- Google used I/O 2026 to unveil a broad expansion of Gemini.
- Gemini is expanding across search agents, Android, shopping, productivity and AI.
- New features like Gemini Spark, Omni, and AI-powered search show Google pushing hard toward always-on AI assistants.
Google spent years insisting that AI would quietly improve its products in the background. At Google I/O 2026, the company finally stopped pretending that subtlety was still the plan. Google is trying to make Gemini the connective tissue of almost everything people do online.
Clearly, Google has no intention of allowing that future to happen anywhere outside of its own products. The difference is that Google already owns the digital spaces where people spend most of their day. Instead of asking users to switch platforms, you can simply inject Gemini into the tools they already open constantly.
Faster brains, bigger ambitions
Google’s biggest technical announcements focused on the new Gemini 3.5 and Gemini Omni family, which the company framed as a major step toward “world models” of AI capable of understanding and generating information across multiple modalities simultaneously.
Gemini 3.5 Flash is Google’s workhorse model. The company repeatedly emphasized speed, lower cost and efficiency, stating that the Flash outperforms the Gemini 3.1 Pro in most benchmarks and runs four times faster than competing models.
Google also emphasized that the model is dramatically cheaper than many rival premium AI systems. That pricing narrative is important because AI is quietly becoming very expensive to operate at scale. OpenAI, Anthropic, and other companies continue to push the envelope on reasoning capabilities, but they are also constantly training users to accept increasingly expensive subscriptions.
Gemini Omni was the most futuristic revelation. Instead of separate systems that handle images, video, audio, and text independently, Omni combines them into a multimodal model designed to reason about everything at once. Google demonstrated the system by editing uploaded videos, changing visual styles, generating AI avatars and reasoning about multimedia content in ways that blur the line between traditional AI assistants and creative production tools.
The company framed Omni as evolving beyond standalone video generators like Veo, but the broader industry context makes the strategy clear. There is a clear parallel here with OpenAI’s increasingly multimodal direction for ChatGPT. The entire industry is racing towards AI systems that can move fluidly between voice, images, reasoning and action without obvious boundaries between them. Google now seems intent on building the same kind of unified AI layer, just at Google scale.
The incessant spark of Gemini
If Gemini 3.5 showed Google’s technical power, Gemini Spark revealed what the company really wants people to do with it.
Spark is essentially a cloud-based AI agent that continues working after users close their laptops or lock their phones. You can organize inboxes, compose emails, manage calendars, and pull information from Workspace apps in the background.
Google suggested it could help with things like organizing a chaotic schedule, creating study guides from incoming assignments, or keeping an eye on client emails.
This is largely where the AI industry as a whole is headed. OpenAI, Anthropic and others are racing toward agent systems capable of completing tasks independently rather than simply responding to prompts. The difference is that Google already owns much of the surrounding ecosystem that those agents need to function effectively. Spark doesn’t need to ask users to connect standalone apps because many of the services are already deeply integrated into the Google accounts that people have used for years.
Android Halo, the visual interface designed to show Spark’s continuous activity, only reinforces the sense that Google wants AI agents to become persistent digital coworkers constantly humming in the background. Useful, no doubt. Also a little strange.
That said, Spark also captures the slightly disturbing direction the industry is taking. Systems like this only work if users provide enormous amounts of context. Emails, calendars, documents, habits, contacts, schedules, and browsing behavior become part of the machine’s understanding of your life.
Gemini redefined
Google also redesigned the Gemini app itself. The new “Neural Expressive” interface adds richer images, animations, timelines, haptic feedback, and conversation layouts designed to make Gemini interactions feel more natural and less like typing in a sterile chatbot box. Gemini Live conversations now start almost instantly.
The broader goal appears to be to reduce the friction between having a thought and acting on it through AI. Docs Live, for example, allows users to verbally exchange ideas while Gemini organizes them into structured documents in real time. Google also plans to expand conversational voice features to Gmail and Keep, further integrating AI into ordinary productivity workflows.
This reflects a broader shift taking place across the industry. OpenAI pushed ChatGPT toward natural voice conversations and persistent memory because users increasingly prefer AI that feels conversational rather than mechanical. Google seems to have come to the same conclusion.
All search is AI
Search may be where Google’s AI transformation becomes most consequential.
The new AI search box, improved AI mode, information agents and generative interfaces all point to Google rebuilding search into something more conversational and interactive. Instead of simply returning lists of links, Search can now generate custom widgets, visual explainers, and mini-apps directly within results pages.
This seems like a direct response to how ChatGPT and similar AI tools have changed user expectations. People increasingly want direct answers and interactive experiences instead of pages full of blue links. Google understands that if users migrate toward standalone AI assistants for discovery and planning, Search risks losing its central role in the Internet economy.
That creates an uncomfortable tension. Google’s AI search tools can really improve usability, but they also fundamentally reshape the web ecosystem that Google originally helped build. Publishers, creators and websites are increasingly concerned that conversational AI responses will reduce incentives for users to click on original sources. Google insists that these systems still support the broader web, although the long-term balance remains uncertain.
The shopping announcements sounded less dramatic than the Gemini Omni, but may ultimately matter more for Google’s business.
Universal Cart, Universal Commerce Protocol, and Agent Payments Protocol all point to a future where Gemini becomes an active shopping intermediary rather than a passive recommendation engine. Google wants AI systems capable of tracking prices, monitoring offers, detecting compatibility issues, managing carts between retailers, and eventually making purchases on users’ behalf.
The company demonstrated examples such as AI that identifies incompatible PC components before checking out, monitors inventory changes, automatically tracks credit card benefits, and watches for price drops in the background. AP2 adds spending controls, merchant approvals, and transparent transaction logs to assure users that AI agents won’t suddenly empty their bank accounts without warning.
Again, this does not happen in isolation. Amazon, OpenAI and other companies are exploring AI shopping assistants because commerce is one of the clearest paths to turning consumer AI into a sustainable business.
Google’s advantage is obvious. Search already dominates product discovery across large portions of the Internet. Gmail contains receipts and order histories. YouTube constantly influences purchasing behavior. Gemini can potentially connect all of those systems into one giant business layer.
Google’s I/O announcements revealed how deeply committed the company is to Gemini. The company is trying to make AI inseparable from modern computing itself. Search, Android, shopping, communication, and more are now being built around AI.
For Google, the strategy makes a lot of sense. If AI becomes the next major computing platform, the company wants Gemini to be at the center of it. It’s less obvious whether users will eventually find it convenient or intrusive.
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