Google Has Reportedly Started Internally Testing a New Artificial Intelligence (AI) Feature for its search platform. Dubbed ai mode, the feature was first rumoured In December 2024. It is said a full-screen interface where users can ask complex and exploratory queries, and the AI Responds in A CONPONDS IN A CONVERSATIONAL MANNER and Display Pic. This feature is reportedly separe from ai overviews which appears on top of the search results in Google search.
Google search count get an ai mode
According to a 9to5google ReportThe mountain view-based tech giant is dogfooding (testing a product or a service internal) the ai mode currently. Citing an internal email to google employers, the publication claimed that the company is now inviting employees to use and test the feature.
The reported email descybes ai mode as “Search Intelligent Research (Ing) For You-Organizing Information Into Easy-to-Digest breakdowns with links to explore content cras the web.” Google reportedly provided example Queries to Help Users Undrstand The Best Use Case of the Tool. One Such Example States, “How many boxes of spaghetti should i buy to feed 6 adults and 10 children, and have enough for seconds?”
Google reportedly also also revised in the email that ai mode is powered by a custom version of Gemini 2.0 that is capable of “Advanced Reasoning and Thinking Capability.” Finally, the email also included a screenshot of the user interface. This is reportedly considered an early interface and not the final version. The feature is said to work on mobile as well.
Based on the screenshot, the ai mode will be placed among other filters, such as images, videos, and news. Once a user taps on it, a full-screen interface opens where the gemini-power is ai chatbot conversationally answers the Query. On the right side, it also displays urls from where it sourced the information. Users can click on any of the links to dive into the topic.
At the bottom, there is a text field which allows users to ask a follow-up Query. The mobile apps will also allow users to access the microphone to verbally add the prompt. Thumbs-up and down icons are also added at the bottom, letting users provide feedback about the quality of responses. Notably, Google has not officially announced the feature, and it is unclear when it might roll out to users.
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