As the de facto map of the web, Google has long provided links and information broad enough to match the size of the internet itself. But with the new AI Overviews feature Google has pushed the world into a new age of exploration – where artificial intelligence curates your search results. But what happens if you don’t want to dive into the new age? Let’s take a look at the why, the how, and the what now of keeping your simple Google search alive during the AI gold rush, and making sure that you are in control of the adventure.
As an AI company, it recently rolled out a suite of AI features headlined by AI Overviews which are now changing the face of the results listed for hundreds of millions of people, and will soon change it for more than a billion worldwide, turning what was traditionally a list of links into synthesised overview of things you’re searching for. Does this sound great to you? Maybe not if you don’t want AI in between you and your internet.
That most straightforward breakout seems less a breakout than a manual work-around, requiring that users click on ‘Web’ instead of leaving it to ‘Verify’ every time they perform their searches. Google’s ‘Where do you want to go today?’ options would include a crawlspace-like plumbing escape hatch that would allow seeks to perform unbot-buttressed Google searches every once in a while.
This will, however, change that setting, thereby permitting you to search using Chrome and the URL bar without AI Overviews as an unwelcome companion, offering that classic Google search experience.
Even going beyond simple search results, Google now infuses artificial intelligence everywhere and anywhere possible, from answering software help questions, Google Now cards keeping users informed and making their lives easier, to intelligent email responses from Gmail: this is not a test of artificial intelligence, it’s not even just a feature, it’s a transformation in how Google sees us interacting with our digital world in the coming years. The AI Overviews feature heavily at the Google I/O developer conference, and these are just the tip of the iceberg.
In contrast with the overall complex approach of selling any of your old electronics, it’s easy to sell your Google device with Gizmogo. Enter their website, select your device model, describe the condition it’s currently in, get an instant quote and – if you are happy with it – ship your device to Gizmogo, for free and get paid within days after the inspection.
Pretty much any Google device is eligible for sale at Gizmogo, provided it’s in good working order. You might get less for a device with a small defect, but you’re almost guaranteed to get something back.
Gizmogo offers you the best price, the easiest shipping, the fastest payout, and is a hustle-free place where you can sell your used Google devices, just so you know.
Once Gizmogo receives and inspects your Google device, payments are generally issued within 24 hours, meaning you have money back fast.
A damaged Google device will get you some money. That isn’t very much, compared to undamaged devices, but it’s better than throwing them in the trash. Gizmogo’s looks ugly and has a crappy name, but I wouldn’t have thought of it alone. Now I can.
Google’s decision to entwine AI into its search functions is, in some ways, just the tip of a very large iceberg. Everywhere we turn online, human-sounding automated, intelligent systems are increasingly determining how we explore and find our way around the internet. Whether you want to let the change wash over you or still hold on to that lingering sense of familiarity when you’re searching, it helps to know what’s going on and how you can exercise choice in not getting left behind. It certainly is possible to adjust your settings or use different routes that allow you to retain control over how much machine learning AI has on your interactions with technology. Even in the brave new world of machine learning and AI, humans are managing to retain their preference.
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