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I’ve experienced the next era of AI, and I’m never going back

Launching Gemini Deep Research query on Chrome desktop.
Oplus_20054016 Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

Ever since ChatGPT arrived on the scene, the hype around AI has only intensified. As talk of Artificial general intelligence (AGI) and “superintelligence” — yeah, OpenAI chief, Sam Altman, is now talking about that — heats up, we have another buzzword to deal with.

Say hello to Agentic AI. In simpler terms, AI agents that are supposed to automate a chunk of our digital chores, things like Custom GPTs by OpenAI.

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The idea is to have an AI do your task, or some portion of it. Qualcomm and MediaTek have already prepped their silicon for the era of agentic AI. But here’s the problem. We don’t have a true agentic AI tool yet. We’ve barely crawled past the inquiry-response transaction flow that most generative AI chatbots offer.

Enter Deep Research, the first agentic AI product in the Google Gemini family.

A fundamental rethinking of search on the internet

Using Gemini Deep Research on a smartphone.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

As the name makes abundantly clear, Google’s Deep Research is good at research, but in a much more controlled fashion than an average Google Search. With Deep Research, you can lay out the outline for the search quest before the process begins.

You can specify the exact sources (or kind of sources) to get the results. That’s fundamentally different from Google Search, which mostly responds to keywords clubbed together, and shows results that it deems are worthy of a look.

That’s a fundamentally flawed approach, and we often end up in a cesspool of clickbait or AI-generated jargon. Plus, Google’s random changes to its search algorithm often mean the search results for the same query may look different a day, or week, later.

Deep Research pulls up material from a controlled and user-specified knowledge bank. So, let’s say you are trying to find information about the impact of social media on the mental health of young users, but only from peer-reviewed research papers. The results would stick to scientific papers only.

Query and response from Gemini Deep Research.
What you ask (Left), and how Gemini presents your research flow (Right) before it starts crawling the sources. Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

For journalists, students, researchers, or even businesspeople, this approach saves a lot of time. More importantly, it doesn’t put the onus of trusting a source on the user.

You already are familiar with the source, or its veracity, so the material you get doesn’t come with a trust conundrum. Moreover, the chore of skipping past the bad, non-desirable search results or ads is simply non-existent in Deep Research — at least right now.

Deep Research essentially drafts a multi-step search activity, finds the information on your behalf, and repeats the process as the “search agent” moves from one source to the next, hunting for a new piece of relevant information.

Essentially, it saves you the drudgery of running into the same information as you jump between different search results, in hopes of finding the wisdom you seek. In a nutshell, the time-consuming and psychologically infuriating parts of a Google Search are avoided (and you don’t even need to use a Google Search alternative).

That’s not even the nicest part about Deep Research.

Helpful, in just the precise way

Citations provided by Gemini Deep Research
This is how Deep Research lists the sources for all the information it has compiled. Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

Researching and finding information from credible sources is only one-half of the picture here. Deep Research takes the pain point of clicking back and forth between different search result entries, or opening a few dozen tabs. Dealing with a bunch of tabs on a large screen is already a hassle for multiple reasons.

The most important of them all is the hunt for that exact nugget of information embedded within a wall of text, video, or audio. Deep Research not only pulls up reliable information from the sources you’ve cherrypicked, but it also presents all those findings in a non-repetitive, coherent fashion.

Just what you want, from the sources you seek.

Now, unless your search task involves a single-step reference on the internet, you have to break the process into multiple steps. So, let’s say you want to learn about the art of mushroom farming. You would ideally look up information about the seed varieties, weather conditions, pest mitigation, and diseases — separately. It’s hard to find a definitive guide, especially one pulled from reliable sources.

Deep Research does just that for you. All the information that it has crawled across the web to gather, will be presented in the form of a neatly-curated article, with appropriate headlines, tables, and categorical breakdown.

Data presented by Gemini Deep Research
Deep Research can create tables and generate bullet points in its web search report. Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

It is the kind of search report that would otherwise take you hours to internalize and flesh out in the form of a document. For anyone who is in the profession of referencing and memorizing knowledge on a daily basis, this tool is a lifesaver.

Take for example this search query:

I am writing a paper on the application and differences between NMP and LFP batteries in the context of electronic vehicles and fire hazards due to battery. Pull up details from research papers and reputed agencies only. Help me understand and clarify the subject.

What I got after roughly 2-3 minutes of research was a comprehensive draft, the way I would write a thesis, legal brief, or research paper. I gave a brief demo of Deep Research to a research student, a lawyer, and a journalist. The overwhelming sentiment was that of “wow” mixed with a sense of relief.

It’s not every day that you see people willing to pay $20 a month for an AI tool that is not even mainstream. Husain Anis Khan, an Alex Chernov Scholar at Melbourne Law School, told me that he loved the premise of being able to find academic research material.

Response provided by Gemini Deep Research.
Gemini serves your answers in a report that looks like this. Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

Md Meharban, a multimedia journalist whose work has appeared at outlets like Reuters, NatGeo, AFP, and The New York Times, also tells me that Deep Research could prove to be a valuable tool in their workflow.

“A healthy chunk of my documentary work relies on research. The deeper, the better,” Meharban tells Digital Trends. “If I can narrow down the unexplored areas of an assignment, chances are higher that my work will stand out.”

Hitting the human-machine sweet spot

I’ve embarked on my fair share of overtly optimistic AI adventures. Experimenting with an AI girlfriend (which a few take as far as virtually impregnating), using it for inbox relief, and toning down my lazy Gmail conduct, my experience has been a mixed bag.

Deep Research is the first AI tool that has offered a fulfilling experience, something I can’t say for any other AI tool out there. I’ve paid for more AI products and subscriptions than my gaming, streaming, and reading passions combined, so I feel the sting of paying for a poor product.

For my work as a journalist, a tool like Deep Research has proved nearly indispensable, especially when researching topics like triboelectric nanogenerators on wearables and fabrication complexities for microfluidic sweat sensors.

Launching a search with voice prompt on Gemini Deep Research.
Looking up deeply complex information begins with a natural language search. Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

If I go looking for the aforementioned materials on Google Search, I will essentially be playing a keyboard whack-a-mole spanning across multiple pages of Google Search links. With Deep Research, I am simply narrating what I seek, in natural language.

There’s no guesswork involved. I can specify the exact search route and the knowledge destination. I can tone the whole operation to my specific needs — be it a research-themed task or simply a marketing-related exercise.

Being able to tune it all to your needs, and getting it done without having to stray away from normal human conversational tone is what stands out. It makes my workflow a tad less robotic. A dash of human touch in there, if you will.

Then there’s the value conundrum, which any sane human does a double-take for. With products like Deep Research — or rivals like Perplexity Pro or ChatGPT Plus — the lingering question is just how much value you get out of a $20 monthly subscription.

The best $20 spent for work, and a few unexpected bonuses.

Within Google’s ecosystem, the competition is non-existent. I got access to Gemini Advanced with the Google One AI Premium subscription, which also offers 2TB of cloud storage and Gemini integration across a majority of Google products that we use on a daily basis.

One-click import into Sheets? Add a research brief to Docs? Compose in Gmail? You get all that — alongside Gemini Deep Research — with the bundle. It’s far better value than OpenAI or Perplexity’s products.

Moreover, I would much rather have my workflow concentrated within Google’s universe, than consent to a whole bunch of questionably ethical and privacy-risking T&C of another AI product ecosystem.

Nadeem Sarwar
Nadeem is a tech and science journalist who started reading about cool smartphone tech out of curiosity and soon started…
I let Gemini turn complex research into podcasts. I’ll never go back
Audio Overview in Gemini.

The shift away from Google Assistant, and into the Gemini era, is nearly in its last stages. One can feel nostalgic about the eponymous virtual assistant, but it’s undeniable that the arrival of Gemini has truly changed what an AI agent can do for us.

The language understanding chops are far better with Gemini. Conversations are natural, app interactions are fluid, integration with other Google products is rewarding, and even in its free state, Gemini takes Siri to the cleaners even on an iPhone.

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Samsung might put AI smart glasses on the shelves this year
Google's AR smartglasses translation feature demonstrated.

Samsung’s Project Moohan XR headset has grabbed all the spotlights in the past few months, and rightfully so. It serves as the flagship launch vehicle for a reinvigorated Android XR platform, with plenty of hype from Google’s own quarters.
But it seems Samsung has even more ambitious plans in place and is reportedly experimenting with different form factors that go beyond the headset format. According to Korea-based ET News, the company is working on a pair of smart glasses and aims to launch them by the end of the ongoing year.
Currently in development under the codename “HAEAN” (machine-translated name), the smart glasses are reportedly in the final stages of locking the internal hardware and functional capabilities. The wearable device will reportedly come equipped with camera sensors, as well.

What to expect from Samsung’s smart glasses?
The Even G1 smart glasses have optional clip-on gradient shades. Photo by Tracey Truly / Digital Trends
The latest leak doesn’t dig into specifics about the internal hardware, but another report from Samsung’s home market sheds some light on the possibilities. As per Maeil Business Newspaper, the Samsung smart glasses will feature a 12-megapixel camera built atop a Sony IMX681 CMOS image sensor.
It is said to offer a dual-silicon architecture, similar to Apple’s Vision Pro headset. The main processor on Samsung’s smart glasses is touted to be Qualcomm’s Snapdragon AR1 platform, while the secondary processing hub is a chip supplied by NXP.
The onboard camera will open the doors for vision-based capabilities, such as scanning QR codes, gesture recognition, and facial identification. The smart glasses will reportedly tip the scales at 150 grams, while the battery size is claimed to be 155 mAh.

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Chromebooks are about to get a lot smarter, and more accessible
Acer Chromebook Spin 513 top down view showing display and keyboard deck.

Google recently announced that Gemini will soon replace Google Assistant everywhere, from your phone and smartwatches to smart home speakers. ChromeOS has now joined the transition bandwagon, starting today.
The company has kicked off the stable rollout of Chrome OS M134, and it marks the silent exit of Google Assistant. “When triggering Assistant, you will automatically be directed to the Gemini app on your Chromebook,” Google says in a community update note.
Google says the feature update will be rolling out in a phased manner, so you might not be able to access the Gemini interface immediately after installing the latest software. Just to clear any confusion here, Gemini has been accessible on Chrome OS, but with the new build, it replaces the Google Assistant.

Once the transition takes effect, users will see the sparkly Gemini icon in the top-right corner of the launcher window. For now, support for the “Hey Google” hotword for summoning Gemini is absent, even though it works fine on mobile platforms where Google Assistant is in the phase-out process.
Another noteworthy aspect is that Chrome OS will offer Gemini as a Progressive Web App (PWA), instead of a native application experience. That’s not necessarily a bad thing, considering you get access to a whole new world of capabilities with Gemini.

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