Google’s IA mode in research, which transforms your search on the web into a round-trip conversation with Google AI, is no longer limited to some privileged. Google deploys AI mode in more than 40 countries and territories and adds the management of more than 35 new languages.
At first, this feature was only available in a few places. Google is now extend it to more than 200 countriesThis makes it one of the most important deployments to date. Powered by Gemini models, the tool offers users a more natural and conversational research experience. It goes beyond the simple correspondence of keywords and aims to understand what people really want to say.
IA mode allows users to ask more detailed and complex questions, not just basic questions. For example, instead of looking for the “best places to visit in Tokyo”, someone could ask: “Where should I go to Tokyo if I like local cuisine and hidden cultural places? The system can recover these details, examine different aspects of the question and give detailed answers directly in research. Google has noticed that people are already starting to type longer and more specific questions.
Speak your language, literally and culturally
In addition, linguistic management now covers a wide range of additions such as Arabic, Chinese (simplified and traditional), Dutch, French, German, Hindi, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish and many others. This is added to the expansion last month. Deployment is already underway for many users and will continue in next week, according to Google. announcement.
Under the hood, the Gemini models integrate most of the new features and help Google research to understand not only the text but also the images. The models also allow the search to better understand the local context, slang and current expressions, which is important in places where translations can lack cultural details. Google claims that this smarter approach makes it possible to obtain more precise and more useful results, no matter where you are and whatever the language you use.