Noti.Group RSS Feed
  • Contact Us
Sunday, April 26, 2026
Noti Group Logo
  • Home
  • World News
  • Business
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World News
  • Business
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
Noti Group
No Result
View All Result
ADVERTISEMENT

Google’s AI product names are confusing as hell

in Technology
Reading Time: 3 mins read
407 4
A A
0
Google is officially dumping Assistant for Gemini
137
SHARES
6.8k
VIEWS
ShareShareShareShareShare

Google executives took the stage this week at I/O to unveil their latest AI technology: Deep Think. Or was it Deep Search? Then there’s the new subscription plan, Google AI Pro, which used to be Gemini Advanced, plus the new AI Ultra plan. Then there’s Gemini in Chrome, which is different from AI Mode in search. Project Starline is now Google Beam, there are Gems and Jules, Astra and Aura… you get the idea. The products overlap in confusing ways, the naming conventions are diabolical, and I’m begging Google to return some semblance of sanity to its product line before we all lose our DeepMinds.

In Google’s defense, at least we’re not calling any of these things Bard. That was Google’s original name for its AI chatbot during the Great Chatbot Rush of 2023. OpenAI shipped ChatGPT, and apparently Google decided it had to ship something before there was time to consider not naming it Bard. The company corrected that mistake and went with Gemini, folding in Duet along the way. This was all a very good idea.

This week’s Google I/O made it clear that the naming conventions are out of control again. There’s Gemini 2.5 Pro Deep Think, which is designed to reason through complex math and coding problems. It’s a product of DeepMind, which is Google’s parent company’s AI research arm. Oh, and there’s Deep Search, which is part of the new AI Mode coming to Google Search. And then there’s Search Live, which lets you point a camera at something and ask questions about it. But don’t confuse it with Gemini Live, which you can also use to point a camera at something and ask questions about it. Also, Google Lens still exists? That’s where I keep getting lost.

There’s Veo, which is Google’s image-generation model, and Flow, an AI video editing tool, and then Flow TV, where you can watch other people’s weird AI-generated videos. We’ve got Vertex, Lyria, and Imagen, which might also be a list of potential baby names from, like, 2007. There are all of the various flavors of Gemini, including the multimodal AI assistant, not to be confused with Project Astra, which is also a multimodal AI assistant — just one you can’t use yet. There’s Project Mariner, the click-around-a-website agent mode, which is confusing to me personally as a Seattle Mariners fan. This was doubly confusing when Google demoed it purchasing tickets for a Cincinnati Reds game, but I digress.

I do have a little sympathy for Google. We’re watching the company discover how to develop and market emerging technologies and the tools to use them in real time. On stage, CEO Sundar Pichai called the pace of new product releases “relentless.” Google is under pressure from OpenAI, Meta, and its shareholders to ship AI features as fast as it can invent them. Maybe it doesn’t leave a lot of time to spend on clever naming strategies.

But this feels like the trickle-down effect of a familiar, uniquely Google problem: separate teams working on similar technologies that don’t talk to each other. That’s how you end up launching seven different chat apps with slightly different features and slightly different names, or maybe nine different ways to use AI to search for a new pair of shoes. Would you like to use AI to help you buy things, by the way? Google would like to help.

The funny thing is we’re talking about Google. As in, just Google it. The company name that became a verb you use whenever you need to find something out. Google rivals the likes of “Kleenex” in terms of household recognition. But the name “Google” feels like an artifact of a long-gone era when some lovable goofballs reinvented how we use the web. Here and now, I’m looking at a press release about new AI features while trying to understand which belong to Gemini, what Project Mariner does, what Astra has to do with Lens, and feeling a little lost. Guess I’ll just Google it.

[Notigroup Newsroom in collaboration with other media outlets, with information from the following sources]

Tags: googleGoogle I/O 2025Tech
Previous Post

Anthropic’s Claude 4 AI models are better at coding and reasoning

Next Post

‘Thunderbolts’ stunt performer on Bucky Barnes’ motorcycle scene

Related Posts

An influx of used EVs could drive down prices
Technology

An influx of used EVs could drive down prices

April 25, 2026
Researchers say we’re talking less than ever
Technology

Researchers say we’re talking less than ever

April 25, 2026
The Govee smart lamp brightened up my room, and then my life
Technology

The Govee smart lamp brightened up my room, and then my life

April 25, 2026
Screenshot
Technology

Framework’s Laptop 13 Pro is the most exciting new PC in forever

April 25, 2026
Load More
Next Post
'Thunderbolts' stunt performer on Bucky Barnes' motorcycle scene

'Thunderbolts' stunt performer on Bucky Barnes' motorcycle scene

No Result
View All Result

Recent Posts

  • Giancarlo Stanton, Yankees waiting to make IL decision ‘not ideal’ calf issue
  • Mets’ Nolan McLean trying to fix concerning trend late in starts
  • Karl-Anthony Towns delivered Magic-like gem when Knicks needed it most
  • Dodgers rout Cubs, snap offensive slump
  • UCLA baseball keeps finding way, edging Sacramento State

Recent Comments

  • Stefano on The Last Byzantine Medieval Town on Earth Is Being Destroyed, and It’s Too Late
  • Van Hens on The Last Byzantine Medieval Town on Earth Is Being Destroyed, and It’s Too Late
  • Ioannis K on The Last Byzantine Medieval Town on Earth Is Being Destroyed, and It’s Too Late
  • Panagiotis Nikolaos on The Last Byzantine Medieval Town on Earth Is Being Destroyed, and It’s Too Late
  • John Miele on UK government suggests deleting files to save water

Noti Group All rights reserved

No Result
View All Result
Noti Group

What’s New Here

  • Giancarlo Stanton, Yankees waiting to make IL decision ‘not ideal’ calf issue
  • Mets’ Nolan McLean trying to fix concerning trend late in starts
  • Karl-Anthony Towns delivered Magic-like gem when Knicks needed it most

Topics to Cover!

  • Business (4,866)
  • Entertainment (1,972)
  • General News (326)
  • Health (327)
  • Investigative Journalism (12)
  • Lifestyle (4)
  • Sports (9,807)
  • Technology (6,677)
  • World News (1,336)
  • Contact Us
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • RSS
  • Contact News Room
  • Code of Conduct
  • Careers
  • Values
  • Advertise
  • DMCA

© 2025 - noti.group - All rights reserved - noti.group runs on 100% green energy.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World News
  • Business
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment

© 2025 - noti.group - All rights reserved - noti.group runs on 100% green energy.