Google just revealed Gemini Intelligence for Android — here are 7 ways it wants your phone to do all the work for you, so you don’t have to

Gemini widgets on an Android phone
(Image credit: Google)

  • Gemini Intelligence adds AI-powered automation directly into Android and Chrome
  • New features include smarter Autofill, voice cleanup, and custom AI widgets
  • Google wants Android to handle more tedious digital tasks for you

Google has just unveiled Gemini Intelligence for Android at the Android Show. It’s a new AI system designed to automate more of the boring, repetitive parts of using your phone, meaning you get to just ask it to do things while watching it work.

Google's pitch for Gemini Intelligence is aimed at reducing friction when using your phone, which is probably the most sensible use for AI on a mobile. Gemini Intelligence combines Gemini AI with Android itself to help handle multi-step tasks across apps, summarize websites, fill in forms, build shopping carts from photos, and even create custom widgets using natural language.

Many of the features still require a prompt or command from you to start them off, but the goal is clearly to make Android feel more proactive and less manually demanding. It’s also one of the clearest signs yet that Google sees AI as a system woven directly into the everyday experience of using your phone.

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From smarter autofill to AI-powered browsing tools, here are the seven biggest Gemini Intelligence features that stood out from today’s announcement.

1. Gemini can now handle multi-step tasks across your apps

The headline feature of Gemini Intelligence is Android’s new ability to automate multi-step tasks across multiple apps without you having to manually jump between them yourself. Google says Gemini will be able to do things like find your class syllabus in Gmail, identify the books you need, and add them to your shopping cart, or book a front-row bike for your next spin class.

Google is emphasizing that you remain in control throughout the process, with Gemini stopping once the task is complete and waiting for final confirmation before taking action.

2. Gemini can turn what’s on your screen into actions

Google also wants Gemini to understand the context of what you’re looking at on screen and turn it into something useful. Instead of constantly switching between apps and copying information around manually, Gemini Intelligence can use screenshots, photos, or on-screen content as the starting point for actions.

One example Google gave was long-pressing the power button while viewing a grocery list in your Notes app, then asking Gemini to build a delivery shopping cart from it automatically. Another involved taking a photo of a travel brochure and asking Gemini to find a similar tour online for a group of six.

3. Gemini in Chrome

Autobrowse in Gemini

(Image credit: Google)

Google is also bringing Gemini deeper into the Chrome browsing experience on Android. Starting later this year, Gemini in Chrome will be able to help summarize web pages, compare information across sites, and assist with online research directly inside the browser.

But the more interesting part is something Google calls 'Chrome auto browse.' With this, Gemini will be able to handle routine online tasks on your behalf, including things like booking appointments or reserving parking spaces, as shown in the example above.

4. Smarter Autofill

Gemini Intelligence, autofill.

(Image credit: Google)

Your phone can already autofill web forms, but thanks to Gemini Intelligence, it can now be even smarter when doing so. With Gemini Intelligence enabled, Android will be able to pull relevant information from connected apps and use it to complete more complicated forms automatically.

5. Rambler voice-to-text

Rambler feature in Gemini Intelligence

(Image credit: Google)

This is a great feature that will suit people who like to ramble on a bit when composing a text using dictation. Rambler is designed to make voice-to-text on Android sound more natural and polished. It is built to understand the way people actually speak, including pauses, repetitions, corrections, and filler words like “um” or “like.”

It will essentially use AI to remove all the fluff and just keep the text message to the essentials, while still retaining your style. You can also add information or emojis to text messages after it's typed something out.

Google also says Rambler supports multilingual conversations, allowing you to switch between languages within the same message without confusing the system.

6. Create My Widget

Gemini widget creation.

(Image credit: Google)

One of the more interesting additions is a feature called 'Create My Widget', which lets you generate custom Android widgets (mini apps) simply by describing what you want in natural language. It looks like vibe coding — simply ask Gemini Intelligence what you want the widget to do, and it will generate it for you.

In the example above, we've asked Gemini to generate a simple countdown timer, but the sky's the limit when it comes to what you can ask for. Now you don't have to wait for developers to make the widgets you want; you can just create them without any coding skills at all.

7. AI-driven Material 3 Expressive UI changes

Finally, Gemini Intelligence comes with updates to Android’s overall design language, building on Google’s Material 3 Expressive interface system. According to Google, the goal is to make the operating system feel calmer, more focused, and less distracting while Gemini handles more tasks in the background.

Whether these features end up feeling genuinely useful or slightly over-engineered will probably depend on how reliably Gemini actually works in day-to-day life. AI assistants have promised to simplify our digital lives for years, but the reality has often involved awkward voice commands, limited app support, and systems that break the moment things become even slightly complicated.

If Google can make that experience feel seamless and avoid making it feel intrusive, then Gemini Intelligence could end up being one of the best changes in how Android phones work in years.

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Graham Barlow
Senior Editor, AI

Graham is the Senior Editor for AI at TechRadar. With over 25 years of experience in both online and print journalism, Graham has worked for various market-leading tech brands including Computeractive, PC Pro, iMore, MacFormat, Mac|Life, Maximum PC, and more. He specializes in reporting on everything to do with AI and has appeared on BBC TV shows like BBC One Breakfast and on Radio 4 commenting on the latest trends in tech. Graham has an honors degree in Computer Science and spends his spare time podcasting and blogging.

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