Google has officially unveiled Gemini Intelligence for Android, signalling one of the company’s biggest pushes yet toward an AI-first smartphone experience.
- 1. Gemini Can Handle Multi-Step Tasks Across Apps
- 2. Gemini Can Turn Your Screen Into Actions
- 3. Gemini Is Coming Directly Into Chrome
- 4. Autofill Is Becoming Much Smarter
- 5. Rambler Makes Voice Typing Sound More Human
- 6. “Create My Widget” Lets Users Build Widgets With AI
- 7. Android’s Entire Design Is Becoming More AI-Driven
The new system deeply integrates Gemini AI into Android itself, allowing phones to handle more everyday tasks automatically instead of forcing users to manually jump between apps. From smarter browsing to AI-generated widgets, Google wants Android to feel more proactive, personalised, and less dependent on constant user input.
While many features still require prompts, Gemini Intelligence represents a major shift in how Google sees the future of smartphones.
Here are the seven biggest Gemini Intelligence features announced during Android Show.
1. Gemini Can Handle Multi-Step Tasks Across Apps
The biggest upgrade is Gemini’s ability to complete multi-step actions across multiple apps automatically.
Google demonstrated examples where Gemini could locate a class syllabus inside Gmail, identify required books, and add them directly into a shopping cart without users manually switching apps themselves.
The assistant can also help with things like booking spin classes or handling reservations.
Importantly, Google says users remain in control during the process, with Gemini stopping before final confirmations or payments are made.
2. Gemini Can Turn Your Screen Into Actions
Gemini Intelligence is also designed to understand what’s currently displayed on your screen and act on it intelligently.
For example, users can open a grocery list in a Notes app, long-press the power button, and ask Gemini to automatically build an online shopping cart from the list.
Google also showed Gemini analyzing a photo of a travel brochure and finding similar tour packages online for a group booking.
The idea is to reduce repetitive copying, pasting, searching, and app-switching that normally slows users down.
3. Gemini Is Coming Directly Into Chrome
Google is integrating Gemini more deeply into the Chrome browser on Android.
Later this year, Gemini in Chrome will help summarize websites, compare information across tabs, and assist users with research directly inside the browser.
One of the more ambitious additions is “Chrome auto browse,” where Gemini can reportedly complete online tasks like reserving parking spaces or booking appointments automatically.
If it works reliably, this could significantly change how people interact with websites on mobile devices.
4. Autofill Is Becoming Much Smarter
Android’s existing autofill system is getting a major AI upgrade.
With Gemini Intelligence enabled, Android will be able to pull relevant information from connected apps like Google Drive and automatically complete more complex forms.
That means tasks like entering passport details, IDs, addresses, or other stored information could happen much faster with less manual typing.
It’s one of the quieter upgrades, but likely one users may notice most often in daily use.
5. Rambler Makes Voice Typing Sound More Human
Google also introduced a new AI-powered dictation feature called Rambler.
The tool is designed to clean up messy voice-to-text messages automatically by removing filler words, pauses, repetitions, and corrections while still preserving the user’s natural tone.
For example, if someone says: “Get bread, cereal and bananas- actually no bananas,” Gemini will intelligently remove the correction and keep the final intended message clean.
Rambler also supports multilingual typing, allowing users to switch between languages naturally within the same conversation.
6. “Create My Widget” Lets Users Build Widgets With AI
One of the most interesting announcements was a feature called “Create My Widget.”
Instead of waiting for developers to build specific Android widgets, users can simply describe what they want using natural language, and Gemini will generate it automatically.
Google showed examples like creating custom countdown timers, but the feature could eventually allow people to build personalized mini-apps without any coding knowledge.
It’s essentially AI-generated customization for Android’s home screen.
7. Android’s Entire Design Is Becoming More AI-Driven
Gemini Intelligence also ties into broader changes to Android’s Material 3 Expressive interface system.
Google says the goal is to make Android feel calmer, cleaner, and less distracting while AI quietly handles more tasks in the background.
Rather than constantly opening apps and managing workflows manually, users may gradually rely more on Gemini to automate parts of the experience for them.
That broader shift could become one of the defining trends of the next generation of smartphones.
Whether Gemini Intelligence truly delivers on its promises will depend heavily on reliability and real-world usability. AI assistants have promised to simplify digital life for years, but many have struggled once tasks became even slightly complicated.
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