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Read the original on aistudio.google.com »
Nearly all UK drivers said they thought headlights were too bright and that they have been dazzled by oncoming vehicles, according to a major study. The government said last week that it will take a closer look at the design of cars and headlamps after concerns about lights dazzling drivers.A study commissioned by the Department for Transport (DfT) found 97% of people surveyed found they were regularly or sometimes distracted by oncoming vehicles and 96% thought most or some headlights were too bright. Dr Shaun Helman, who led the research for Berkshire-based Transport Research Laboratory (TRL), said it provides “compelling evidence” that lights’ glare is a “genuine issue for UK drivers”.
New measures will be included in the government’s upcoming Road Safety Strategy, reflecting what is becoming an increasingly fraught issue for road users. TRL’s data suggests that LED and whiter headlamps may be linked to glare and that drivers might find their whiteness harder to cope with.Of those surveyed, 33% said they had either stopped driving or are driving less at night because of lights, while another 22% said they would like to drive less at night but have no choice. A total of 1,850 drivers, matched to the age and gender split of the country’s licence holding population, were surveyed for their views.
TRL said LED lights used in vehicles are brighter, more concentrated and emit more blue light, which human eyes struggle with more at night. The RAC’s senior policy officer Rod Dennis said: “Having campaigned hard for this study, we welcome its findings which independently confirm what drivers have been telling us — that rather than being an imagined phenomenon, some bright headlights do cause a glare problem.“While drivers clearly benefit from high-performing headlights, it’s important this doesn’t lead to others suffering the effects of dazzle, so a balance needs to be struck,” he added.Mr Dennis said that it is “vital” TRL’s report is “reviewed carefully to put us on a path towards changes that ultimately benefit all road users.“Denise Voon, a clinical advisor at The College of Optometrists, said the DfT should “take immediate, actionable steps to support drivers and commission more detailed research, specifically into how headlight regulations need to change”.
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Read the original on www.bbc.com »
After nearly 10 years, I am stepping down as the CEO of Mastodon and transferring my ownership of the trademark and other assets to the Mastodon non-profit. Over the course of my time at Mastodon, I have centered myself less and less in our outward communications, and to some degree, this is the culmination of that trend. Mastodon is bigger than me, and though the technology we develop on is itself decentralized—with heaps of alternative fediverse projects demonstrating that participation in this ecosystem is possible without our involvement—it benefits our community to ensure that the project itself which so many people have come to love and depend on remains true to its values. There are too many examples of founder egos sabotaging thriving communities, and while I’d like to think myself an exception, I understand why people would prefer better guardrails.
But it would be uncouth for me to pretend that there isn’t some self-interest involved. Being in charge of a social media project is, turns out, quite the stressful endeavour, and I don’t have the right personality for it. I think I need not elaborate that the passion so many feel for social media does not always manifest in healthy ways. You are to be compared with tech billionaires, with their immense wealth and layered support systems, but with none of the money or resources. It manifests in what people expect of you, and how people talk about you. I remember somebody jokingly suggesting that I challenge Elon Musk to a fight (this was during his and Mark Zuckerberg’s martial arts feud), and quietly thinking to myself, I am literally not paid enough for that. I remember also, some Spanish newspaper article that for some reason, concluded that I don’t dress as fashionably as Jeff Bezos, based on the extremely sparse number of pictures of myself I have shared on the web. Over an entire decade, these tiny things chip away at you slowly. Some things chip faster. I steer clear of showing vulnerability online, but there was a particularly bad interaction with a user last summer that made me realise that I need to take a step back and find a healthier relationship with the project, ultimately serving as the impetus to begin this restructuring process.
As for what the legacy of my run will be, I find hard to answer. For one, I think it is not up for me to judge. On the other hand, it is as much about what didn’t happen as it is about what did. I’ve always thought that one of the most important responsibilities I had was to say “no”. It is not a popular thing to do, nor is it a fun thing to do, but being pulled into too many different directions at once can spell disaster for any project. I’d like to think I avoided some trouble by being careful. But I’m also aware that my aversion to public appearances cost Mastodon some opportunities in publicity. Ultimately, while I cannot take sole credit for it, I am nevertheless most proud of how far we’ve made it over these last 10 years. From the most barebones project written out of my childhood bedroom, to one of the last remaining and thriving pieces of the original, community-centred internet.
I have so much passion for Mastodon and the fediverse. The fediverse is an island within an increasingly dystopian capitalist hellscape. And from my perspective, Mastodon is our best shot at bringing this vision of a better future to the masses. This is why I’m sticking around, albeit in a more advisory, and less public, role.
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Read the original on blog.joinmastodon.org »
At the time of writing 12:43 UTC on Tue 18 Nov, Cloudflare has taken many sites down. I’m trying to browse the web, but about half of the sites show an error:
Most of these sites are not even that big. I expect maybe a few thousand visitors per month.
This demonstrates again a simple fact: if you put your site behind a centralized service, then this service is a single point of failure. Even large established companies make mistakes and can go down.
Most people use Cloudflare because they have been scared into the idea that you need DDoS protection. Well, maybe you do, but probably you don’t.
As they say in security, “no one will burn a zero day on you!”. For your small blog with one hundred visitors per month, it’s probably the same: “no one will burn their DDoS capabilities on you!”
I don’t know how else to say it. Many people keep talking about the importance of a decentralized web, and then continue putting their site behind Cloudflare.
If you really want to be safe in case your server goes down, then setup a second version of your site at another location and point to that server via the A and AAAA records, see “round-robin DNS”.
Maybe that’s the core of this message. Face your fears. Put your service on the internet. Maybe it goes down, but at least not by yet another Cloudflare outage.
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Read the original on huijzer.xyz »
I believe the Pebble community, Core Devices, Rebble and I all want the same thing. We love our Pebbles and want them to keep working long into the future. We love the community that has sprung up around Pebble, and how it’s persevered - next year will be the 14th anniversary of the original Kickstarter campaign!
But I have to respond to claims made by Rebble posted on their blog yesterday. I will link to their post so you can read their side of the story, and I’ve asked them to link back to this blog post from theirs.
Look - I’m the first person to call myself out when I fail. I wrote a detailed blog post about Success and Failure at Pebble and often write in detail about learning from my mistakes. But in this specific case, you’ll find that I’ve done my utmost to respect the Pebble legacy and community. Rebble is misleading the community with false accusations.
For those just passing through, here’s the TLDR:
Core Devices is a small company I started in 2025 to relaunch Pebble and build new Pebble smartwatches. Rebble is a non-profit organization that has supported the Pebble community since 2017. Rebble has done a ton of great work over the years and deserves recognition and support for that.
Core Devices and Rebble negotiated an agreement where Core would pay $0.20/user/month to support Rebble services. But the agreement broke down after over the following disagreement.
Rebble believes that they ‘100%’ own the data of the Pebble Appstore. They’re attempting to create a walled garden around 13,000 apps and faces that individual Pebble developers created and uploaded to the Pebble Appstore between 2012 and 2016. Rebble later scraped this data in 2017.
I disagree. I’m working hard to keep the Pebble ecosystem open source. I believe the contents of the Pebble Appstore should be freely available and not controlled by one organization.
Rebble posted a blog post yesterday with a bunch of false accusations, and in this post I speak to each of them.
* Dec 2016 - Pebble shut down. Some IP was sold to Fitbit. I blogged about why I think we failed. Fitbit continued to run the Pebble Appstore and web services for 1.5 years. I really appreciated that.Rebble organization grew out of the official Pebble Developers Discord.
* Rebble organization grew out of the official Pebble Developers Discord.
* July 2018, Fitbit shut down the Pebble appstore.Before it shut down, Rebble (and others) scraped all 13,000 apps and metadata from the Pebble Appstore. Rebble began hosting a copy of the appstore. They created a new Dev Portal where developers could upload new apps, roughly 500 have been uploaded since July 2018.Rebble also reverse engineered many Pebble web services (weather, timeline and voice transcription) and provided them as a paid service for the Pebble community.
* Before it shut down, Rebble (and others) scraped all 13,000 apps and metadata from the Pebble Appstore. Rebble began hosting a copy of the appstore. They created a new Dev Portal where developers could upload new apps, roughly 500 have been uploaded since July 2018.
* Rebble also reverse engineered many Pebble web services (weather, timeline and voice transcription) and provided them as a paid service for the Pebble community.
* Jan 2025 - Google open sourced PebbleOS, breathing new life into the community.
* March 2025 - I announced a new company (Core Devices) and 2 new watches - store.rePebble.com
* November 2025 - we finished shipping out 5,000 Pebble 2 Duos. We’re working hard on Pebble Time 2. We’re aiming to start shipping in January.
Accusation 1: ‘Rebble paid for the work that [Eric] took as a base for his commercial watches’
* I think they’re accusing me of ‘stealing’ open source contributions to PebbleOS that Rebble paid for. This is entirely false.
* We did not take any PebbleOS work Rebble paid for ‘as a base for [our] commercial watches’. To my best of my knowledge My best guess is that they are referring to Rebble having paid CodeCoup, the company behind , to fix some bugs that affected older non-Core Devices watches. Any Rebble-sponsored CodeCoup commits are not present in our repo. In fact, the opposite is true - we paid Codecoup $10,000 to fix multiple BLE stack issues, some of them on the host side that benefit all devices, including old Pebbles. Update: I’m told Rebble did pay him, months later. My point is valid - when we shifted development to our repo, Rebble had not paid anything. More broadly, I reject the premise that using open source software under the terms of the license, regardless of who funds development, is ‘stealing’.
* We started using our own repo for PebbleOS development because PRs on the Rebble repo reviews were taking too long. We only had one firmware engineer at the time (now we have a whopping 2!) and he felt like he was being slowed down too much. All of our contributions to PebbleOS have been 100% open source.
* Overall, the feedback that PebbleOS could benefit from open governance is well taken. Long term, PebbleOS would be a good fit for open source organization with experience in open governance, like Apache or Linux Foundation. I wrote about this last week.
* With our small team and fairly quick development schedule, it’s true that we haven’t PRed our changes into Rebble’s repo. It’s tough to prioritize this while we are busy fixing bugs and getting ready for Pebble Time 2.
Accusation 2: ‘Core took Rebble’s work’ on libpebblecommon to create libpebble3
* The majority (>90%) of our new open sourcelibpebble3 library was written by Core Devices employees. The remainder comes from libpebblecommon, another open source library written by two people.
* In April 2025, Core purchased the copyright to the libpebblecommon code from the two maintainers and incorporated it into libpebble3**, which is also open source**.
* All our contributions to libpebble3 are GPL-3.0 licensed. Here’s the motivation behind that our licensing strategy for this repo. We use the same CLA agreement as Matrix, QT and MySQL. Our CLA explicitly includes a clause that requires to Core Devices to distribute all contributions under an OSI-compatible FOSS license (e.g. GPLv3).
* Note that neither Rebble libpebblecommon maintainer signed the Rebble blog post.
Side note regarding Cobble, I don’t think Rebble even knows this but in 2024, I personally spent over $30,000 to support its development, way before PebbleOS was open source. It was my own way to support the community.
Accusation 3: ‘Core promised that they would let Rebble maintain and own the developer site’
* Nothing of the sort was agreed upon. See the full written agreement that Core Devices has with Rebble towards the bottom. Rebble agreed that Core would host the developer site.
* I have been maintaining and updating the developer site personally - all open source. Having two sources of truth would be confusing for the community.
Accusation 4: ‘[Eric] scraped our app store, in violation of the agreement that we reached with him previously’
Note: ‘scraping’ usually means to automated extraction of data from a website.
* Here’s what happened. I wanted to highlight some of my favourite watchfaces on the Pebble Appstore. Last Monday Nov 10, after I put my kids to sleep and between long calls with factories in Asia, I started building a webapp to help me quickly go through Pebble Appstore and decide which were my top picks.
* Let me be crystal clear - my little webapp did not download apps or ‘scrape’ anything from Rebble. The webapp displayed the name of each watchface and screenshots and let me click on my favs. I used it to manually look through 6000 watchfaces with my own eyes. I still have 7,000 to go. Post your server logs, they will match up identically to the app I (well…Claude) wrote (source code here)
* I integrated these picks into the Pebble Appstore on Saturday and posted about it on Sunday.
All of four of these accusations could have been clarified simply by asking me. Instead, Rebble decided to post them on their blog and threaten a lawsuit.
How did we get here?
Why are there dueling blog posts in the Pebbleverse?
I think most of the people are behind Rebble are great and the community overall is awesome. I know they truly mean well, but there are many aspects of the org that are severely troubling. I am very close with one of the Rebble board members, who I consider a personal friend. Over the years, I learned a lot about the organization and helped coach him through some major disputes between board members.
I exchanged literally thousands of messages with my friend on this topic over the span of 3 years. I refrained from getting too involved, despite being asked several times to join Rebble as a board member or lead the organization. I demurred - I saw how painful it was for him and I had no interest in being part of that.
PebbleOS is now open source! Yay. This is thanks to the work of many Googlers, ex-Pebblers and others - I called out (hopefully) all of them in my blog post in March. I really wanted Rebble to be a part of the Pebble revival going forward. I hired 3 people from Rebble to join Core Devices. I regularly brought up Rebble’s efforts over the years.
I engaged with Rebble folks in discussions in the spring on how we could formally work together, and then made some concrete proposals in the summer. One difficulty was that Core Devices is a business with customers and schedules. This didn’t always sync up with the timeframes of a non-profit. Things became very drawn out. It was very hard to pin people down, even on simple stuff like what the goals of Rebble as an organization were.
Regardless, I continued pushing to make Rebble a key part of the Pebble relaunch.
By August, we finally got close to an agreement.
On September 30 2025, we agreed to the following document and published respective blog posts (ours, theres). Core Devices would pay Rebble $0.20/user/month. I considered it a donation to a group that has done so much to support the community. But I purposely pushed for openness - no single group (Core Devices or Rebble) should be in control.
Notice the final bullet in the App store section:
All binary/metadata (including historical apps) will be published as archive file (no scraping Rebble services)
Looking back, we should have had more clear wording in this agreement. But this was after months of chat discussions and hours of Zoom calls. I honestly thought that we had reached an agreement to make the archive open, like in this message I received from a Rebble board member.
By the end of October, Rebble has changed their mind about providing an archive file.
Not withstanding their false accusations of theft, the crux of our disagreement is the archive of 13,000 Pebble apps and watchfaces that were uploaded to the Pebble Appstore in July 2018 before it was shut down.
* I believe that these apps and watchfaces should be archived publicly and freely accessible by anyone. They should not held behind a walled garden by one organization. I repeatedly advocated for hosting this data on a neutral 3rd party like Archive.org.
* Rebble believes ‘the data behind the Pebble App Store is 100% Rebble’ (this is a direct quote from their blog post). They repeatedly refer to all watchfaces and watchapps as ‘our data’.
This is just plainly false. The apps and watchfaces were originally uploaded by individual developers to an appstore run by a company that no longer exists. These folks created beautiful work and shared them freely with the Pebble community. I’ve spoken with numerous Pebble app developers about this. After the fall of Pebble Tech Corp, none of them envisioned one single organization claiming ownership of their work and restricting access, or charging money for access.
Let’s do the right thing - honour the original developers and create a free publicly available archive of their beautiful watchfaces and watchapps.
It’s easy to assume the worst in situations like this. But our plan for the appstore is pretty straightforward. We’re working on rewriting the appstore frontend to be native in the mobile app rather than a web view. Rebble’s appstore backend API will be the data source. Rebble’s dev portal is where developers upload apps. No subscription or Rebble account will not be required to download apps. We intend to curate how the appstore is displayed Pebble app.
We’re excited to see other Pebble-supporting mobile apps pop up - like MicroPebble and GadgetBridge, offering different features and experiences. We’d love to support these efforts with open source code or financially.
Reading things like ‘We’re happy to let them build whatever they want as long as it doesn’t hurt Rebble’ in their blog post worries me. Take our voice-to-text and weather features. Rebble currently offers these as part of their paid subscription. Our new Pebble mobile app includes a on-device speech-to-text feature. We’re planning to include weather for free in our app and make the data available to all watchfaces so you don’t need to configure each one separately. These features are better for users but would they ‘hurt’ Rebble? Will I need to ask permission from Rebble before building these features? It’s clear that the goals of a non-profit and device manufacturer will not always be in alignment.
Now consider the appstore. It’s a fundamental part of the Pebble experience. Even before yesterday’s accusations, I felt wary about relying too heavily on a 3rd party like Rebble to provide such a critical service. When people buy a watch from Core Devices, they expect to be able to download apps and watchfaces. If Rebble leadership changes their mind, how can I be certain I can deliver a good experience for our customers? This is one of the primary reasons I think it’s important for an archive of the Pebble Appstore to be freely available.
Rebble - prove that you believe in an open, unrestricted Pebble community. Tear down the walled garden you are trying to create. Publish your copy of the Pebble Appstore archive. Stop saying that you ‘100%’ own other developers data. Let’s move on from this ridiculous sideshow and focus on making Pebble awesome!
I’ve worked hard to structure everything that we’re doing to be sustainable for the long term, and to do right by the Pebble community. I think Rebble should do the same.
I earned almost nothing from Pebble Tech Corp. I paid myself a $65,000 salary each year. I did not get any payout through the asset sale. I fought to make sure that all Pebble employees were taken care of as best as possible, and that the Pebble community would live on. I believe that at every turn, I’ve done right by the community.
I didn’t relaunch Pebble to make a lot of money. My goal this time round is to make it sustainable. I want to continue making more watches and cool gadgets. There are no investors. I am taking huge risks doing this. I relaunched it because I love Pebble and want it to live on long into the future. Generally, I am excited and positive for the future, despite everything.
For everyone else, again, I apologize for the extreme amounts of inside baseball and the better things you could be doing with your time. I’ll leave the comments open here. Please refrain from any personal attacks or vicious comments (at myself or other people) - follow the HN guidelines.
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Read the original on ericmigi.com »
Today we are introducing Gemini 3, our most intelligent model that can help bring any idea to life. Built on a foundation of state-of-the-art reasoning, Gemini 3 Pro delivers unparalleled results across every major AI benchmark compared to previous versions. It also surpasses 2.5 Pro at coding, mastering both agentic workflows and complex zero-shot tasks.
Gemini 3 Pro fits right into existing production agent and coding workflows, while also enabling new use cases not previously possible. It’s available in preview at $2/million input tokens and $12/million output tokens for prompts 200k tokens or less through the Gemini API in Google AI Studio and Vertex AI for enterprises (see pricing for rate limits and full pricing details). Additionally, it can be utilized via your favorite developer tools within the broader ecosystem and is available, with rate limits, free of charge in Google AI Studio.
Developers are spending more and more time creating software with AI at their side. Building on the momentum of Gemini 2.5 Pro and all the feedback, Gemini 3 Pro serves as a new foundation of intelligence for what’s possible with an agentic coding model.
Gemini 3 Pro scores 54.2% points on Terminal-Bench 2.0, which tests a model’s tool use ability to operate a computer via terminal.
You can feel the power of this model come to life in Google Antigravity, our new agentic development platform, in addition to Gemini CLI, Android Studio, and other coding products like Cursor, GitHub, JetBrains, Manus, Cline and more.
To advance how the model and IDE work together, we’re introducing Google Antigravity to showcase what’s possible with Gemini 3. It’s an agentic development platform that enables developers to operate at a higher, task-oriented level by managing agents across workspaces, while retaining a familiar AI IDE experience at its core. It’s a faster way to develop: you act as the architect, collaborating with intelligent agents that operate autonomously across the editor, terminal, and browser. These agents plan and execute complex software tasks, communicating their work with the user via detailed artifacts. This elevates all aspects of development, from building features, UI iteration, and fixing bugs to researching and generating reports. Visit the Google Antigravity website to download the public preview at no charge, now available for MacOS, Windows and Linux.
With Gemini 3, we are releasing a client-side bash tool that empowers the model to propose shell commands as part of agentic workflows for tasks such as navigating your local filesystem, driving development processes, and automating system operations. We’re pairing this with a hosted server-side bash tool for multi language code generation and secure prototyping. Available now in the Gemini API for early access partners, with general availability coming soon.Additionally, Gemini hosted tools Grounding with Google Search and URL context can now be combined with structured outputs. This is especially powerful for building agentic use cases which involve fetching and extracting data and then outputting them in a specific format for downstream agentic tasks.
Gemini 3 Pro unlocks the true potential of “vibe coding”, where natural language is the only syntax you need. By significantly improving complex instruction following and deep tool use, the model can translate a high-level idea into a fully interactive app with a single prompt. It handles the heavy lifting of multi-step planning and coding details delivering richer visuals and deeper interactivity, allowing you to focus on the creative vision.
Gemini 3 Pro tops the WebDev Arena leaderboard by scoring an impressive 1487 Elo.
Whether it’s building a game with a single prompt, an interactive landing page from unstructured voice notes, or a full on app from a napkin sketch, developers can bring their idea to life with Gemini 3. With this model, we pushed single prompt generation capabilities further than ever, meaning you can go from idea to AI-powered app with a single prompt, like this retro game built in Google AI Studio.
We’ve built Google AI Studio to be your fastest path from a prompt to an AI-native app. Build mode lets you add AI capabilities faster than ever, automatically wiring up the right models and APIs, while features like annotations enable fast and intuitive iteration. You can start building with Gemini 3 in Google AI Studio today.
Gemini 3 is the best model in the world for complex multimodal understanding and sets new highs on MMMU-Pro for complex image reasoning and Video MMMU for video understanding. Combining its intelligence and a 1 million-token context window, developers can see significant improvements while building key multimodal use cases. To give you more control over latency and cost, you can now configure multimodal vision processing with more granularity in the Gemini API based on the visual fidelity required for your application.
Gemini 3 Pro is best-in-class for document understanding, going beyond simple OCR (Object Character Recognition) to intelligently handle complex document understanding and reasoning.You can see the model’s vision understanding, reasoning and coding capabilities in our demo app that brings any idea to life in Google AI Studio.
The model’s improved spatial understanding also drives strong performance in embodied reasoning tasks like pointing, trajectory prediction and task progression, unlocking new use cases across autonomous vehicles, XR devices and robotics.Its spatial reasoning also powers intelligent screen understanding of desktop, mobile and OS screens delivering significant performance improvement for computer use agents. The model also understands the intent of user actions based on mouse movements and screen annotations unlocking novel experiences like this Visual Computer demo app.
Gemini 3 Pro captures rapid action with high-frame-rate understanding, ensuring developers never miss a critical moment in fast-moving scenes. Beyond speed, long-context recall allows for synthesizing narratives and pinpointing specific details across hours of continuous footage.
Gemini 3 Pro is now integrated into many developer products and tools to seamlessly fit into your existing workflows and unlock entirely new ways to code.Build with the Gemini API: You can integrate Gemini 3 Pro immediately into your applications via Google AI Studio and Vertex AI for Enterprise. To support the model’s deeper reasoning capabilities, we’re introducing a new thinking level and more granular media resolution parameters in the API, along with stricter validation for thought signatures. This update is critical for preserving the model’s thoughts across multi-turn conversations. Check out the Developer Guide for the technical breakdown and our Prompting Guide to learn how to build with Gemini 3 Pro.Experience the model’s agentic capabilities: Whether you are adding AI-native features to an Android app, automating workflows through Gemini CLI or managing a fleet of autonomous agents in Google Antigravity, Gemini 3 Pro provides the reliability needed for complex, agentic architectures.Vibe code with Gemini 3 Pro: Google AI Studio is your fastest path to bring any idea to life. Get started in Build mode to generate a fully functional app with a single prompt. And if you need a little inspiration, click “I’m feeling lucky” and let Gemini 3 Pro handle the creative spark and the code implementation simultaneously.The software landscape is shifting. As AI changes who builds and how they build, we are committed to meeting you where you are — giving you the tools to push the boundaries of what’s possible.This is just the start of the Gemini 3 era but we can’t wait to see what you build with Gemini 3 Pro!
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Read the original on blog.google »
Nearly two years ago we kicked off the Gemini era, one of our biggest scientific and product endeavors ever undertaken as a company. Since then, it’s been incredible to see how much people love it. AI Overviews now have 2 billion users every month. The Gemini app surpasses 650 million users per month, more than 70% of our Cloud customers use our AI, 13 million developers have built with our generative models, and that is just a snippet of the impact we’re seeing.
And we’re able to get advanced capabilities to the world faster than ever, thanks to our differentiated full stack approach to AI innovation — from our leading infrastructure to our world-class research and models and tooling, to products that reach billions of people around the world.
Every generation of Gemini has built on the last, enabling you to do more. Gemini 1’s breakthroughs in native multimodality and long context window expanded the kinds of information that could be processed — and how much of it. Gemini 2 laid the foundation for agentic capabilities and pushed the frontiers on reasoning and thinking, helping with more complex tasks and ideas, leading to Gemini 2.5 Pro topping LMArena for over six months.
And now we’re introducing Gemini 3, our most intelligent model, that combines all of Gemini’s capabilities together so you can bring any idea to life.
It’s state-of-the-art in reasoning, built to grasp depth and nuance — whether it’s perceiving the subtle clues in a creative idea, or peeling apart the overlapping layers of a difficult problem. Gemini 3 is also much better at figuring out the context and intent behind your request, so you get what you need with less prompting. It’s amazing to think that in just two years, AI has evolved from simply reading text and images to reading the room.
And starting today, we’re shipping Gemini at the scale of Google. That includes Gemini 3 in AI Mode in Search with more complex reasoning and new dynamic experiences. This is the first time we are shipping Gemini in Search on day one. Gemini 3 is also coming today to the Gemini app, to developers in AI Studio and Vertex AI, and in our new agentic development platform, Google Antigravity — more below.
Like the generations before it, Gemini 3 is once again advancing the state of the art. In this new chapter, we’ll continue to push the frontiers of intelligence, agents, and personalization to make AI truly helpful for everyone.
We hope you like Gemini 3, we’ll keep improving it, and look forward to seeing what you build with it. Much more to come!
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Read the original on blog.google »
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