Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast - EP 501: Google's Logan Kilpatrick: Gemini AI updates that create new possibilities live from Google Cloud Next
Episode Date: April 10, 2025Dozens of AI updates. 🤯Whether you're a creative writer, IT specialist, software engineer or project manager, Google just dropped like a bajillion crazy useful AI updates on us at Google Cloud... Next. Watching Google's announcement keynote this morning was like watching a TED Talk by an auctioneer who just drank five espressos. How to make sense of it all the new features inside Google Gemini? By tapping into the brainpower of Logan Kilpatrick, Senior Product Manager Senior Product Manager Google DeepMind. In our fastest show ever, Logan doesn't disappoint and breaks down not only some of the highlights of the shiny new AI toys that are gonna be crowding your news feed, but the new possibilities they created. Like.... legit new business are already popping up. We discuss it all. 👇Inside Google Cloud Next: Gemini AI updates that create new possibilities. An Everyday AI Chat with Jordan Wilson and Logan Kilpatrick, Senior Product Manager Senior Product Manager Google Deepmind. Newsletter: Sign up for our free daily newsletterMore on this Episode: Episode PageJoin the discussion: Questions for Logan or Jordan? Join the conversation.Upcoming Episodes: Check out the upcoming Everyday AI Livestream lineupWebsite: YourEverydayAI.comEmail The Show: info@youreverydayai.comConnect with Jordan on LinkedInTopics Covered in This Episode:New announcements at Google Cloud NextGoogle Gemini 2.5 Pro and 2.5 Flash updatesDeep research capabilities in Google GeminiCanvas in the Gemini app and use casesVeo video generation and live API availabilityGoogle Firebase Studio evolution from Project IDXGemini 2.5 Pro use cases and performanceLive API in AI Studio and future work interfacesTimestamps:00:00 "Excitement Builds for 2.5 Pro"05:44 Chatbots: From Novelty to Utility08:48 AI Revolution in Video Editing10:15 Firebase Studio: Next-Gen AI-Enhanced IDE15:19 "Effortless AI Integration Needed"16:35 "Logan's Potential Third Visit?"Keywords:Google Cloud Next, Google Gemini, Google Gemini AI Studio, Logan Kilpatrick, Google DeepMind, AI updates, Google Gemini 2.5 Pro, Google Gemini 2.5 Flash, Developer tools, Deep research, Gemini Advanced, Canvas feature, Vibe code, Video generation model, Veo, Live API, Android integration, Google ecosystem, MCP, Internet sentiment analysis, Competitive analysis, AI-powered creativity, AI in business, Connected data, Personalization feature, Google search history, Creative tools, Vertex AI, Text-to-music, Updated Chirp, Firebase, Firebase Studio, Project IDX, Integrated development environment, Browser-based development, AI-powered coding, Multimodal capabilities, Live API, AI interface, AI advancements.EP 501: Inside Google Cloud Next: Gemini AI updates that create new possibilitiesSend Everyday AI and Jordan a text message. (We can't reply back unless you leave contact info)
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There's so much new that was just announced at Google Cloud Next.
I'm having a hard time wrapping my head around it.
It seems like there was dozens of new AI updates.
So I said, what better than to bring in one of their leaders to help us make sense of it all?
So we're going to talk a little bit today about what's new inside Google, Gemini, Google, Gemini, AI,
studio like everything with Logan Kilpatrick the senior product manager at Google DeepMind. Logan,
thank you for joining us a second time. Yeah, round two. This is going to be, I don't even remember
what we were talking about for round one. It feels like it was super recently, but there's a ton of new stuff
to talk about, so I'm happy to be back. Yeah, absolutely. So, you know, top to bottom. I mean,
we saw new updates with Google Gemini 2.5 Pro being rolled out in other places, a new model in
Google Gemini 2.5 Flash, right? So many things for development.
But where do you start?
Or maybe like, what are you most excited about that was just announced here at Google Cloud next?
Yeah, that's a great question.
So I've been continually excited about 2.5 Pro.
I think like we're seeing 2.5 Pro sort of rolling out across our developer products, our
consumer products.
It just landed in deep research yesterday, which like folks have been super jazzed about.
I think if you're a, if you're an advanced Gemini Advanced user, you get like 20 deep research
queries.
You know, our customers prefer the sort of Gemini Advanced to 2.5 Pro.
sort of two to one versus sort of other products in the market, which I think is just sort of a
nice proxy of like actually this model unlocks new stuff from a deep research perspective,
from a canvas perspective, getting to see if folks haven't tried Canvas yet in the Gemini
app, being able to sort of vibe code and agentically sort of write code for you without having
to be a developer is like such a cool and special experience. So that's what I've historically
been most excited about. I think today now at college next where, you know, tons of new stuff
launched VEO is available for developers, which if folks haven't seen, is our sort of state-of-the-art
video generation model, which has been awesome. We just announced the live API, which I think a
lot of folks. And actually, like, in parallel to that, the live mode is rolling out to some
customers in Android, I think, as well. So, like, there's everything happening. Like, one of the
things that I've been most happy about is it feels like more and more we're getting into a place
where as these new capabilities come online, they end up sort of ubiquitously across the
Google ecosystem, which is really cool because, like, you know, some people where a Gemini
user. Some people are a Google Aist Studio user. We've got enterprise users. We've got people in search.
And like, I think it's awesome to sort of get to a place where new thing launches available everywhere
for the world to use. So I want to quickly dive into two of those things that you mentioned there. So
the deep research. I've been blown away, not just by, you know, I think there was a couple
times you guys updated it first to 2.0. And now I think to 2.5 pro. And yeah, you talked about some of
the benchmarks that came out in terms of, you know, the preference, I'll say it, it's against open AIs, right?
Which I thought was a great, you know, a great offering. But, you know, now seemingly your guys' is way, way better.
You know, what are you even using the deep research tools for? Like, I love asking the people that
build it. Like, what are you using it for? Because I think people can learn from what you're using
it for. Yeah, that's a great question. I think some of the stuff, like not the two use cases that
have been top of mind for me. One, I was looking up, like, what the general sentiment is about
MCP. If folks haven't been following, there's this, we won't, we won't dive into the MCP
threat in this conversation, but if you haven't done MCP before, I haven't looked into it,
use deep research. It gives it actually, like, pretty robust answer and, like, gave me a
bunch of supporting materials on, like, not just how people on Twitter are thinking about
MCP, but, like, it's an agentic way of interacting with, with tools. So that was one of the
use cases, because I was just very intrigued to know, like, what happens when you do that.
The other one is I've been doing a bunch of like sort of competitive analysis of just like as we think about, you know, how we're showing up at the market.
What do we look like comparatively against other providers?
And this is a really interesting, like I think for me, the deep research conduit has been really interesting because what deep research is actually able to capture is sort of like the information that's available on the internet.
And I think it's like, you know, could I go and talk to customers and like get this perspective?
yes, that's actually a really interesting and useful perspective,
but it's actually also interesting to capture it,
like, what is sort of the codified perspective on the internet
of how people think about, you know,
the Gemini API or ASQD or stuff like that.
So it's been really interesting just to, like, have that experience.
And, like, it actually, like, diverges from, in some interesting ways,
like, what people tell me in person about, like,
how they think of the product is used and all this stuff.
So really interesting if folks haven't done that exercise,
if you have, like, a product that you build
or you have like a favorite thing.
Like just like ask the deep research functionality and the Gemini app like to put together
reports and like see how that differs from your point of view or from yeah, your perspective.
Yeah.
And another thing you just talked about there is kind of like, you know, vibe coding in Canvas.
So Canvas has been out what?
Like two weeks, two weeks.
Something like that, right?
Like I use it so much already for a tool that's only been out two weeks.
But maybe walk people through some of the, you know, practical applications.
I think a lot of people are, you know, like, oh, like let's.
create a game and like, that's fun to get started. But, you know, in terms of, you know,
business utility, what are you all seeing as, as some of the more impressive or useful's applications
for the new Canvas mode inside Gemini? Yeah, I still think we're in the era of, and I think like
chatbots in general, we're in that place for a long time. And I think that's sort of just in the
last like six to eight months, like got it out of just like being sort of a novelty of item.
And I think like Canvas is sort of still in that realm where it's like,
It can do interesting things to your point, like building games from scratch.
Like it would take me a long time to program a game from scratch right now.
You know, AI being able to do that is awesome.
But like where does the practical business value come in?
I think for a lot of people, the practical business value comes in like when you're connecting this thing to your company's data and like all.
And like that's the kind of stuff that doesn't exist yet today, at least in the sort of canvas environment that we have.
And that's what I'm most excited about because I think like ultimately for these tools to be useful, like you need to connect a bunch of your stuff to them and sort of let them, you know,
have access to your email and then I can sort of build a tool around my email to do it.
So I'm really excited about that.
And I think from my, like, and I'm not a product manager on the Gemini app, but I'm a consumer
of the Gemini app and I love it.
And I think it's a great product.
One of the things that I'm most excited about is like this trend of the Gemini app sort
of becoming this AI interface and this AI conduit to like all of the things that are
happening inside the Google ecosystem.
And like the sort of pertinent example of this is the Gemini's.
and I app also in addition to all the other canvas stuff and deep research and everything else going on, it has a personalization feature. And the personalization feature is actually built based on your Google search. So you can opt in to be like, hey, you know, basically personalize the answers of the models giving based on Google search. And like that sounds very like uninteresting at the surface level. But it starts to get to a world where like AI is this interface to like connect to this like vast set of data. And I think about this for myself in the work context, in the personal context, like I'm on YouTube all the time. I'm at YouTube all the time. I'm at.
email all the time. I'm searching stuff all the time. I'm in docs all the time. So like it's really
wonderful to be able to sort of bring all that experience together. I think Canvas is like the
first step of that with Docs specifically with Cohn now. So I'm super excited. Yeah. And and you know,
if you haven't had the time to use Canvas yet, I highly recommend it. Right. It's literally being
able to, you know, run and render code. You don't have to be able to even know coding. It's so
easy. So another thing, Logan, there, that you mentioned is V-O-2. And, you know, some of the new
capabilities in that that are available in Vertex as well, you know, adjusting camera angles, right?
What does this do for creatives, right? There are so many new things I wasn't even expecting that
were announced today, you know, the text to text to music, right? The updated chirp. Like, what is this
going to do for creatives and how does this all unlock, you know, both in Vertex and AI Studio?
Yeah, I think my, I think the general trend that gets me excited is like, and I was just having a conversation actually with the folks in the vertex team about this and they and they sort of agree, which is like this general up leveling of people to be able to like go to the next level. Like I'm not a creative. Like I'm also not a game designer. Like in the game design use case, I couldn't build a video game. I've tried before. It's horribly difficult. It's not it's not fun to sort of bash your head against the wall trying to do that. I think there's a lot of cases where that's true in the video use case. Like you and me like you, we were talking off camera like editing videos, you know, tough.
and there's a lot of great tools out there that help do it,
but it's still kind of a pain in a lot of cases.
And to be able to have all these AI tools,
like start to take those steps and, like,
up level the people who are really excited
and, like, take out the stuff that I'm not interested in doing.
I'm super excited.
I think, like, VEO specifically has been the one that folks have been, like,
losing their mind for a long time.
And this is actually, like, today is the first time that this,
with the exception of YouTube where it's, like, set up at a very specific product
experience, it's the first time the, like, raw model is, like,
generally available to the world to actually get their hands on, which feels like a crazy.
Yeah.
I don't think it's been as crazy of like a public moment yet as I think it actually is in
reality, but like the world's best video generation model is like now available for people
to actually use and start building it.
So I think we're going to see the technology start showing up in lots of new,
interesting ways.
Yeah.
And it was impressive.
And we'll share in the newsletter today, the demo that they did.
I'm sure that Google's going to be posting that online, right?
But being able to, you know, kind of do the live shots.
of Las Vegas and animate them and put them to music, super impressive.
Something, another new, you know, update here, Firebase, is that what it is, right?
Like, did Google just release, like, an IDE out of nowhere?
Like, like, tell us, tell us what Firebase is.
How does it work?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
This is a great question.
So this is some slight developer context.
So if you're not a developer, some of this stuff might not, it might not be relevant
or it might not make too much sense.
So the original incarnation of that product, which today became Firebase Studio, was something called Project IDX, which we announced last year at Google I.O.
And the intent of Project IDX was like, how can we build a next generation ITE integrated development environment for developers to actually use in the browser, which I think was the unique.
Like today, developers like download a local ID on their computer and they do their development locally.
This was bringing the ID to the developer to the browser.
And sort of the next iteration of that product suite,
and this was being created by the Firebase team,
which is why it ended up as Firebase Studio.
The next iteration is that product is how do you actually not just, like,
do the basic developer environment,
but how do you infuse AI into that?
And how do you sort of help developers bootstrap actually going and creating apps
and products and stuff like that?
So I'm super excited for Firebase Studio.
I think it's like the, for folks who aren't close to Firebase,
like, Firebase has a lot of like street credit as being like an incredibly like
developer-centric team.
in product surface. So I think I haven't spent a bunch of time with IDX. I haven't spent a bunch of time with
Firebase Studio yet. But I have full conviction that that team is going to knock it out of the park. And
hopefully we'll see more of these tools that enable folks who are developers actually to like start
coming in and building stuff like they couldn't before. Yeah. You know, one thing, just getting back to
you know, 2.5 pro, I like I think it's worth gushing about it a little bit. And I love that in the
keynotes. You know, it was mentioned at the LM arena and, you know, I think it came in with like a 39 point
lead over the second models when it was released. How good is Gemini 2.5 Pro? It's, it's mind-boggling to me.
Like, when I use it inside AI Studio, like I feel like I'm stealing something because it's so good,
it can handle so much data. And it's free. And it's free inside AI Studio. Like, like, talk,
talk about like maybe some of the best use cases that you're seeing for Gemini 2.5 Pro. Yeah, that's
great example. And I actually think one of the interesting thing, and I had this conversation with some of the folks on the deep my team is like sometimes actually you see like a 40 point jump on some benchmark somewhere. And like it actually doesn't even tell the story to the completeness of like just how much better it is. There's also this like other and then I'll answer your question directly. There's also this other thread which is like every time a new model comes, there's like an entire class of new companies that weren't possible before that like just become possible. And like it feels like that's true when you get this like.
like massive jump in capability.
I think 2.5 Pro is actually one of those models where like there's a bunch of new companies
now that are possible.
I think there's a lot of coding stuff.
It is interesting that it's one of the things that makes me most excited is that as you
see these like general purpose frontier models like take a step function change in capability.
It's like across every use case.
So like you like I think the one that's like didn't work really well before that now works
really well is coding.
So like lots of people are like very excited.
about the model's ability to do code.
But like, I've seen tons of creative writing examples.
I've seen tons of people using 2.5 Pro as like a harness to build agentic products,
which is a little bit like in the weeds behind the scenes.
Yeah.
So, and I think this actually, we haven't even gotten to like a bunch of the yet, yet to be
released, like a bunch of the multimodal stuff that I think we're seeing with 2.0
flash, which was another thing.
I think that happens since the last time we caught up.
There's too much stuff going on.
It's hard.
It is certainly hard to keep up with.
All right.
So it is hard to keep up.
You know, Logan, I know you're busy guy.
You have to go speak to, you know, thousands of people.
But, you know, as we wrap up today's expedited conversation,
because, you know, maybe we'll have to get you on a third time.
But, you know, what are some of the, you know, even speaking of kind of like a new class of companies, right?
Which is great with like a great way to think about with Gemini 2.5 Pro.
But, you know, what are you most excited about from this weekend and, you know,
or maybe for the average, you know, everyday business leader?
What are you most excited for them to get their hands on?
And how do you think, you know, kind of like there's, oh, a new class of companies now?
Is there going to be a new class or a new way that we do our everyday work because of what was announced here?
I think the live API is that.
And we hadn't talked about it yet, but the live API is basically this.
And I don't remember if we did demos at what I don't think so.
But if folks haven't tried this out, AIS Studio.com slash live has this experience where you can come in and you can talk to the model.
you can share your screen, the model can actually look at your camera if you give it permission.
And like it creates this really, what I think is this like future of how people are going to work,
which is the models can actually see the stuff that you see, which I think unlocks like,
it takes it takes the drudgery out of having to use AI tools, which like my personal perspective is today,
the challenge with using AI is that you as the user of the AI product have to go and do a bunch of
work to bring all the context of the model.
And like oftentimes, like for me as the person who wants to use AI, I'm like, the contact is already there.
I'm looking at it on the screen.
Like, why is this so much work to like take that information and go bring it over to whatever AI product?
And it's like a very simple thing that all of these new, back to the thread of like new classes of companies to be built, all of these new companies and products to be built, you just flip that switch.
And then all of a sudden, like, you know, whatever the random product is that you're using can see your screen and like help you reason through whatever the problem is that you're trying to solve.
It can, you know, bring in real information in real time from Google search.
It can execute code on your behalf, like all of this, like, really, really interesting stuff that I don't actually think we've seen products built yet with this technology, which gets me excited because I think it's going to be wicked.
All right.
It's an exciting one.
A fast but furious interview, just like what we've seen so far out of this conference, fast and furious update.
So, Logan, thank you so much for taking time out of your day to join Everyday AI.
We really appreciate it.
Yeah.
And for folks who aren't watching on video, Jordan has a sweet everyday AI Nike shirt, which looks awesome.
Yeah.
You're crushing it.
Now it would be like just drowning out with requests for it.
All right.
Well, hey, thanks again, Logan.
And if you want more, we talked about a lot, in a very short amount of time, it's all going to be in the newsletter.
So if you haven't already, please go to your everyday AI.com.
Sign up for the free daily newsletter.
Let me know.
Should we bring Logan on for the third time, the first person ever after 500 episodes to be on a third time?
All right, thanks for tuning in.
We'll see you back tomorrow and every day for more everyday AI.
Thanks y'all.
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