Google DeepMind, Google’s flagship AI research lab, wants to beat OpenAI at the video generation game — and it might just, at least for a little while. On Monday, DeepMind announced Veo 2, a next-gen video-generating AI and the successor to Veo,
Google has released what it's calling a new "reasoning" AI model to rival OpenAI's o1 — but it's in the experimental stages.
Apptronik, an AI-powered humanoid robotics company, has entered a strategic partnership agreement with the Google DeepMind robotics team. The partnership will bring together artificial intelligence with hardware and embodied intelligence, advancing humanoid robots that can be more helpful to people in dynamic environments.
Google has introduced Gemini 2.0 Flash Thinking, an experimental AI model that lays out how it tackles tough problems in order to let you peek into its thought process and make it easier to see how it works.
Google Deepmind has unveiled its next-generation AI tools, Veo 2 and Imagen 3, along with a playful new experiment, Whisk, aimed at remixing visuals in creative ways. Veo 2 is the newest version of the company's flagship video-generation tool,
Google DeepMind has formed a strategic relationship with Apptronik to take a huge step forward in the future of robotics.
The latest flurry of Gemini launches has made things even worse, and so we thought it was time to lay out a cle
Google claims Veo 2 has a "better understanding of real-world physics"—an issue that often trips up such tools.
Apptronik will combine its iterative design experience and Apollo humanoid in testing with Google DeepMind's AI platforms.
The rapid commoditization of AI models continues, even with a groundbreaking new approach known as inference-time compute.
Google's DeepMind unveiled Veo 2 model on Monday, a video generation model able to create clips up to two minutes in length at 4K resolution.
New 'reasoning' AI models are popping up left and right, and this latest model from Google could be its most impressive yet.