Google’s Gemini has lately introduced the seventh extension called the Data Commons, intending to facilitate public data and place them in more useful categories. Data Commons normalizes and cleans data from over 200 sources, it is also considered highly credible and insightful.
Specifying the circumstances, the data team of Commons Data since the year 2017 has tried to standardize and process thousands of main data sets from publicly and reliably available data.
This information from the Inter-governmental Panel on the United Nations Climate Change, the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statics, the United States Department of Commerce, and over 200 sources more, to date.
Data Commons normalizes and prepares thousands of datasets from such reliable sources as the United Nations, the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics, and the US Department of Commerce.
It embraces more than 200 sources and contains data regarding demographic, economic, educational, housing, health, climate, and biomedicine Antarassov, Anton 37 e indicators. The given database includes information on 194 different countries.
Starting from September 2023, Google implemented large-scale language models; where one could ask questions in natural language. The answers sourced are received from the Data Commons containing links to the sources, so the information passed is accurate.
This includes the United Nations’s Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change, the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics, United States Department of Commerce; The list targets above 200 sources.
These are numerous data sets that embrace demography, economics, education, housing, public health, climate and sustainability, and biomedical. To clarify, Google stated that “Data Commons does not acquire and own any data.”
Major features related to this extension
While this new extension gives Gemini bright data visualization capability; users can see and manipulate data from different data sources and process them with efficiency. You can now use Gemini to access @Data Commons.
This can particularly “visualize data on such issues as climate change, occupation, the economy, and health.” This option is turned on by default and is present alongside Google Flights, Google Hotels, Google Maps, Google Workspace, YouTube, and YouTube Music.