Google has started testing a reasoning model called Deep Think for Gemini 2.5 Pro, the company has revealed at its I/O developer conference. According to DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis, Gemini's Deep Think uses "the latest cutting-edge research" that gives the model the capability to consider multiple hypotheses before responding to queries. Google says it got an "impressive score" when evaluated using questions from the 2025 United States of America Mathematical Olympiad competition. However, Google wants to take more time to conduct safety evaluations and get further input from safety experts before releasing it widely. That's why it's making Deep Think initially available to trusted testers via the Gemini API first in order to get their feedback first.
The company has also introduced a better Gemini 2.5 Flash model, which is optimized for speed and efficiency. It's now more efficient than before, uses fewer tokens and has scored higher in benchmarks for reasoning, multimodality, code and long context than its predecessor. It will be generally available in early June. For now, the improved Gemini 2.5 Flash is available as a preview via Google AI Studio for developers, via Vertex AI for enterprise customers and via the Gemini app for other users.
While most of the efficiency gains covered on the I/O stage were focused on 2.5 Flash, Google did announce that it's bringing the 2.5 Flash concept of "Thinking Budgets" to its more advanced 2.5 Pro model. This feature will let you balance tokens spent vs. accuracy and speed of output.
Separately, Google is bringing Project Mariner into the Gemini API and Vertex AI, as well. Project Mariner is Google's Gemini-powered AI agents that can navigate pages on the web browser to complete tasks for users. The company will roll the agents out more broadly this summer so that developers can experiment with them. In addition, the company is releasing new previews for text-to-speech on both 2.5 Pro and 2.5 Flash models via the Gemini API, with support for two voices in 24 languages.
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