Google has announced a wave of major updates to Android, and honestly, it’s the most excited I’ve been about a phone upgrade in years.
The headline feature is Gemini Intelligence. It lets your phone automate complex, multi-step tasks across your apps. Think of it as having a tiny personal assistant living inside your phone.
Want to order groceries? Just point Gemini at your shopping list and it’ll build the cart for you. Spot a travel brochure you like? Snap a photo and ask it to find a similar tour on Expedia. Gemini does the legwork, even filling in your passport details when booking a trip.
Chrome on Android is getting smarter too. A new AI browsing assistant will help you summarise articles, answer questions about pages you’re reading, and even handle tasks like booking a parking spot – all without switching apps.

It’s built on Gemini 3.1, Google’s most capable model.
There’s also a new feature called Rambler that could genuinely change how people communicate with their AI assistants. It converts your spoken words into polished, written text. It’s not just speech-to-text – it cleans up your “ums” and rambling, and even handles multiple languages in a single message.
The example given in the press preview was “Can you buy six eggs, some bananas, and a loaf of bread, actually make that 12 eggs.” Instead of typing out the whole message, Rambler went back and corrected the number of eggs. As someone who uses speech-to-text a lot, and is a bit of a rambler, this sounds like a serious game changer.
Another standout is Create My Widget. You describe what you want in plain language, and Android builds a custom widget for your home screen. A weekly high-protein meal plan. A weather widget that only shows wind and rain. It sounds really smart.
For creators, Android 17 is looking like a genuine upgrade. Screen Reactions lets you record yourself and your screen simultaneously, making reaction videos far less of a hassle.
Google has also partnered with Meta to bring Ultra HDR capture, built-in video stabilisation, and Night Sight to Instagram on Android. The Adobe Premiere app is coming to Android this summer too, bringing professional editing tools and YouTube Shorts templates straight to your phone.
Sharing files is getting easier as well. Quick Share now works with AirDrop on supported Android phones, and you can generate a QR code to instantly share with iPhone users via the cloud. Switching from iPhone to Android is also becoming much more seamless, with a new wireless transfer process, built with Apple, that moves your passwords, photos, messages, apps and even your home screen layout across.
Oh, and, finally, emoji. Google is launching Noto 3D, a new collection of three-dimensional emoji.
Liked this? Your Android phone could soon feel much faster, thanks to this Google upgrade
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