To speed up the pace of its AI development, Google is further streamlining the teams that develop its AI services, platforms and tools.
On Thursday, Logan Kilpatrick, product lead for Google's AI Studio developer platform, said in an announcement post On
Founded in 2023 through a merger of Google's DeepMind team and Google Research's Google Brain team, Google DeepMind is the AI research and development arm behind a lot of Google's recent AI product innovations, including Gemini.
“This move will allow us to double our already intensive collaboration and speed up research through the developer pipeline,” Kilpatrick wrote in his post. “Our team’s mission stays the identical.”
Jaana Dogan, an engineer on one in every of the teams moving to Google DeepMind, said In a post on
“Better APIs, more open source, more tools, whatever… it's a really small percentage of what's next,” she wrote.
TechCrunch has reached out to Google for more information and can update this post after we hear back.
Google's merger of development-focused AI teams into its Google DeepMind organization follows the corporate moved the team behind its Gemini-powered chatbot, also called Gemini, to DeepMind. At the time, Google CEO Sundar Pichai said the reorganization was geared toward “further increasing the pace of progress” of Google’s AI development.
Google has it too moved its models, research and responsible AI teams to DeepMind in recent months.
In an audio recording of a Google day-to-day meeting in December obtained by CNBC, Pichai described the corporate's Gemini chatbot as having “strong momentum” while also acknowledging: “We still have some work to do in 2025 to shut the gap and there’s one.” “To construct a leadership position.” So.”
“Scaling Gemini on the buyer side shall be our biggest focus (in 2025),” Pichai allegedly said. “I feel it's really necessary that we internalize the urgency of this moment and the necessity to move faster as an organization. There’s lots at stake.”
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