Google is trying something new with laptops. Fifteen years after introducing the Chromebook, the company has announced the Googlebook. Instead of ChromeOS, these new laptops will run on an Android-based operating system that heavily integrates its Gemini Intelligence.

The basic idea is to combine the standard Chrome browser with standard Android apps. The most noticeable change is how you interact with the mouse. Google and DeepMind built a feature called Magic Pointer.
If you wiggle your cursor, Gemini pops up to offer contextual actions based on what’s on your screen. For example, pointing at a date in an email can create a calendar event, or selecting two images can merge them visually. It’s a different approach to standard clicking.
It also includes a prompt-based widget maker. You can type what you need, and Gemini will pull information from your Google apps or the web to make a custom widget. If you’re planning a trip, it can gather your flight details and hotel reservations into one temporary spot on your screen.

Because it runs on Android, the OS is designed to work closely with Android phones. You can open your phone apps on the laptop screen to reply to a message or finish a quick task. It also offers a Quick Access feature that lets you browse your phone’s files directly from the laptop’s file manager without having to transfer them to the cloud first.
Google is working with Acer, Asus, Dell, HP, and Lenovo to build the hardware. The laptops are expected to use higher-end materials and will feature a physical glowbar to distinguish them from regular Chromebooks. There is no word on pricing or an exact release date yet, but Google says more details are coming later this year.
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(Google)





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