After Ghibli-style images earlier in the year, a new trend has engulfed social media, where users are generating 3D model images of themselves using Google's new and powerful Gemini 2.5 Flash model, ...
The Gemini Nano Banana AI model has quickly become a viral trend, generating over 200 million images and 3D models online. In today’s modern technology era, Google allows users to create 3D models, ...
Gemini 2.5 Flash image model, popularly known as Nano Banana, is the rage on the internet these days with its popular 3D-model trend. Users on social media are using Gemini to turn their real-life ...
In this exciting tutorial, learn how to make a 3D model of your car using Google Gemini's advanced tools. Whether you're a car enthusiast or a 3D modeling beginner, this step-by-step guide will help ...
Apple Vision Pro is moving deeper into the workplace, with Webex now letting teams review and manipulate 3D models together in real time.
Titleist is again releasing a limited batch of the elusive Pro V1 Left Dot golf ball. Here's why the ball is so popular and how to get them.
The Google AI Studio with Nano Banana is what helps create the viral 3D figurines. Nano Banana trend: If you have recently come across a new social media trend that involves people creating and ...
AI is evolving faster than ever, and each new update sparks a fresh internet trend—especially in image creation. After the Ghibli-style craze that took over social media a few months ago, the latest ...
A new AI trend called Nano Banana is going viral. It uses Google’s Gemini 2.5 Flash Image tool. This tool transforms photos into 3D figurines. Users can create miniatures of anything. The tool is free ...
The Nano Banana AI 3D figurine trend has exploded online, fueled by Google's Gemini 2.5 Flash Image tool. Users are creating personalized, hyper-realistic miniature figurines from photos and prompts.
On Tuesday, Tencent released HunyuanWorld-Voyager, a new open-weights AI model that generates 3D-consistent video sequences from a single image, allowing users to pilot a camera path to "explore" ...