Google today added Gemini AI to Google Maps, enabling a new Ask Maps feature. Gemini in maps can answer complex, real-world questions that Google says "a map could never answer before".
Google Maps will depend more heavily on artificial intelligence to help people figure out where they want to go and the best way to get there as part of a major redesign unveiled Thursday.
Google is adding its Gemini AI technology to a new feature in its maps service as the company pushes its artificial intelligence tools deeper into its expansive product portfolio.
Google Maps is one of the company’s core products, which means it hasn’t escaped the shift to Gemini. There will be more opportunities to converse with a robot in Google Maps starting today, but there ...
Obtaining a geocoding api key marks the starting point for any location-based feature development. The process should be simple, but varies dramatically ...
The Git suggests Google sees CLI as a cleaner alternative to Model Context Protocol (MCP) setups, which can require a lot of development overhead to connect AI applications. The new CLI does have an ...
Security researchers have found nearly 3000 publicly visible Google API keys authorizing Gemini. This allows abusive access.
I open Google Maps almost every day to get from point A to point B, find a restaurant, or check traffic before even leaving the house. But that approach barely scratches the surfa ...
They explore how automation, AI, and integrated platforms are helping finance teams tackle today’s biggest challenges, from ...
Google Cloud API keys, normally used as simple billing identifiers for APIs such as Maps or YouTube, could be scraped from websites to give access to private Gemini AI project data, researchers from ...
Google API keys for services like Maps embedded in accessible client-side code could be used to authenticate to the Gemini AI assistant and access private data. Researchers found nearly 3,000 such ...
Jake Peterson is Lifehacker’s Tech Editor, and has been covering tech news and how-tos for nearly a decade. His team covers all things technology, including AI, smartphones, computers, game consoles, ...