What you need to know
- Gemini Advanced’s Deep Research feature was first announced to English-speaking users earlier this month.
- The feature is now extended to more languages and regions.
- Deep Research allows users to explore complex topics and convert them into an easy-to-read report in minutes.
Google has rolled out some impressive upgrades for its Gemini and as part of this upgrade also announced a new tool called Deep Research for Gemini Advanced users, which is now expanding to more countries and in additional new languages.
Deep Research is a personal AI research assistant tool for Gemini AI users, and it is now available in more than 45 languages and in 100 countries around the world, the company announced for Gemini Advanced users just before the holidays. Users can try it by selecting “Gemini 1.5 Pro with Deep Research” from the Gemini Advanced drop-down menu.
Deep Research aims to save hours by “deeply analyzing relevant information from across the web,” making the AI assistant even more useful than it already is.
For example, if you raise a question, Deep Research “creates a multi-step research plan that you can review or approve. Once you approve, it begins to deeply analyze relevant information from the web on your behalf.”
The new feature will attempt to explore complex topics and convert them into a more comprehensive, easier-to-read report, which can then be exported to your Google Docs.
The curated report will also include links to original sources, relevant websites or companies if users want to dig deeper for more details. Since it’s an AI assistant, users can ask follow-up questions or ask it to refine, and it will generate reports in minutes.
The search giant began rolling out Deep Research earlier this month to Gemini Advanced users on desktop and mobile web. While the initial rollout was aimed at English-speaking users, the latest announcement adds languages and more countries, as mentioned above. Users of the Gemini mobile app can, however, expect the feature to roll out as early as next year, according to the announcement blog post.