Google He debuted a couple of new Super Bowl commercials that portray ai as such a central technology for people's lives as the phone or computer in which they access. But, like some of the other Google Super Bowl ads, the company is trying once again to make your fabrics between plays.
The first announcement, Entitled “Dream work”It represents a man who uses the Gemini Live Voice mode on his Pixel phone to prepare for a job interview. After Gemini asks him to talk about “the work he cared most”, the man begins to detail what he learned after becoming a father.
Above all, man basically only speaks with himself all the time. Gemini takes a seat in most of the announcement, since he simply shows himself listening and offering suggestions between the scenes of the man who raises his daughter, which even shows the family's dog at the door of death.
The following announcement, Called blitz partySimilarly, it stands out Gemini in Pixel, but acquires a much more cheerful tone. A man uses the voice mode of the Chatbot ai to learn more about football and find phrases that he can use to impress the family of his appointment before tuning the great game together, such as shouting “Passes interference!” On television. A little cheesy, but at least he is not using a dying dog to pull your heads.
Despite the change in the tone, it seems that Google is really trying to position its assistant of ai as a useful and conversational partner with which he can interact every day, causing a regular search on Google to seem worldly.
The company also highlighted its ai tools in the work space in a series of ads that highlight small businesses throughout the United States, although one of them showed an incorrect statistic in a Gemini response.
(Tagstotranslate) ai