Gemini Intelligence rewrites the rules of apps, attention, and discovery

The news: Google wants to turn its entire ecosystem into everyone's personal AI assistant. The company unveiled Gemini Intelligence, an agentic operating system layer that proactively browses Chrome, researches topics, compares prices, places online orders, and fills out forms by pulling data directly from users’ Gmail and Google Drive.

Gemini Intelligence is coming to Samsung Galaxy and Google Pixel smartphones in the summer and is expected to roll out to smartwatches, vehicles (via Android Auto), glasses, and laptops later this year. Here’s how it will operate:

  • Services: Users will be able to ask Gemini to book a ride share or reorder a recent meal on DoorDash. “Gemini will work seamlessly in the background, leaving you free to keep using your phone,” Google stated in a blog post.
  • Messaging: A Rambler feature converts speech to text for messages and emails while editing out pause words like “um” and “like” in multiple languages and in real time.
  • Coding: Create My Widget brings AI’s vibe-coding capabilities to consumers and makes it possible to create simple applications that live on users’ homescreens for easy access.

Why it’s worth watching: Android owns 67.4% of the worldwide mobile OS market, per StatCounter. Google could upend more than two-thirds of the mobile app economy as one conversational AI replaces dozens of apps. 

  • By debuting these features on its own ecosystem, Google can convert users’ preferences into defaults while making their devices more compelling. 
  • Google’s wealth of first-party data lets it build AI tools and services that feel intuitive and anticipatory. The downside is that Gemini Intelligence needs sweeping access to emails, Drive files, calendar entries, location data, and payment methods, which users may be reluctant to share. 
  • That concentration of personal data inside a single AI agent raises red flags on data retention, permission, and privacy.

Implications for brands: Once Gemini handles ride-hailing, food orders, price comparisons, and form submissions autonomously, users will no longer need to open individual apps—or visit brand websites, see product ads, or encounter loyalty prompts. Brands risk losing direct customer touchpoints, reducing their relationship with users to backend fulfillment. 

To maintain visibility, brands can design around conversational interactions and update apps and services so they’re more compatible with Gemini automations. In addition, lock in launch partnerships for ride-sharing, reservations, and food delivery.

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