Google Makes Gemini Code Assistant Available for Everyone
Google is throwing a major lifeline to students and hobbyist coders with Gemini Code Assistant, a free AI coding assistant that supports all publicly available coding languages, the company said Tuesday.
Gemini Code Assistant, previously available only for enterprise customers, will give everyone access to a "practically unlimited" AI coding assistant, the company said in a press release. Gemini Code Assistant allows 180,000 completions per month, which Google says is 90 times more code completions than other free coding assistants on the market.
"A professional developer coding every day is probably going to use maybe half of that," said Ryan J. Salva, senior director of product at Google in charge of developer experiences. "You would have to be a wildly dedicated developer coding 14 hours a day, every day, just banging on it in order to get to those limits."
Google says Gemini Code Assistant has a generous 128,000 input token support in chat and can use natural language to help generate, explain or improve code. For example, you could ask Gemini to write a script that sends a daily email with the latest weather forecast and get workable code. Code Assistant, however, isn't at the level where a novice can simply give Gemini Code Assistant a prompt and develop a fully fledged program.
Salva sees 2025 as the year when AI helps coders not only produce more code but better-quality code. Within software teams, it's common for developers to go through code review, in which their code is overlooked by a supervisor who then gives them tips on how to improve. Salva says AI agents within Gemini can help with this, freeing up more time for developers. Google also will have a public preview of Gemini Code Assist for GitHub.
"We've built an AI agent that performs the work of a teammate or a co-worker who reviews the code contributed for defects," Salva said, "looking for, 'are you following best practices?' [or] 'Are there ways to make the logic more elegant?'"
Google's release of Gemini Code Assistant comes as Big Tech is quickly trying to mark areas of AI dominance. Right now, ChatGPT is considered the default for AI-assisted chatbots, with 400 million weekly users. Some of ChatGPT's success has to do with its viral launch in late 2022. There's tremendous power in being considered the default piece of technology. By making Code Assistant freely available, Salva says the business case is to help drive lifelong adoption of Google's AI services.
Business cases aside, Salva sees Gemini Code Assistant as a major step in helping people begin making programs in natural language, where little coding knowledge is required.
"The large language models can do the work of writing the independent logic for you," Salva said. "And this makes humans a lot more creative... it increases their creative output because they no longer have that language barrier."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Tom's Guide
an hour ago
- Tom's Guide
Claude 4 is one of the best chatbots yet — here's the only prompt you'll ever need for it
There is an art to prompting AI. While a chatbot will answer almost any kind of question, no matter how you phrase it, they are designed to operate best with incredibly specific instructions. This can be hard to work out yourself, needing a bit of understanding about how the models work. Most of the large companies in AI now have prompting guides, explaining how best to use them, but Anthropic's Claude goes a step further. Load up the chatbot and you'll be given free rein to ask any question or request that comes to mind. Or, for a simplified and more effective approach, Claude offers five pre-made options that will set you up for the best answer. These aren't necessary for a quick question or an easy request, but if you're looking for a detailed and well-thought-out answer, try these options out — all listed just below the search bar. Claude currently offers five different pre-made options. These are: write, learn, code, life stuff, and Claude's choice. For each one that you click on, a host of options will appear. These change each time you open Claude, giving a wealth of options. Write As the name suggests, this is all tasks that involve writing. In this option, you'll find templates including writing case studies, developing content calendars, and creating social media posts. Learn The Learn category is one of the more varied ones. This can be for anything from developing discussion prompts on a given topic, creating feedback for students, or creating a knowledge map with surprising patterns in topics you know well. The Learn category can be either incredibly specific or unbelievably vague, joined only by the idea that you'll learn something new here. Code Claude 4 has built up a reputation for its coding ability. However, it can be hard to get going with this. Vibe coding (the ability to write code by prompting AI) has seen a jump in popularity, but it does take a bit of skill. This mode helps get you started, offering templates such as vibe code with me where it will start with a back-and-forth conversation about what you're making, or simply a clear request like help me turn a screenshot into working code. Life Stuff The vaguest sounding prompt here, Life Stuff, is anything in your personal life. Use this mode to organize your living space, improve your sleep habits or develop exercise routines. This mode does involve putting in quite a lot of personal information about yourself. While Claude has made a point of not using any data that you put in for training, it is important to consider if you're comfortable divulging any information. Claude's Choice This is a bit like Google's 'I'm feeling lucky'. It's just a random assortment of starting points for a conversation with Claude. Some of the examples I was presented with include 'explore ancient wisdom', 'consider innovation patterns', and 'explore memory techniques'. This section is less useful, and more where you go when you're bored and looking for something to do. Once you've decided on your category, simply click the prompt that best works for what you're after. If none of them fit exactly what you need, click the one that is closest to your needs. Claude will then fill out the prompt for you with the model asking some follow-up questions to help nail down the conversation. Using these pre-made prompts is a bit like having someone introduce you and explain what you're looking for. It sets up the conversation so all you need to do is answer the questions that you're asked. The prompt that is generated by this method is almost identical every single time, looking roughly like this: If none of the pre-made options apply to you, try copying the above into Claude, replacing the enter topic section with what you're looking for. While the prompt style above won't always work, it is an easy way to get started with Claude and gives you an idea of the best way to get the chatbot to perform. I tried it with a variety of prompts, both pre-made and ones of my own choosing and had success with the vast majority of them. By using this kind of technique, it will also allow you to make the most of Claude's Artifacts feature - creating in-app games, tools, and interactive features. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips.


Tom's Guide
2 hours ago
- Tom's Guide
I let smart glasses read my emotions and watch what I eat — and now I can't unsee the future
I believe the next great fitness wearable will not be a smartwatch or smart ring — it will be glasses. I saw this for myself when trying a prototype of the new eyewear Emteq Labs is keen to launch next year. Sporting sensors all around the rims, it can detect the subtlest of changes in your facial expressions (even those you aren't consciously aware of doing). With this data, paired with AI, it can become a personalized life coach for your fitness, your diet and even your emotional health. I put this to the test in my time talking to Emteq CEO, Steen Strand, to see what they can truly bring to the table for the average user and what the future holds. At the core of Emteq's glasses are a series of nine sensors that can identify facial movements to a near-microscopic degree. They're dotted across the bottom of the lenses in these prototypes, which are paired with AI to deliver a personalized set of specs that can sense you. Of course, there are plenty of fascinating use-cases for these, such as using your face to interact with a computer, or adding more true-to-life emotion to your in-game character. But the one that jumped out at me is health — not just physical health but emotional health. Currently, health tracking via consumer tech is limited to your fitness routines — filling in Apple Watch rings and checking your sleep. These are all fair and good, but as I've learned in my journey of losing 20 pounds, good nutrition is just as important. And while there are apps like MyFitnessPal that can deliver effective nutritional information. None come quite as easy to use and complex with actionable detail as Emteq's prototype setup. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. Using ChatGPT-4o, the on-board camera takes a snap of what you're eating and breaks it down into total calories and detailed macros. And on top of that, it will even give you a chewing score…yep, you read that correctly. Digestive issues and impacts on metabolic health can creep up if you chew too fast, so it's important to take your time. So those sensors on your glasses can track biting and chewing speeds to ensure you don't become too much of a food hoover. 'We can use AI to give you custom personalized guidance — some of that actually in real-time,' Steen added. 'We have high fidelity information about how you're eating and what you're eating, and are already using haptic feedback for in-the-moment notifications.' And with their ability to track activity too — tracking different exercises such as walking, running and even star jumps — this can all come together with the AI infusion to give you a far better understanding of your fitness levels. Then there's the emotion sensing piece of the puzzle. Up until this point, it's all been very surface level — prompts to fill in a journal, heart rate tracking to detect stress, or practice deep breathing exercises. All nice-to-haves but beyond the big issue that people could just lie to their phones, nothing has really gone deeper. We believe that understanding emotions is a force multiplier for AI, in terms of it being effective for you in the context of wearing glasses all day. If you want AI to be really effective for you, it's critical that it understands how you're feeling in real-time." Well, beyond accurately assessing eating behaviors throughout the day, other data points can be used to assess emotional context, such as mood detection and posture analysis. While I'm able to fake a smile, the upper section of my face and forehead gave me away in the moment. And then when you tap into the evergrowing popularity of people using ChatGPT for emotional support and therapy, you're surely going to get a more personalized, more frank conversation when data is added in there too. 'We believe that understanding emotions is a force multiplier for AI, in terms of it being effective for you in the context of wearing glasses all day,' Steen commented. 'If you want AI to be really effective for you, it's critical that it understands how you're feeling in real-time, in response to different things that are happening around you.' It sounds creepy on paper, and it kind of is when you think about it. But it's certainly a gateway into real emotional honesty that you may not get by rationalizing with yourself in a journal app and possibly glazing over any cracks in your mental health when filling out that survey for the day. Now this may all seem fascination (I think it is too), but I'm not ignorant of the key questions that come with strapping a bunch of sensors to your face: the questions of privacy surrounding a device grabbing so much data, or simply asking do we really want to be judged for our chewing. Privacy is always a question you can have of many different items that collect a lot of information like this. And to that latter question, that's asked with every big step forward like this. But the end result is something so much more advanced than a smart ring, and much more proactive. Here at Augmented World Expo (AWE), I found a breadcrumb trail of a lot of things that could lead to the smart glasses of the future that everyone will wear. Emteq is probably the biggest crumb of them all, because while AI is definitely the key to unlocking XR, personalizing it is the real challenge. Sensors and real-time data collection like this to help aid you into a better life is the clearest step towards tackling that challenge.


Business Upturn
3 hours ago
- Business Upturn
OpenAI in talks with Saudi PIF, Reliance for $40 billion fundraise, eyes additional $17 billion in 2027: Report
By News Desk Published on June 12, 2025, 09:15 IST OpenAI is reportedly in discussions with major investors from Saudi Arabia and India, including the Saudi Public Investment Fund (PIF) and Reliance Industries, as part of its ambitious $40 billion fundraising plan, according to The Information . The report highlights that OpenAI has held conversations with both Middle Eastern and Indian financial heavyweights, signalling the company's intent to broaden its global investor base. The discussions are part of OpenAI's efforts to secure capital for its AI infrastructure and long-term growth strategy. In addition to the current fundraising round, OpenAI has informed potential investors that it aims to raise another $17 billion in 2027, further underlining the scale of its future expansion plans. OPENAI HAS DISCUSSED RAISING MONEY FROM SAUDI ARABIA, INDIAN INVESTORS – THE INFORMATION OPENAI HAS TALKED TO SAUDI'S PIF AND INDIA'S RELIANCE FOR ITS $40 BILLION FUNDRAISE- THE INFORMATION OPENAI HAS TOLD INVESTORS IT WANTS TO RAISE ANOTHER $17 BILLION IN 2027 – THE… — First Squawk (@FirstSquawk) June 11, 2025 Meanwhile, OpenAI's lead investor SoftBank has reportedly been buying employee shares, indicating continued confidence in the AI firm's valuation and growth trajectory. The reported talks with sovereign wealth funds and major corporate entities come as OpenAI continues to lead the global artificial intelligence race with innovations like ChatGPT and partnerships across the tech ecosystem. News desk at