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When AI Remembers Everything, Moves Like a Human, and Joins the Board
Google’s 128K-token model, AI-powered robotics, and the future of AI in corporate decision-making.
Hello, Leaders!
AI just got a serious upgrade—Google’s new Gemma 3 brings an open-source powerhouse with a 128k context window, meaning models can process way more information at once. Meanwhile, over half of American adults have now used AI chatbots (and, let’s be real, half of them are probably still getting questionable responses). In the physical world, Gemini Robotics is pushing AI beyond screens, while some companies are debating giving AI a seat at the boardroom table. Let’s get into it.
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Google Unveils Open-Source Gemma 3 With a 128K Context Window
Google just dropped Gemma 3, an open-source AI model with a 128,000-token context window—meaning it can process massive amounts of text in one go. To give you an idea, Gemma 2 had a context window of 80K.
Why enterprises should care:
Longer context = fewer hallucinations – Models with deeper memory can understand long conversations, contracts, or reports without losing track.
Open source = more innovation – Unlike proprietary models, Gemma 3’s openness means businesses can tweak and optimize it for their needs.
Potential cost savings – Running an open-source model could mean cutting reliance on expensive APIs from OpenAI or Anthropic.
Bottom line: The AI race is shifting—expect open-source models to start competing with closed giants like GPT-4.
Over Half of American Adults Have Used an AI Chatbot
A new survey confirms it: AI chatbots aren’t just for techies. Over 50% of American adults have used one, with ChatGPT leading the pack, followed by Google Gemini.
Key insights:
Mainstream adoption is here – AI is no longer niche. Expect AI-driven customer service, marketing, and productivity tools to become the norm.
Trust issues still linger – While more people are using AI, misinformation, bias, and accuracy concerns remain top hesitations.
Enterprise adoption will accelerate – As AI familiarity grows, expect less resistance from employees and customers when integrating AI tools.
For businesses: If AI isn’t part of your operations yet, you’re already behind.
Gemini Robotics Brings AI Into the Physical World
AI is stepping out of the chatbox and into reality. Gemini Robotics is Google’s latest push to merge AI with real-world robotics, training AI to interact with physical spaces.
Why it matters:
Beyond screens – AI isn’t just generating text—it’s learning how to move, manipulate objects, and work in real-world settings.
Enterprise impact – Robotics AI could reshape warehousing, logistics, manufacturing, and even healthcare.
Human-like learning – These AI systems are trained similar to how humans learn, making them more adaptable.
Big picture: We’re moving from “AI in your pocket” to AI in your workplace. The future isn’t just digital—it’s robotic.
When AI Gets a Board Seat
Should AI have a corporate board seat? Some companies think so, and experiments are already underway.
What this could mean:
AI as an advisor – AI models can analyze massive amounts of data to help boards make faster, data-driven decisions.
Regulatory concerns – Who’s accountable if an AI-driven decision leads to financial loss or legal trouble?
Bias & ethics – AI models reflect the data they’re trained on—so who makes sure they’re offering fair, unbiased recommendations?
For executives: AI might not be CEO material (yet), but its role in decision-making is only going to grow.
Should AI Have a Say in Business Decisions?AI is already influencing operations, but should it go further? |
TL;DR:
Google’s Gemma 3 just launched with a massive 128k context window, meaning AI can process more information at once.
Over half of Americans have used an AI chatbot—ChatGPT and Gemini lead the charge.
Gemini Robotics is taking AI beyond screens, training models to interact with the physical world.
AI in the boardroom? Some companies are testing whether AI should have a say in corporate decisions.
AI is creeping into every part of business—longer context, real-world robotics, mainstream adoption, and even boardrooms. The question isn’t if AI will be involved in your business, but how soon and how much.
Stay sharp,
Cat Valverde
Founder, Enterprise AI Solutions
Navigating Tomorrow’s Tech Landscape Together