logo
Google AI Pro and Perplexity Pro are now free in India, but there's a catch: Who gets what? Benefits explained

Google AI Pro and Perplexity Pro are now free in India, but there's a catch: Who gets what? Benefits explained

India Today2 days ago
Google and Airtel are now offering free one-year subscriptions to the premium versions of Google AI Pro and Perplexity Pro. Through this offer, eligible users can access tools like Gemini, Veo 3, and 2TB of cloud storage via Google, and get access to advanced search with GPT-4.1, Claude, file uploads, and image generation via Airtel. However, both offers come with specific eligibility requirements and deadlines.advertisementLet's take a detailed look at what Google and Airtel are offering and how you can access Google AI Pro and Perplexity Pro for free.Google Free AI Pro offerGoogle is offering its AI Pro subscription, priced at Rs 19,500 annually, free for a year to eligible college students in India. The offer is available to students aged 18 and above who are enrolled in accredited institutions. To activate the plan, students must verify their academic status via the Google One student offer page and confirm their identity by submitting personal and academic details.What Google AI Pro offers
The AI Pro subscription includes access to Gemini 2.5 Pro, Google's flagship AI model, and Veo 3, a video generation tool. The subscription also provides integrated AI support within Google apps like Gmail, Docs, and Sheets, as well as 2TB of cloud storage.Some of the highlighted features of Google AI Pro include:Study Assistance: Summarising long textbooks (up to 1,500 pages), exam prep tools, and explanations for complex topics.Writing Support: Tools to generate drafts, improve essays, and brainstorm ideas.Video Generation: Create short videos from text and images using Veo 3.NotebookLM: A research tool offering summarised content from documents and audio files.Gemini Integration: AI-driven features across Google Workspace applications.Cloud Storage: 2TB available across Drive, Gmail, and Google Photos.Airtel offering free access to Perplexity ProAirtel is also offering Perplexity Pro free for a year to all its subscribers across mobile, broadband, and DTH services. Normally priced at Rs 17,000 annually, the subscription to this premium AI-powered search and answer platform can be activated through the Airtel Thanks app under the 'Rewards' section.Perplexity Pro offers users access to real-time, research-backed answers drawn from the internet. Users can also ask follow-up questions and explore topics. Some of the highlighted features include:Unlimited AI Searches: Users can perform up to 300 AI-powered queries daily.Model Switching: Choose between AI models like GPT-4.1, Claude, and others.File Uploads: Upload documents and receive AI-generated summaries and insights.Image Generation: Convert text prompts into visuals using models such as DALLE.advertisementAccess to Perplexity Labs: Build tools like spreadsheets, dashboards, and basic apps through AI-powered workflows.So, what's the catch?Well, both offers are not available to everyone.Google AI Pro: The free subscription to the Google AI Pro plan is limited to Indian residents using personal Google accounts. To be eligible, users must not already be on an existing or higher-tier Google One plan and need to have a valid payment method on file to cover future billing if the subscription isn't cancelled before the trial ends. The deadline to redeem this offer is 15 September 2025.Perplexity Pro: Meanwhile, Airtel's offer for Perplexity Pro is only available to Airtel users and must be claimed via the Airtel Thanks app. No payment information is required to activate this subscription.- Ends
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Elon Musk's xAI To Launch Baby Grok After Criticism Over Sexualized AI Avatars
Elon Musk's xAI To Launch Baby Grok After Criticism Over Sexualized AI Avatars

India.com

time6 minutes ago

  • India.com

Elon Musk's xAI To Launch Baby Grok After Criticism Over Sexualized AI Avatars

Elon Musk's Child-Friendly AI App: Tech billionaire Elon Musk has revealed that his AI venture, xAI, is working on a child-friendly version of its chatbot Grok. The new app, tentatively named 'Baby Grok', aims to build on Grok's capabilities while tailoring its features for younger users. The announcement follows criticism of Grok's previous versions, particularly for featuring sexualized AI avatars that experts warned could negatively influence children. According to media reports, xAI stated that the program will bring its advanced AI capabilities to federal, local, state, and national security customers, signalling the firm's growing interest in public sector partnerships. In response, the upcoming chatbot is expected to feature stricter content controls and safety measures. However, Musk has not yet shared detailed insights into how Baby Grok will differ from xAI's standard offering. Earlier this month, xAI launched Grok 4, just months after its prior release, signaling the rapid pace of AI advancement. The update came in the wake of controversy over antisemitic remarks generated by the chatbot on X (formerly Twitter), which drew sharp public backlash. Google's Gemini Chatbot For Kids Meanwhile, Google has announced it is developing a children-focused version of its Gemini chatbot. Designed to assist with homework, answer questions, and foster creativity, the app will come with parental controls through the Family Link platform. Google has confirmed that the kids' version of Gemini will not include ads or collect data, focusing purely on educational and creative use.

Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt warns of AI superintelligence outpacing Earth's energy limits: 'Chips will outrun power needs'
Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt warns of AI superintelligence outpacing Earth's energy limits: 'Chips will outrun power needs'

Economic Times

time2 hours ago

  • Economic Times

Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt warns of AI superintelligence outpacing Earth's energy limits: 'Chips will outrun power needs'

Bloomberg Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt has issued a stark warning: the real limit to AI's growth isn't technology—it's electricity. As companies chase artificial general intelligence, their energy demands are skyrocketing. As the world marvels at the rapid evolution of artificial intelligence—writing code, diagnosing illnesses, even composing symphonies—an unexpected crisis is taking shape behind the scenes. The real limit to AI's growth, it turns out, may not be algorithms or microchips but something far more elemental: electricity. In a striking episode of the Moonshots podcast, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt offered a sobering assessment of the future of AI. 'AI's natural limit is electricity, not chips,' he declared. Schmidt, who now chairs the Special Competitive Studies Project, a pro-AI think tank, explained that the U.S. alone may need an additional 92 gigawatts of power to sustain its AI ambitions—a demand equivalent to building 92 nuclear power plants. For perspective, only two such plants have been constructed in the U.S. over the past three decades. As companies like OpenAI, Microsoft, Meta, and Google sprint toward artificial general intelligence (AGI)—machines with reasoning capabilities that rival or surpass human intelligence—their growing appetite for energy is becoming impossible to ignore. 'We need energy in all forms… and we need it quickly,' Schmidt emphasized during a recent testimony before Congress. This is not just a theoretical concern. Microsoft has already signed a 20-year nuclear power deal to revive the shuttered Three Mile Island facility, while Sam Altman of OpenAI has invested heavily in Helion, a fusion energy startup. Meanwhile, tech companies are snapping up water rights and power contracts in a desperate bid to keep their servers cool and their models humming. In fact according to a report from Quartz, Microsoft's 2023 environmental report revealed a 34% spike in water use, totaling 1.7 billion gallons—just to cool its AI-driven data centers. By 2027, AI workloads could require enough water to serve all of Canada for a year, according to researchers. This surge in energy and resource consumption is igniting broader fears. Environmental groups like Greenpeace warn that AI's unchecked growth could derail national and international climate goals. And yet, the lure of 'superintelligence'—AI so advanced it could transform medicine, law, defense, and scientific research—is too great for companies and investors to resist. 'We don't know what AGI or superintelligence will ultimately deliver,' Schmidt admitted, 'but we know it's coming. And we must plan now to make sure we have the energy infrastructure to support it.' The tension is real. On one hand, AI promises to solve global challenges. On the other, its development could strain—and possibly break—the very systems it aims to improve. The irony is poignant: machines designed to think like humans may one day need more power than humanity can afford to give. AI has long been portrayed as the brain of the future. But Eric Schmidt's warning makes it clear: without electricity, there's no intelligence—artificial or otherwise. As society edges closer to superintelligence, perhaps the more pressing question isn't how smart our machines will become, but whether we'll have enough power to keep them running.

Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt warns of AI superintelligence outpacing Earth's energy limits: 'Chips will outrun power needs'
Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt warns of AI superintelligence outpacing Earth's energy limits: 'Chips will outrun power needs'

Time of India

time2 hours ago

  • Time of India

Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt warns of AI superintelligence outpacing Earth's energy limits: 'Chips will outrun power needs'

As the world marvels at the rapid evolution of artificial intelligence—writing code, diagnosing illnesses, even composing symphonies—an unexpected crisis is taking shape behind the scenes. The real limit to AI's growth, it turns out, may not be algorithms or microchips but something far more elemental: electricity. In a striking episode of the Moonshots podcast, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt offered a sobering assessment of the future of AI. 'AI's natural limit is electricity, not chips,' he declared. Schmidt, who now chairs the Special Competitive Studies Project, a pro-AI think tank, explained that the U.S. alone may need an additional 92 gigawatts of power to sustain its AI ambitions—a demand equivalent to building 92 nuclear power plants . For perspective, only two such plants have been constructed in the U.S. over the past three decades. Explore courses from Top Institutes in Select a Course Category Data Science others Project Management MBA Operations Management Digital Marketing MCA Others Data Science Degree Public Policy Artificial Intelligence healthcare PGDM Data Analytics Technology Leadership Design Thinking Healthcare Management Finance Cybersecurity Product Management CXO Skills you'll gain: Duration: 10 Months IIM Kozhikode CERT-IIMK DABS India Starts on undefined Get Details Skills you'll gain: Duration: 11 Months IIT Madras CERT-IITM Advanced Cert Prog in AI and ML India Starts on undefined Get Details Skills you'll gain: Duration: 11 Months E&ICT Academy, Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati CERT-IITG Postgraduate Cert in AI and ML India Starts on undefined Get Details Skills you'll gain: Duration: 10 Months E&ICT Academy, Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati CERT-IITG Prof Cert in DS & BA with GenAI India Starts on undefined Get Details Skills you'll gain: Duration: 30 Weeks IIM Kozhikode SEPO - IIMK-AI for Senior Executives India Starts on undefined Get Details The Silent Race for Power As companies like OpenAI , Microsoft , Meta, and Google sprint toward artificial general intelligence (AGI)—machines with reasoning capabilities that rival or surpass human intelligence—their growing appetite for energy is becoming impossible to ignore. 'We need energy in all forms… and we need it quickly,' Schmidt emphasized during a recent testimony before Congress. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Senior Living Homes in Trishal May Surprise You Senior Living | Search Ads Undo This is not just a theoretical concern. Microsoft has already signed a 20-year nuclear power deal to revive the shuttered Three Mile Island facility, while Sam Altman of OpenAI has invested heavily in Helion, a fusion energy startup. Meanwhile, tech companies are snapping up water rights and power contracts in a desperate bid to keep their servers cool and their models humming. In fact according to a report from Quartz, Microsoft's 2023 environmental report revealed a 34% spike in water use, totaling 1.7 billion gallons—just to cool its AI-driven data centers. By 2027, AI workloads could require enough water to serve all of Canada for a year, according to researchers. You Might Also Like: What is Artificial Super-intelligence? Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt warns AI will soon outsmart humanity and we are not ready A Global Brain with a Local Cost This surge in energy and resource consumption is igniting broader fears. Environmental groups like Greenpeace warn that AI's unchecked growth could derail national and international climate goals. And yet, the lure of 'superintelligence'—AI so advanced it could transform medicine, law, defense, and scientific research—is too great for companies and investors to resist. 'We don't know what AGI or superintelligence will ultimately deliver,' Schmidt admitted, 'but we know it's coming. And we must plan now to make sure we have the energy infrastructure to support it.' The tension is real. On one hand, AI promises to solve global challenges. On the other, its development could strain—and possibly break—the very systems it aims to improve. The irony is poignant: machines designed to think like humans may one day need more power than humanity can afford to give. AI has long been portrayed as the brain of the future. But Eric Schmidt's warning makes it clear: without electricity, there's no intelligence—artificial or otherwise. As society edges closer to superintelligence, perhaps the more pressing question isn't how smart our machines will become, but whether we'll have enough power to keep them running. You Might Also Like: Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt sounds alarm on AI data centers' soaring power demand: 'We need energy in all forms'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store