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Google launches Gemini Enterprise

ALSO : Meta pushes AI for 5X productivity

News of the day

1. Google introduces Gemini Enterprise, its AI assistant for businesses, directly challenging Microsoft Copilot and ChatGPT Enterprise. It integrates with Google Workspace for enhanced productivity. Read more

2. Meta's metaverse employees are urged to use AI to achieve 5X productivity, making it a daily habit. This initiative aims to accelerate prototyping and innovation, impacting engineers, PMs, and designers.  Read more

3. Learn how MCP and the Claude API enable LLMs to interact with external tools, access real-time info, and perform actions, moving beyond text generation to agentic AI.  Read more

4. AI is revolutionizing cyber threats, making attacks more sophisticated and scalable. Learn about the challenges and defenses needed in this new era.  Read more

Our take

Hi Dotikers!

Google launched Gemini Enterprise on October 9, 2025, openly declaring its ambition to become the entry point for AI at work. This isn’t just another chatbot — it’s a platform that unifies data, tools, and people to power agents capable of acting within business processes. The first use cases, from Best Buy to HCA Healthcare, are mostly meant to send a clear message to IT decision-makers: the agent is becoming the default interface.

In detail, Gemini Enterprise offers a central hub for creating, deploying, and governing agents. It includes a no-code builder, ready-to-use agents like Deep Research and Code Assist, connectors for Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, Salesforce, SAP, and BigQuery, as well as advanced security and compliance controls. In short, Google is selling ergonomics and governance as much as models. If your AI fleet still looks like a herd of untamed kittens, this might be the time to give them a proper home 🙂

The pricing strategy confirms Google’s goal of broad adoption. Gemini Business starts at $21 per user per month for small teams. The Enterprise Standard and Plus editions start at $30, offering higher quotas, encryption and sovereignty options, and access to third-party agents. The entry point is clearly calibrated for scale ; and for direct comparison with rival offers.

On the competitive front, Microsoft set the $30 psychological benchmark with Copilot for Microsoft 365, now fully integrated into the suite and designed to capture users where their documents and meetings already live.

OpenAI, meanwhile, is pushing ChatGPT Enterprise, with strong privacy and compliance guarantees, and no training on customer data by default. But without the leverage of a massive productivity suite, the battle now centers on agent capabilities and real-world integration.

For enterprises, the key question is no longer “chatbot or not?” ; it’s which agent platform will become the backbone of work.

G.

Meme of the day

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