
Tech • IA • Crypto
Google has unveiled a sweeping AI overhaul across models, search, software, and devices, signaling a major shift toward fully integrated, agent-driven computing.
At its annual developer conference, Google positioned itself as a fully integrated AI powerhouse, spanning infrastructure, chips, models, cloud, and consumer products. The company emphasized its ability to unify every layer of the stack, aiming to embed AI across all digital interactions. Usage of Gemini surged from 400 million to 900 million users in one year, underscoring rapid adoption.
The flagship model Gemini 3.5 Flash focuses on speed, cost-efficiency, and built-in reasoning capabilities. It is designed for mass deployment across services, outperforming earlier versions while remaining cheaper than top-tier competitors. A more advanced Gemini 3.5 Pro version is expected in June, reinforcing Google’s push into high-performance AI.
A second major model, Gemini Omni, expands into image, video, and audio generation with contextual awareness. It demonstrates early “world model” capabilities, such as understanding physical interactions and scene logic. This enables advanced editing tasks like transforming environments or generating consistent multimedia outputs.
New products like Google Flow and Pix enable AI-driven video editing, avatar creation, and image manipulation. Users can generate full scenes or insert themselves into synthetic environments. Music generation also advances with Flow Music, allowing users to turn simple inputs into complete compositions.
Google expanded SynthID, its invisible watermarking system, to track AI-generated content. The tool can now identify not only AI origin but also source materials used in generation, addressing growing concerns over copyright and authenticity.
The Gemini application is being redesigned with dynamic, multimodal interaction, including voice, video, and live content generation. Users can seamlessly revisit, edit, and expand past outputs, turning conversations into continuous workflows rather than isolated prompts.
Google unveiled Spark, an agent platform capable of operating continuously in the cloud. These agents can access personal data across Gmail, Drive, and other services to perform complex tasks autonomously. The system reflects a shift toward persistent, personalized AI assistants working without direct user input.
With Antigravity 2.0, Google brings multi-agent collaboration into software development. Specialized agents can handle different aspects of coding simultaneously, such as security or frontend design, accelerating workflows and mimicking full development teams.
Google Search is undergoing a fundamental redesign into an AI-first experience. Instead of returning links, it will generate answers, perform tasks, and even complete transactions. This “agentic search” integrates personal data and preferences, marking a major shift away from traditional web navigation.
New Android-powered smart glasses integrate Gemini for real-time assistance. Users can interact via voice or touch, receiving contextual information about their surroundings. The device signals Google’s ambition to embed AI directly into everyday perception.
French AI company Mistral acquired Austria-based E2MI, specializing in industrial physics simulations. The move strengthens Europe’s position in AI-driven manufacturing, particularly in aerospace, energy, and materials engineering, with potential implications for reindustrialization.
A U.S. court dismissed Elon Musk’s claims against OpenAI, rejecting a demand of $134 billion after a rapid jury decision. Jurors concluded Musk acted too late and in competitive self-interest. The ruling clears uncertainty ahead of OpenAI’s anticipated fundraising.
Pope Leo XIV will publish an official doctrinal text addressing artificial intelligence, marking a rare intervention at the intersection of technology and ethics. The move echoes past Church responses to industrial revolutions and signals growing societal concern over AI’s impact.
Spotify is experimenting with user-generated AI podcasts stored in private libraries. While not directly producing the content, the platform enables integration through external tools, raising questions about copyright and the future of audio creation.
Google’s announcements reflect a decisive transition toward an AI-native digital ecosystem, where search, software, and devices converge into autonomous, personalized systems shaping how users interact with information and technology.