Google vs. OpenAI: How the search giant sprang into action to combat an existential threat

When OpenAI unleashed ChatGPT, it awoke Google from its slumber. As Google now reimagines its business in the age of AI, big questions lie ahead. Continue reading Google vs. OpenAI: How the search giant sprang into action to combat an existential threat

Google Releases Its Most Powerful AI Model, Gemini 3—Here’s What You Need to Know

The post Google Releases Its Most Powerful AI Model, Gemini 3-Here’s What You Need to Know appeared com. Google released Gemini 3 Pro in a public preview today, calling it the company’s most capable AI model to date. The system handles text, images, audio, and video simultaneously while processing up to 1 million tokens of context-roughly equivalent to 700, 000 words, or about 10 full-length novels. The preview model is available for free for anyone to try here. Google said the model outperformed its predecessor, Gemini 2. 5 Pro, across nearly every benchmark the company tested. On Humanity’s Last Exam, an academic reasoning test, Gemini 3 Pro scored 37. 5% compared to 2. 5 Pro’s 21. 6%. On ARC-AGI-2, a visual reasoning puzzle benchmark, the gap widened further: 31. 1% versus 4. 9%. Of course, the real challenge at this point in the AI race isn’t technical so much as it is gaining commercial market share. Google, which once seemed indomitable in the search space, has given up an enormous amount of ground to OpenAI, which claims some 800 million weekly users ChatGPT versus Gemini, which reportedly has around 650 million monthly users. Google has not said how many weekly numbers it has, but that would be far fewer than its monthly count. Still, the technical achievements of Gemini 3 are impressive. Introducing Gemini 3 our most intelligent model that helps you bring any idea to life. Gemini 3 is our next step on the path toward AGI and has:🧠 State-of-the-art reasoning🖼️ Deep multimodal understanding💻 Powerful vibe coding so you can go from prompt to app in one shot. pic. twitter. com/zG8r95pGcS Google (@Google) November 18, 2025 Gemini 3 Pro uses what Google calls a sparse mixture-of-experts architecture. Instead of activating all 1 trillion-plus parameters for every query, the system routes each input to specialized subnetworks. Only a fraction of the model-the expert at that specific task-runs at any given time, cutting computational costs while. Continue reading Google Releases Its Most Powerful AI Model, Gemini 3—Here’s What You Need to Know

Enable these settings and Google Wallet will personalize your experience across Google services

Get deals and personalized ads you might be interested in when you enable certain settings on Google Wallet. Continue reading Enable these settings and Google Wallet will personalize your experience across Google services

Google to Integrate Polymarket Odds into Search and Finance Platforms

The post Google to Integrate Polymarket Odds into Search and Finance Platforms appeared com. TLDR: Polymarket data will appear directly in Google Search and Finance for real-time event odds. Integration uses Polygon and USDC, ensuring fully on-chain, verifiable transactions. Real-time probabilities may influence crypto trading and accelerate price discovery. Early rollout in Google Labs precedes wider U. S. and global expansion, per reports. Polymarket, the blockchain-based prediction market, is expanding its reach by partnering with Google to embed real-time odds directly into search results and Google Finance. The integration will display probabilities for elections, sports outcomes, crypto milestones, and other events. Users can query questions like “Will Bitcoin hit $100K by year-end?” and see live, crowd-sourced forecasts without leaving Google. The rollout begins in Google Labs for early testers, with broader access expected in the following weeks, according to Bloomberg. Polymarket Integration Brings Prediction Markets to Mainstream Users Polymarket operates on Polygon and uses USDC for on-chain settlements. This ensures that all transactions are transparent and verifiable on-chain. Integration with Google positions Polymarket as a bridge between DeFi speculation and traditional finance. Analysts note this could improve liquidity and accelerate price discovery for event-based markets. Google Finance and search will primarily feature real-time odds, historical charts, and probabilities from Polymarket and competitor Kalshi. Users in the United States will gain immediate access, while India and other regions are expected to follow soon. This visibility could introduce prediction markets to a much wider audience. Experts cite Polymarket’s election-night accuracy as a key driver of mainstream attention. The integration also enables faster arbitrage opportunities across venues, according to blockchain analysts. Liquidity surges may follow as more users monitor odds directly in Google Search. Crowdsourced forecasts could rival traditional polls for predictive reliability. Market observers note this is part of a growing trend of DeFi tools entering mainstream information layers. Polymarket x Google We’re excited to announce Polymarket. Continue reading Google to Integrate Polymarket Odds into Search and Finance Platforms

Google Maps, now brought to you with an AI conversational companion

The AI features are also supposed to enable Google Maps to be more precise by calling out landmarks instead of relying on distance notifications. Continue reading Google Maps, now brought to you with an AI conversational companion

The truth about finding cheap airfare, from the head of Google Flights

Google Flights is one of the most popular flight aggregators on the web. The site lets users search millions of flights to find the best routes and prices that meet their needs. Unsurprisingly, millions of people use Google Flights to find the best deals on holiday tickets. And the search for cheap flights has also led to many nuggets of so-called conventional wisdom that, if followed, will supposedly help you find the cheapest fares. But with the holidays rapidly approaching and finding the best deals on flights at the top of mind for millions of Americans, I wanted to find out if these bits of conventional wisdom were actually true-particularly when it comes to Google Flights. So, I went straight to the source and asked James Byers, group product manager at Google Search, who leads the Google Flights team and the development of the company’s other travel products in search. Claim #1: Clearing cookies or using incognito mode will help you find cheaper fares The idea behind this claim is that airlines and flight aggregators use cookies on your computer to track how many times you’ve visited a site to search for tickets. Frequent returns by the same user to a site suggest they may be preparing to buy tickets, so airlines or site operators raise prices. To get around this supposed tactic, conventional wisdom says to clear your browser’s cookies or just use incognito mode when shopping for tickets. But Byers says that, when it comes to Google Flights, this is a myth. “Whether you have cookies set or incognito, it doesn’t make any difference on Google Flights. You see the same results as anyone else,” says Byers. But he also understands why people believe this one. He notes that due to the networked nature of the flight ecosystem-there are trillions (yes, with a “T”) of possible flight combinations a person could take, and a price change in just one flight, say, departing from Paris, can result in price changes in seemingly unrelated flights. These price changes can happen “stunningly rapidly,” Byers says-within seconds-and the rapid nature of these price changes can make people believe the price changes they see when returning to a ticketing site even a few minutes after their first visit are being done to purposely target them, when, in fact, it isn’t. Claim #2: Using a VPN will help you find cheaper fares Another bit of conventional wisdom is that, depending on your actual location, you should use a VPN when shopping for flights. This is because airlines sometimes offer the same flight at different prices depending on where in the world you are located. If you are in a country with a relatively high GDP, the flight you want may be listed at $1,000. But those in countries with lower GDPs may see cheaper fares for the same flight. In short, airlines think people in wealthier countries will be able to pay more for the same flight than people in developing countries. Byers says this isn’t exactly a myth-but a VPN may do little good in the end. He notes that airlines do tend to offer different prices based on the country you’re purchasing the ticket from, so setting your VPN to show you’re in a different country may help you see lower fares initially. However, this tactic often fails because “usually, when you go to book that flight, you also need a billing address and a payment instrument, a credit card, or some other means of payment in that country.” If you don’t use a payment method native to that country, you’re unlikely to get the local fare. In the end, Byers says the VPN hack is “not a strategy we recommend.” Claim #3: Book your flight tickets on a Tuesday to get the cheapest fares This is probably the oldest bit of conventional wisdom. The idea is that airlines generally have the lowest fares on Tuesdays, so if you buy your tickets on that day of the week, they will be cheaper than if you buy them on any of the other six days. Surprisingly, Byers says Google’s data backs this up. But there’s a catch. “Tuesdays are a little bit cheaper,” Byers says, “but it’s 1. 3% [less], compared to Sunday, which is the most expensive day.” What that means is that if you find the perfect flight on a Sunday, you can wait until Tuesday to see if the price declines-but even if it does, expect to see savings of only around 1. 3%, at most. That’s less than seven bucks on a $500 ticket. And if you do wait until Tuesday to get that possible discount, the ticket you want could be gone by then. “The difference is so small that we recommend that once you see a price [you like] . you should [grab] it regardless of what day you happen to book on,” advises Byers. When you can actually find the best prices on holiday flights, according to Google Flights Conventional wisdom examined, I asked Byers if he had any tips for finding cheap holiday fares, based on Google Flights’ rich trove of data. Surprisingly, he told me that despite the holidays being little more than just two months away, now is a good time to buy your tickets. “We’ve got about 40 days until Thanksgiving,” Byers noted when I interviewed him on October 17. “I think we have about something like 70 days until Christmas. Believe it or not, we’re just about at the point where prices historically are the lowest.” Byers says that, for Thanksgiving, the sweet spot for finding the lowest fares is 35 days before the holiday, which puts the prime buying date at October 24 this year. But he notes that there is some latitude there, which includes “between about 24 to 59 days” before Thanksgiving. “Once you get past that window, prices can go up quickly,” he says. As for Christmas and the end-of-year holidays, Byers says the peak time to buy your tickets is “about 50 days before. That’s the lowest, based on our data.” Google’s head of flights had two other suggestions for finding great flight prices throughout the year. The first is to set Google Flight price alerts. “When we tell you it’s a great price,” he says, grab it. “We have some pretty great data and AI behind that to give you confidence that it’s time to book.” The second: be flexible. The more wiggle room you have with your dates, times, and destinations, the better deals you’ll likely find. “Flexibility is always the name of the game, if you have it.”. Continue reading The truth about finding cheap airfare, from the head of Google Flights