You're tuned in to Tech Beat. Here's what's moving in technology today.
Google is making a serious push to embed artificial intelligence deeper into everyday Android use. The company launched what it's calling Gemini Intelligence, a suite of features designed to make your phone feel less like a tool you operate and more like an assistant that anticipates what you need before you ask.
On the social media front, Meta is rolling out an AI account on Threads that users can tag to get answers or context mid-conversation — clearly inspired by how people use Grok over on X. The catch? You cannot block it. That decision has already drawn sharp criticism, raising familiar questions about how much say users actually have over their own feeds.
And researchers studying large language models have published what they're calling a thirty-three model atlas examining how well frontier AI systems monitor their own knowledge — essentially, whether these models know what they don't know. The findings matter because overconfident AI that can't flag its own uncertainty is a real problem in high-stakes settings.
That's your tech briefing for now. Keep surfing. Tech Beat out.
