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 on Thursday.
The overhaul driven by Google's Gemini
technology will introduce two AI features into a digital mapping service used
by more than 2 billion people worldwide.
One tool called Ask Maps will expand upon conversational abilities that
Google brought to the service last November, giving suggestions to users
looking for things such as nearby places to charge their devices, cafes with
short lines or a detailed itinerary for a road trip involving several stops and
excursions.
Gemini's
recommendations will draw upon a database spanning more than 300 million places
and reviews from more than 500 million contributors that have been accumulated
since Google Maps' debut more than 20 years ago. Google executives declined to
answer a question about whether the company eventually plans to sell ads to
boost businesses' chances of being displayed in Ask Maps' recommendations. Ask
Maps initially will be available on Google Maps' mobile app for iPhones and
Android software in the U.S. and India, before expanding to personal computers
and other countries.
In
what Google executives are billing as the biggest change to the maps' driving
directions, Gemini has also created a new tool dubbed Immersive Navigation that
will present a three-dimensional perspective designed to give users a better
grasp of where they are at any moment in time. The 3D renderings created by
Gemini will include landmarks such as notable buildings, medians in the roads
and other aspects of the terrain that drivers are seeing around them as they
drive to help them get their bearings more quickly.
Google
believes its AI guardrails are now strong enough to prevent the Gemini
technology underlying Immersive Navigation from fabricating bogus places to go,
a malfunction known within the industry as a "hallucination."
Immersive
Navigation is also supposed to help Google Maps more clearly explain the pros
and cons of different driving routes to the same recommendation, as well as
point to the best places to park once a user arrives at a designated
destination. The new AI-powered navigation will only be available in the U.S.
initially, on Google Maps' mobile app for the iPhone and Android, as well as
cars equipped with options to activate CarPlay and Android Auto.
The increased reliance on AI in Google Maps follows the company's introduction of more Gemini technology to make two of its other most popular products—Gmail and the Chrome web browser—more proactive and helpful to their billions of users. The expansion underscores Google's confidence in the Gemini 3 model that the Mountain View, California, company released late last year as part of an intensifying battle for AI supremacy with up-and-coming rivals such as OpenAI and Anthropic.
Source: Google overhauls its Maps app, adding in more AI features to help people get around

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