You certainly do not need first-moverās advantage when you are a tech behemoth that the masses are reliant on. If you havenāt guessed it yet, Iām talking about Google.
š A slow start doesnāt reflect oneās true potential
Despite earlier woes about losing in the race to advance artificial intelligence (AI) and allowing OpenAI to widen the competition gap, Google has remained steadfast and unveiled its first full-fledged multimodal general AI model Gemini. The tech giant added a cool $80 billion to its already-stunning market cap after its share prices rose about 5%, following the launch of its new AI model. This success comes after embarrassing times when the conglomerateās employees were asked to ādogfoodā its Bard chatbot in an internal memo by Sundar Pichai.
šØāš» Poised to create a following for itself
The Gemini AIās truly multimodal model supposedly distinguishes itself from its competitors as it has been trained on a variety of modes and mediums such as images, audios, videos and of course, text. Although a recent upgrade in September enabled OpenAIās ChatGPT to process images, there was no mention of ChatGPT being trained on anything besides text, making Googleās Gemini AI stand out with its truly multimodal approach to training the model.
š„ Could this have links to Sam Altmanās firing?
Within a span of less than a year, Google has sharpened its competitive edge in the race to advance AI. Geminiās success is certainly a far cry from the horror in February, when the company lost about $100 billion in value after its Bard chatbot provided inaccurate responses to a question on the James Webb Telescope. In a Wall Street Journal interview, Australian academic and now-resigned OpenAI board member Helen Toner shared that the launch of ChatGPT could have had a knock-on effect, pressuring tech behemoths like Google into rolling out their own iterations of ChatGPT and AI products prematurely.