Google's latest Pixel phones and Samsung Galaxy phones will start receiving new automation features from Gemini this summer. These updates will then roll out to other devices such as smartwatches, car systems, smart glasses, and laptops.

The suite of features, called "Gemini Intelligence," is designed to automate complex sequences of tasks, including completing orders, filling out forms, creating shopping lists and making travel plans. Google has tested it against popular food delivery apps, enabling Gemini to automatically generate shopping lists from items in the Notes app. The company also claims that the assistant can plan a trip for a specified number of travelers on Expedia simply by analyzing a brochure photo.

Chrome's automatic browsing feature will be coming to Android devices in June. Similar to how Gemini Intelligence navigates between apps, Chrome Autobrowse can automate order filling or travel booking on a website in the background while the user is focused on other tasks.

Another feature called "Personal Intelligence" pulls personal information from multiple apps to automatically fill in complex forms, such as DMV forms or passport information for international flights. Google emphasized that the feature uses an opt-in mechanism to address user concerns about handing over personal information to AI assistants.

Gemini Intelligence will also try to optimize users' voice input. Instead of transcribing every pronunciation word for word, the new feature called "Rambler" omits "ums," repetitive content, and user-self-corrected sentences, aiming to convert speech into precise text. The feature also supports multiple languages ​​like English and Hindi in the same message. This function only records in real time and does not save the audio.

A future update will allow users to create custom widgets by describing them to Gemini. Users can create widgets for tasks like making recipes on their phone's home screen or tracking wind speed and rainfall on their smartwatch watch faces.

With Gemini Intelligence, Google is demonstrating some of the features Apple had previously announced for Siri but had struggled to bring to market. Apple's Assistant was supposed to handle complex queries starting in iOS 26.4, but the update proved unreliable in testing and may not arrive until iOS 27 this fall. It remains to be seen whether Google has successfully implemented these features through Gemini Intelligence, or whether Apple's decision to delay Siri upgrades was correct.