What to expect from Google this week
Google's annual developer conference, I/O, kicks off this week, with the company looking to address its shortcomings in foundation models and coding capabilities.

When Google opens its doors for its annual developer conference, I/O, it will do so as a clear third place in the foundation model race. A year ago, at Google I/O 2025, the situation looked very different: The company was still riding high from the launch of Gemini 2.5 Pro that March, and distinguishing among the top-tier large language models often felt like a subjective splitting of hairs. But a foundation model's reputation these days rests largely on its coding capabilities, and for months Google's coding tools have been outgunned by Anthropic's Claude Code and OpenAI's Codex.
Those systems are so dramatically superior to Google's own offerings that the company has reportedly had to allow some engineers at DeepMind, its AI division, to use Claude for their work—lest they fall farther behind. So when I arrive at the conference in Mountain View, California, I'll certainly be on the lookout for any efforts Google is making to claw its way back into frontrunner position. But I'm also eager to see new developments in areas where Google shapes the cutting edge, such as AI for science.
The company's moves there might receive less attention, but they will be no less consequential. Here are three things I'll be paying particular attention to over the next two days. Google is taking its AI coding crisis seriously.
According to reporting from The Information, there's a new AI coding team at DeepMind. And the Los Angeles Times has reported that John Jumper, who shared a 2024 Nobel Prize in chemistry with DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis for their work on the protein structure prediction software AlphaFold, is lending his talents to the efforts. I would be surprised if we don't see a major new coding release at I/O, perhaps in the form of an update to the company's Antigravity agentic coding platform.
That said, we shouldn't expect anything transformative here. Googlers have access to models and products that are substantially ahead of those released to the public, yet they were still reportedly fighting over who got access to Claude Code last month. Unless the company has made astonishing progress since then, Google probably won't make it back to the coding frontier in the next two days.
Coding might be Google DeepMind's weakness, but science is its conspicuous strength. It is the only frontier AI company to have earned a Nobel Prize. And as LLMs have come to dominate the AI-for-science landscape, Google has only solidified its lead.
Last year, the company released multiple scientific AI tools, including the AI co-scientist, which formulates hypotheses and research plans in response to user questions and has been described as an "oracle" by one Stanford scientist, and AlphaEvolve, a system that iteratively discovers new solutions for mathematical and computational problems. If any new scientific tools are announced at I/O, they'll be worth noting. I'll also be paying close attention to any moves Google makes in health and medicine.
Source: MIT Technology Review