Last year, the firm announced it was rolling out a version of its GS AI Assistant that's tailored for the company's developers, putting the tool in the hands of thousands of engineers to help speed the creation of applications. Goldman Sachs made its GS AI Assistant available to the firm's developers last year. (REUTERS/David Gray/File Photo / Reuters Photos)Goldman built the GS AI Assistant so that it can interact with different LLMs that power various AI tools, like , GPT-4o-mini and o3-mini, Google's Gemini 2.0 Flash, Gemini 2.0 Flash Vision, Gemini 1.5 Flash, Gemini 1.5 Pro, and Claude 3.7 Sonnet, as well as open source models – allowing users the ability to choose the model that best suits their needs.In January, Goldman Sachs rolled out the AI tool to 10,000 employees as the project widened its scope across the company's workforce. The GS AI Assistant has features tailored to different work functions, so developers, , research analysts and employees involved with asset and wealth management all have versions of the AI copilot with capabilities designed to aid in carrying out those duties. Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon previewed the firm's AI plans on an earnings call earlier this year. (Photographer: Jeenah Moon/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)The company also added translation functionality so that analysts and can translate research and other documents into specific languages preferred by clients.Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon said on the company's first quarter earnings call the firm is "leveraging AI solutions to scale and transform our engineering capabilities as well as to simplify and modernize our technology stack.""We continue to believe an acceleration in AI adoption will allow for further efficiencies for our own business, and for companies large and small. As it is utilized more broadly, productivity gains for the economy will be significant," Solomon added. U.S. Stock Market Quotes Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement, Goldman built the GS AI Assistant so that it can interact with different LLMs that power various AI tools, like OpenAI's GPT-3.5 and GPT-4, Google's Gemini, as well as open source models , Goldman Sachs has 10,000 people currently using its in-house AI tool, according to a memo seen by The Post. REUTERS The study said major global banks would use AI to “streamline their operations.”.