
Our Review
Google's Gemini represents the search giant's boldest bet yet on AI assistants—and honestly, it's about time. After watching Google Assistant feel increasingly outdated compared to ChatGPT and Claude, we were curious to see if Google could reclaim its AI crown. The answer is a cautious yes, with some genuinely impressive surprises along the way.
The Deep Research Game-Changer
Let's start with what blew us away: Deep Research. This feature tackles complex research questions by breaking them into smaller tasks, browsing the web systematically, and then synthesizing everything into a comprehensive report. We tested it with a multi-layered business strategy question, and watching it work through the problem step-by-step felt like having a very methodical research assistant.
What sets this apart from other AI tools is the transparency—you can see exactly how it's reasoning through each step. It's not just generating text; it's actually researching, which feels like a fundamental shift in how AI assistants operate.
Multimodal Magic (With Limits)
The content creation capabilities are solid, especially the image generation and those quirky 8-second videos. We had fun with "Nano Banana" (Google's playful name for their image generator), and the video creation, while brief, produces surprisingly natural results with audio that doesn't sound robotic.
But here's where reality hits: these features work best for quick creative sparks rather than polished, professional content. The 8-second video limit feels arbitrary, and we found ourselves wanting more control over the creative process.
The Google Ecosystem Advantage
Where Gemini truly shines is integration. If you're already living in Google's world—Gmail, Calendar, Drive, Photos—this feels like a natural evolution rather than another app to learn. We loved how it could draft emails in Gmail using context from our calendar or pull relevant photos for a presentation.
The Pixel integration with on-device processing is particularly clever, offering real-time assistance without the privacy concerns of cloud-based AI. It's the kind of seamless experience that makes you wonder why other AI assistants feel so disconnected from your actual workflow.
Who Should Care
Gemini makes the most sense for Google power users and enterprises already committed to Workspace. If you're a solo freelancer using random apps, the integration benefits won't matter much. But for teams collaborating in Google's ecosystem, this could genuinely change how work gets done.
We're also impressed by Google's enterprise focus—the security and privacy controls feel mature, which is refreshing in an AI landscape often dominated by "move fast and break things" mentality. Sometimes boring enterprise features are exactly what you need.
Our Review
Feature
Conversational AI assistant
Code generation and analysis
Text summarization and rewriting
Search enhancement
Integration with other Google Workspace apps (Docs, Gmail, Sheets, etc.)






