Googled “Google Gemini versions.” In addition to the search, I got an AI-generated summary that started:
“Google Gemini has three versions: Ultra, Pro and Nano. Ultra is the largest model designed for complex tasks, Pro is the best model for scaling across a wide range of tasks, and Nano is the most efficient model for on-device tasks.
OK that’s enough. But that’s not the full story.
Gemini is the third sign of the zodiac, associated with the twins Castor and Pollux from Greek mythology.
Okay, sorry. I could not resist. Gemini is a chatbot created by Google that replaced its previous chatbot called Bard. It is based on something called the large language model (or LLM), also called Gemini, developed by DeepMind, part of Google.
How much time do you have? Seriously though, we’ll limit ourselves to the Gemini types you might encounter, as the number of iterations seems endless.
Originally, when it launched in December 2023, Gemini offered three different versions (called models): Nano as a lightweight Android version, Pro for everyday use, and Ultra for heavy-duty business/enterprise use.
Then on May 14 at its I/O 2024 event, Google unveiled Gemini 1.5 Pro, the first, as the company called it, a “mid-range multimodal model.” According to Google, the new Pro version is about as powerful as the previous Ultra version and is aimed at improving existing applications and creating new ones for everyday use.
In other words, it can accept prompts in all the different communication modes: text, images, audio and video.
