Google just delivered its first Gemini-centric platform in Googlebook, and it may feature the first AI OS

Googlebook announcement
(Image credit: Google)

  • Google unveils Googlebook
  • It puts Gemini at the center with an "intelligence system"
  • Magic Pointer reinvents the classic pointer with — yes — AI

It's been almost a year since Sameer Samat, Google's Head of Android Experience, let slip that the tech giant was finally ready to do what had long been rumored: combine Android and ChromeOS into a single experience.

The reveal, coming as part of Google's annual Android Show, is a two-pronged affair. First, there's a single platform that somehow combines the best of Android and ChromeOS into one, and second is the unveiling of a new class of laptops: Googlebooks, which Google says are "designed for Gemini Intelligence."

Googlebook announcement

(Image credit: Google)

That's right, Google is once again trying to reinvent the laptop. Forget Pixelbooks (though Chromebooks and ChromeOS are supposedly not going anywhere), this is brand new hardware to house a platform built for a new type of desk and laptop computing experience.

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And at the heart of it is, well, not Android exactly, but Gemini. Some might describe it as the world's first AI OS or, as Google terms it, "an intelligence system."

While Google has offered scant details on the hardware and platform particulars, it is highlighting how Gemini's premier position will transform the computing experience, and that starts with the pointer.

Welcome the Magic Pointer

Googlebook Magic Pointer

(Image credit: Google)

Shaking the cursor to get a different experience on a laptop is not a new idea (try wiggling your macOS cursor), but Google's AI-focused approach is novel. On the Googlebook, a shake of the "Magic Pointer" brings up a contextually aware menu that quickly tells you all the things you can do with, say, Gemini, right there.

Choose one of the options, and it launches, naturally, in-situ Gemini, and now you can follow its guides to do more with whatever's on-screen. If, for instance, you see a pair of images in your gallery and want to imagine a mashup, you can wiggle that Magic Pointer, select them, choose an AI action like "visualize together," and then instantly see the result of the generative AI projects in Gemini. Think of this as prompts in the form of a gesture.

Googlebooks will also be a place where you can experience Android's new "Create My Widget" capabilities, which should let you build bespoke desktop widgets for all kinds of personalized information, like upcoming trips and business meetings.

Is this really a new OS?

Googlebook announcement

(Image credit: Google)

It's a bit hard to say exactly how ChromeOS is influencing the Googlebook experience, since, aside from all the AI, apps, and other features, it will be running locally (Google promises the system will handle "powerful apps on Google Play"). Perhaps it has something to do with the platform's lightness; maybe it'll run all this on lower-range specs.

The relationship with Android is far clearer. Googlebooks will let you cast most Android apps and experiences on the Googlebook desktop. The benefit is that you never have to leave your Googlebook or pause to pick up your Android 18 smartphone to continue a mobile task. The system's dock will include a persistent phone icon that you can select to virtualize your Android phone on the Googlebook. All of this will only work with "compatible" Android phones, and for now, we don't have that list.

While we already know some of the hardware partners, like Acer, Asus, Dell, Lenovo, and HP, we have zero details on how they might use the new intelligence system. It's not clear, for instance, if all will feature the glowbar, a thin, rainbow LED peeking through the metal frame on the Googlebook cover. Google claims the glowbar will be beautiful and functional, but has yet to explain what it will do. It's probably safe to assume that the lights can, even when the system is closed, alert you to, say, incoming notifications, maybe even turn all red when there's a must-see alert.

More likely, though, is that the Googlebook's integrated Gemini AI will respond to voice prompts even when closed, and the glowbar will, ahem, glow when you talk and the system listens and responds.

Other specs, including screen size, touch screens (yes or no), RAM, CPU, webcam, battery life, overall size, and weight, are similarly missing. However, we would not be surprised to see a Googlebook or two at Google I/O 2026, which kicks off next week in Mountain View, California.

Googlebook announcement

(Image credit: Google)

Google deserves credit for being first out of the gate with an "AI OS," (why didn't they call it a "Geminibook?"). But it remains to be seen if Googlebooks will excite or create confusion. After all, this isn't the first time Google has created a premium laptop hardware category to support its own platform ambitions. Pixelbooks flamed out in 2022, though ChromeOS is alive and well across many of the same partners that will now be delivering Googlebooks, and Google confirms that they will continue to support and develop the platform.

How will consumers decide between Chromebooks and these new AI-centric Googlebooks? It may come down to their interest in Gemini (and other AI platforms) and their need to run "powerful apps" locally.

There's no denying, though, that this is a big swing and aligns somewhat with something Google's Sameer Samat told me last year, "...you see the future first on Android.”


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Lance Ulanoff
Editor At Large

A 38-year industry veteran and award-winning journalist, Lance has covered technology since PCs were the size of suitcases and “on line” meant “waiting.” He’s a former Lifewire Editor-in-Chief, Mashable Editor-in-Chief, and, before that, Editor in Chief of PCMag.com and Senior Vice President of Content for Ziff Davis, Inc. He also wrote a popular, weekly tech column for Medium called The Upgrade.


Lance Ulanoff makes frequent appearances on national, international, and local news programs including Live with Kelly and Mark, the Today Show, Good Morning America, CNBC, CNN, and the BBC. 

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