Google built the largest context window in any production frontier model — and then didn't ship it. Gemini 3.
Google shipped an open-weight text diffusion model three weeks ago.
Google's most photorealistic image generator has a death date stamped on it: June 30, 2026. Every Imagen endpoint — 3.
Google's Gemini 3.5 Flash — the company's budget-tier model, priced at $1.
If you're building anything that lets an LLM browse the web — a research agent, a coding assistant, a customer support bot — you have a problem.
On May 19, Google announced that Gemini CLI is being replaced by Antigravity CLI. The old tool stops working June 18.
Google shipped Gemini 3.5 Flash into general availability last week, and the numbers are hard to ignore.
Google dropped a sub-gigabyte file on May 5 that makes Gemma 4 run up to three times faster on the same hardware.
Google just shipped what it's calling the biggest redesign of Search in 25 years, and within days, the whole thing falls over when you type a five-syllable...
If you're using Gemini CLI — the open-source, Apache 2.0 terminal tool that Google launched to considerable developer goodwill — you have 26 days left.
Last week at Google I/O, buried between Gemini 3.5 benchmarks and the Antigravity 2.
Most image generation workflows aren't about getting one perfect shot.
Your GPU spends most of its inference time shuttling weights between VRAM and compute cores, not actually doing math.
Google buried the announcement inside a Q1 earnings call that had plenty of other headline-worthy numbers — 109.
Everybody benchmarked Gemma 4 when it dropped April 2. The Codeforces jump from 110 to 2150 got the headlines.
Snap cut 1,000 engineers two weeks ago and told investors that AI now writes 65% of their new code.
Google's cloud chief Thomas Kurian dropped the Gemini-Siri confirmation mid-keynote at Cloud Next yesterday, almost casually — like it was old news.
When Bloomberg reported Sunday that Google is in active talks with Marvell Technology to co-develop two new custom AI chips, Marvell stock popped and Broadcom...
Google just told you its biggest cost problem isn't training. It's serving.
Google rolled out a feature this week that, on the surface, looks like a productivity gimmick — save your Gemini prompts as reusable "Skills" and...