Google Unveils Gemini 2.5 Pro, Its Most Advanced AI Model

Google has released its Gemini 2.5 Pro model, claiming it to be the most intelligent Artificial Intelligence model to date.

Google has announced the rollout of its experimental Gemini 2.5 Pro model, now available to all users of the Gemini app, claiming it to be the company’s most intelligent AI model. Launched with promises of enhanced reasoning capabilities and improved performance, the model demonstrates Google’s continued efforts to advance AI technology.

The Gemini 2.5 Pro, which was initially available only to Gemini Advanced subscribers, is now offered for free. It includes a range of features such as app support, file uploads, and Canvas integration. The model distinguishes itself by exhibiting state-of-the-art results across various benchmarks, underlining its enhanced problem-solving prowess and coding abilities.

Google’s focus on ‘thinking models’ represents a significant shift towards building AI systems capable of solving complex challenges. The company plans to embed similar capabilities in future models, with the rollout of Gemini 2.5 continuing across platforms like Android and iOS, potentially reshaping the AI landscape markedly in the coming years.

79

Impact Score

Samsung starts sampling 3 GB GDDR7 running at 36 Gbps

Samsung has begun sampling its fastest-ever GDDR7 memory at 36 Gbps in 24 Gb dies that translate to 3 GB per chip, and it is also mass producing 28.0 Gbps 3 GB modules reportedly aimed at a mid-cycle NVIDIA refresh.

FLUX.2 image generation models now released, optimized for NVIDIA RTX GPUs

Black Forest Labs, the frontier Artificial Intelligence research lab, released the FLUX.2 family of visual generative models with new multi-reference and pose control tools and direct ComfyUI support. NVIDIA collaboration brings FP8 quantizations that reduce VRAM requirements by 40% and improve performance by 40%.

Aligning VMware migration with business continuity

Business continuity planning long focused on physical disasters, but cyber incidents, particularly ransomware, are now more common and often more damaging. In a survey of more than 500 CISOs, almost three-quarters (72%) said their organization had dealt with ransomware in the previous year.

Contact Us

Got questions? Use the form to contact us.

Contact Form

Clicking next sends a verification code to your email. After verifying, you can enter your message.