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Maker of Argentina's first Oscar-winning film, Luis Puenzo, dies at 80:
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Seixas relishes 'steep' challenge at Fleche Wallonne
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US Fed chair nominee says will not be controlled by Trump
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Singapore's Tang gets second term at UN's patent agency
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Taiwan leader postpones Eswatini trip after overflight permits revoked
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Lula warns will respond after US expels police attache
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Trailblazer Karren Brady steps down from West Ham role
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US Fed chair nominee says he will not be controlled by Trump
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Stocks slip, oil climbs as US-Iran truce expiry looms
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In Portugal, Lula urges return to multilateralism
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Renewables key to buffer fossil fuel energy shock: COP31 co-hosts
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Chery wants to make small electric car in Europe
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Donovan steps down as Bulls coach
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US official says gas prices have peaked despite Iran war
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Pope calls for 'law and justice' on Equatorial Guinea visit
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Trump's Fed chair pick vows to safeguard independence at confirmation hearing
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Mideast war lights fire under energy transition plans
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Trump says Iran violated truce as doubt surrounds peace talks
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Djibouti president re-election confirmed with 97% of vote
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Barcelona need leaders to fulfil Flick's Champions League dream
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Guardiola hints that Rodri will make swift Man City return
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PSG and Luis Enrique sweat on Vitinha ahead of Champions League semis
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UK tackles electricity price link to world gas amid Mideast war
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In south Lebanon's Nabatieh, residents fear a return to war
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Bangladesh fuel crunch forces hours-long wait at the pump
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Fondness for Francis undimmed one year after pope's death
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Oil and stocks steady as US-Iran truce expiry looms
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Downing Street exerted pressure to OK Mandelson: sacked UK official
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Pope visits Equatorial Guinea on last stop of Africa tour
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German investor morale lowest in over 3 years on Iran war fallout
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FedEx faces French 'genocide' complaint over Israel cargoes
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No Iran delegation sent to US talks yet as truce expiry nears
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Rover discovers more building blocks of life on Mars
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Russia, North Korea connect road bridge ahead of summer opening
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'Strangled': Pakistan faces economic imperative in Iran war peace push
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Michael Jackson fans pack Hollywood for biopic premiere
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Turkey arrests 110 coal miners on hunger strike
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Associated British Foods to spin off Primark clothes brand
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Pope visits Eq. Guinea on last stop of Africa tour
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Hello Kitty's parent company to make own video games
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Di Matteo says 'vital' for faltering Chelsea to add experience
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Ex-Spurs star Davids condemns 'lack of quality, lack of management'
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Turkmenistan, the gas giant increasingly dependent on China
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In just one year, Google turns AI setbacks into dominance
Caught off guard by ChatGPT and mocked for early blunders with its own generative artificial intelligence efforts, Google has pulled off a dramatic turnaround in just one year, becoming a major player in consumer-facing AI.
"The market had written off Alphabet in the AI race," Matt Britzman, analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, said of Google's parent company. "That was short-sighted."
In March 2023, Google hastily launched its version of ChatGPT, called Bard, four months after the original shook the world.
During its launch event, Bard made an error answering a question about the James Webb telescope, drawing ridicule from viewers tuning in from around the world.
Several analysts subsequently downgraded their recommendations of Alphabet, worried that ChatGPT would eat into the Google search engine's generation-long dominance of the internet.
A year later, in May 2024, the Mountain View, California giant unveiled AI Overviews, a feature integrated into Google Search that again caused online ridicule after recommending a glue pizza recipe and eating a rock a day in answers to queries.
Despite massive investments in AI technology for over a decade -- acquiring the DeepMind lab in 2014 and producing high-level research publications that inspired the ChatGPT phenomenon -- Google kept stumbling.
Much of Google's AI development "focused on powering its platforms rather than delivering services directly to consumers," said Ben Wood, an analyst at CCS Insight.
Ted Mortonson, an analyst at financial services firm Baird, said Google leadership was caught "flat-footed" and had grown "too complacent" about their AI advantage.
- Turnaround trajectory -
Amid the crisis, change was afoot. Google co-founder Sergey Brin was seen back at the Googleplex, and the company undertook a drastic internal reorganization.
In spring 2024, AI developers were consolidated under a single Google DeepMind banner with Nobel Prize winner Demis Hassabis put in charge.
"It took us time to bring these teams together," CEO Sundar Pichai explained on the "Lex Fridman Podcast" in early June.
Google also needed time to deploy its new in-house AI chips, the TPUs (Tensor processing units), essential to the company's ambitions.
But "I could see, internally, the trajectory we were on," he said.
Despite the "glue pizza" missteps, or hallucinations in AI parlance, Overviews marked the first step in Google's turnaround.
Next came the commercial launch of NotebookLM -- a digital document tool that can synthesize uploaded content into easy-to-understand writing or even a chatty podcast.
At Google's developer conference in May 2025, the company unveiled video generation tool Veo 3, whose precision and consistency made a big splash, along with AI Mode, a feature that completed the transformation of search engine into ChatGPT-style chatbot.
August brought a new version of the Pixel smartphone, whose AI enables 100x zoom and real-time translation. Mid-September saw the launch of video generation on YouTube.
"Today's tools, especially from Google, can be used in the real world, as opposed to just being developer conference demos," emphasized Avi Greengart of Techsponential.
With Pixel, "Google is in pole position in AI equipment," said Wood.
Google drove the point home with its image editing program integrated into Gemini, informally called Nano Banana, which became such a sensation that Gemini topped ChatGPT in iPhone downloads for the first time earlier this month.
The outlook brightened further for Google when it avoided having to sell its Chrome browser -- a government demand in its search monopoly trial that was rejected by a federal judge in early September.
Signaling the shift, Apple is reportedly considering using Gemini for its overhaul of AI voice assistant Siri, according to Bloomberg.
A partnership with the iPhone giant would hand Google a new revenue stream, though monetizing its AI "is still somewhat of a question mark," said Greengart.
"Google is playing the long game," said Wood. "It knows that right now, it needs to offer free services to get consumers engaged with Gemini. However, in the longer term, it's hoping this can be turned into a substantial revenue stream."
L.Wyss--VB