Cyber week deals! Galaxy Watch8 Classic, Fold 7, S25 Ultra. Follow us on YouTube, TikTok, or LinkedIn
Last updated: February 9th, 2024 at 15:16 UTC+01:00
SamMobile has affiliate and sponsored partnerships, we may earn a commission.
Reading time: 2 minutes
Gemini Advanced is based on Google's Gemini Ultra 1.0 engine. It is the most advanced AI-powered chatbot and is more capable of doing things like coding, creative tasks, reasoning, understanding instructions more carefully, and performing other highly complex tasks. While Gemini is free for everyone, Gemini Advanced is available only with a paid subscription model. It can be accessed by switching from Gemini to Gemini Advanced from the top-left corner of the screen. You can use Gemini Advanced for coding improvements and suggestions, deriving summaries of documents and emails, and getting new ideas for projects.
Gemini Advanced can become your personal tutor, take quizzes for your exams, give you step-by-step instructions for various tasks, hold back-and-forth conversations with you, and even explain different coding approaches. It is clear that Gemini Advanced is made for advanced or professional users who want AI help to improve their productivity and creative work. Google said that Gemini Advanced will get multimodal capabilities in the future, which will let you upload documents and images so that you can deeply analyze them or add context to your queries. It will soon be integrated into Gmail, Google Docs, and Google Workspace.
Right now, you can access Gemini Advanced through the website, and it is available for English users in 150 countries. Google said that support for other languages will be offered soon. If you want access to Gemini Advanced, you need to be on Google One's 2TB subscription plan, which costs $19.99 (INR 1,950 in India) per month.
Asif is a computer engineer turned technology journalist. He has been using Samsung phones since 2004, and his current smartphone is the Galaxy S21 Ultra. He loves headphones, mechanical keyboards, and PC hardware. When not writing about technology, he likes watching crime and science fiction movies and TV shows.
