Gemini in Chrome Goes Global: Major Expansion Rolls Out

Share

Key Points

  • Googleis adding Gemini AI to Chrome for desktop and iOS in many regions.
  • The AI can summarize, compare tabs, schedule meetings and edit images using text prompts.
  • Security measures protect against threats and let users confirm sensitive actions.

Google today began rolling out its newest Chrome AI tools for Chrome on desktop and iOS, targeting users in Latin America, Africa, the Middle East and beyond. This rollout shows Google’s push to bring AI to more devices.

With Gemini in Chrome, you can ask your personalized browsing assistant to summarize content and compare tabs across multiple windows. Users can get quick answers without switching tabs.

Thanks to deep integrations with Google apps, you can schedule meetings in Calendar, check location details in Maps, and draft emails in Gmail without leaving the page. This makes work faster for students and professionals.

The new Nano Banana 2 feature lets you transform online images using a text prompt in the Gemini side panel and perform an image edit with a simple command. The feature works on any device where Chrome runs.

Personal Intelligence lets the browser remember context from past chats and connect apps such as Gmail, Photos, YouTube and Search for tailored answers. It also helps you find information faster across Google services.

Security is built in, with models trained to spot prompt injection threats and to ask for confirm actions before any sensitive step is taken. Google says the safeguards keep your data private and your choices in control.

Read the rest of the article

You can also check out our list of the Best Instagram Extensions, Best Pinterest Exensions & the Best AI Extensions.


Discover more from Chrome Geek

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Juniya Sankara is a veteran systems administrator and open-source advocate who has been configuring Linux environments since childhood. When he isn't hardening kernel security or testing desktop environments in his hardware lab, he writes deep-dive technical tutorials for UbuntuFree, WindowsMode, and ChromeGeek.