Science & Technology

Why Google’s Gemini Code Assist needs devs to pick it over Copilot | TechCrunch Minute

Google’s new coding assistant underscores how quickly AI is improving at helping developers write code — but how far can it really go? At its Cloud Next conference, Google announced Gemini Code Assist, an enterprise-focused AI code completion and assistance tool. While the tool is expected to be a direct competitor to GitHub’s Copilot Enterprise,…

Published

on

Google’s new coding assistant underscores how quickly AI is improving at helping developers write code — but how far can it really go? At its Cloud Next conference, Google announced Gemini Code Assist, an enterprise-focused AI code completion and assistance tool. While the tool is expected to be a direct competitor to GitHub’s Copilot Enterprise, it also signals how big tech companies clearly want to apply AI to helping developers write code and other programming tasks.

Subscribe for more on YouTube:

Follow TechCrunch on Instagram:
TikTok:
X:
Facebook:

Read more:

3 Comments

  1. @benseal3072

    April 11, 2024 at 1:33 am

    It is a good use of blockchain for context based media. “Here is the V1 and here is the V2.” Network supporters earn token while the authors are finalized to the version published. Very cool smart contract use for colleges as well as a revolution in patient use in blockchain.

  2. @Red_Paper6495

    April 12, 2024 at 8:40 am

    This is funny, Gemini 1.5 Pro and Geimi Ultra cannot program at all compared to OpenAI ChatGPT.
    Out of 100 questions on programming in C++, Gemini gives a maximum of about 5-10 correct answers, the remaining 90 answers are simply made up and have nothing to do with reality and facts.
    Gemini – This is an absolutely useless thing in programming.

  3. @roelljr

    April 15, 2024 at 11:10 pm

    Most of what they announced is not available and the stuff that is (I have access to all the preview features) have been very disappointing. Seems very rushed. Actually doesn’t seem any better than Duet. Looks like they just replaced the underlying model for the time being. It just feels like Google is playing catchup from so far behind…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Trending

Exit mobile version