Sorry, aber gerade ist bei uns wirklich gar nix zu holen. Unser Server ist im Wartungsmodus – und unser kleiner Bot versucht gerade, mit letzter Energie die Fehlermeldungen zu sortieren.
Ob’s ein Daten-Leck, ein Stromausfall im Cluster oder einfach nur ein mies gelauntes Bit war – wir wissen es noch nicht. Was wir aber wissen:
Das Daten-Drama eskalierte zu einer Server-Schmelze. Aber keine Sorge: Wir sind dran.
Was jetzt?
Bei unseren Kolleg:innen von inside digital läuft bestimmt alles rund – schau doch mal vorbei!
Oder du vertreibst dir die Zeit mit einem Besuch auf unseren Social-Media-Kanälen – zum Beispiel Instagram, YouTube oder TikTok. Da gibt’s immerhin keine Serverprobleme – versprochen.
Danke für deine Geduld. Unser Bot rebootet schon mit Hochdruck. 🔧
NewsPixel 8 Won't Get Google's Gemini Nano AI Model
Google has a big AI push when it launched the Pixel 8 (review) series last year. However, it has also made some AI features exclusive to the Pixel 8 Pro from the beginning. It is now confirmed by the company that the Pixel 8 won’t receive Gemini Nano after all, leaving a few AI tools powered by the AI model missing from the smaller Pixel handset.
Also read: Everything you should learn about Google’s Gemini Nano.
For starters, Gemini Nano is the scaled down model of Google’s LLM (Large Language Model) for mobile which taps on the Android AICore architecture. It enables other AI features on the Pixel 8 Pro (review) such as Summarize in the Recorder app and smart reply function when using Gboard in a few messaging apps.
No Gemini Nano for the Google Pixel 8
In the latest Android Show episode (via 9to5Google), a Google engineer said that Gemini Nano won’t make it to the Pixel 8. The reason given was due to “hardware limitations” on the handset. While it’ did not dive deeper into the details, the bottleneck is likely due to the smaller 8 GB RAM of the Pixel 8 compared to 12 GB on the Pixel 8 Pro.
Interestingly, the standard Samsung Galaxy S24 (review) model also uses Gemini Nano comes with 8 GB of RAM. However, it should be noted that Samsung’s flagship phones are powered by a more capable Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 and Exynos 2400 chipsets while the Pixel 8 is equipped with Google’s Tensor G3. Hence, it’s likely that the NPU capabilities of the latter chip has been a limiting factor, too.
However, it’s not a complete dead end for Pixel 8 users, as there is the possibility that Google will bring these exclusive features to the device and even to much older Pixel phone models by releasing versions that run on the cloud.
As if today, Google’s Pixel 9 with Tensor G4 SoC is tipped to be released this fall and will most likely feature support for Gemini Nano as well as the Pixel 9 Pro and Pixel Fold 2. It’s unclear if the upcoming mid-range Pixel 8a that is touted to debut this summer will take advantage of the said AI model to supercharge its capabilities.
Apart from a few exclusive AI additions, the smaller Pixel 8 already enjoys other AI-based tools like Circle to Search and Magic Compose on top of existing features.
Why do you think Google is limiting Gemini Nano on the Pixel 8 Pro? We want to hear your opinion. Let’s discuss in the comments.
0 comments