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Google Riposte to Chatgpt with Gemini 2.5 Pro, a free model with stunning performance

Google Riposte to Chatgpt with Gemini 2.5 Pro, a free model with stunning performance

While all the media have been talking, in recent days, about the new version of ChatGPT with the GPT‑4o model and its ability to generate impressive images, Google also took the opportunity to deploy a new version of Gemini, its artificial intelligence model.

New features with Gemini 2.5 Pro

To enhance this new version of Gemini, Google has been very generous with users. Beyond the free accounts that have access to a million "tokens" without spending a cent, the features offered by the model go far beyond all expectations...

Among Google's latest advances, we can notably mention Gemini's reasoning capacity, approaching the latest updates OpenAI update, or even Chinese artificial intelligence DeepSeek and its R1 model.

Developers should also appreciate this new version, with highly advanced programming skills. In the video shared by Google for the launch of Gemini 2.5 Pro, we can notably see the creation of a functional game from a simple "prompt".

A future update for iOS and Android

The only downside for Gemini 2.5 Pro is that these features are not yet available on smartphones. While mobile browsing has now become a standard, the lack of compatibility with iOS and Android could harm Google.

However, it's only a matter of time before Gemini 2.5 Pro is available to users. Indeed, Google has announced a rollout of its application for the beginning of this week.

An alternative to Studio Ghibli-inspired images...

Gemini 2.5 Pro was initially made available to users who had opted for a subscription, before finally being available to all users with a free account. This choice does not seem trivial, and is part of a real strategy on the part of Google.

Indeed, if OpenAI very quickly made people talk about its latest model with the generation of images directly in ChatGPT, it was quickly undermined by users. With massive generations of images created by artificial intelligence to draw inspiration from the very famous Studio Ghibli, the American firm was forced to suspend this feature.

Sam Altman, the head of OpenAI, even publicly asked users to stop using this feature, as his team "needed sleep," before removing it altogether. A boon for Google and its new version of Gemini...

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