Google's Android Show 2026 recap: Googlebook is here, Gemini Intelligence is everywhere, and there's still a week to go before I/O
Last year's Android Show was simply a teaser, dropping a few Android 16 crumbs before the real Gemini show at I/O. This year Google front-loaded it. Tuesday's pre-I/O event dropped a brand-new laptop line called Googlebook, rebranded the company's best AI features as Gemini Intelligence, redesigned Android Auto from the ground up, and stuffed Android 17 with everything from a 10-second app speed bump to bank-scam call screening. Plenty to chew on before I/O even starts. Here's everything Google put on the table before then.
The big software trick is Magic Pointer. Hover over a date in an email, an address, a flight number, and the cursor pops contextual Gemini suggestions. Cast My Apps lets you run any Android phone app on the laptop screen. A Quick Access file browser reaches straight into your phone's storage. Custom widgets sit on the desktop the way they sit on your home screen.
The underlying OS, widely reported as "Aluminium," is a fusion of Android and ChromeOS. Google confirmed Aluminium is only an internal codename and said the actual branding comes later this year. A 16-minute hands-on video of the OS leaked hours before the show, which can't have helped anyone's morning at the Googleplex.
Three names worth remembering. Rambler is a Gboard upgrade that strips filler words from your dictation and handles mid-sentence language switching—useful in India, where everyone code-mixes by default. Create My Widget lets you generate a home screen widget by describing it: a weekly high-protein meal plan, a flight tracker, a Gmail-and-Calendar trip dashboard. Autofill With Google now uses Personal Intelligence to fill out long mobile forms by pulling from your connected apps.
The agentic stuff is the meat. Long-press over a grocery list in Notes, ask Gemini to build a shopping cart in the app of your choice, done. Photograph an event flyer, ask Gemini to find it on Expedia, done. You still have to confirm before anything is bought or booked, which is the right call.
Gemini in Chrome for Android arrives in late June. It summarises pages, generates images with Nano Banana, and auto-browses through tasks like reserving parking from an event ticket. Auto-browse is gated to AI Pro and Ultra subscribers in the US for now.
Google Maps inside Android Auto goes full 3D with Immersive Navigation—buildings, terrain, lane lines, stop signs, traffic lights. Cars with Google built-in get Live Lane Guidance, which uses the front camera to nudge you into the right lane before an exit.
Then there's video. Full HD 60fps playback is coming to supported cars from BMW, Ford, Genesis, Hyundai, Kia, Mahindra, Mercedes-Benz, Renault, Škoda, Tata and Volvo. It works only while parked. The moment you shift into drive, the video switches to audio-only. Dolby Atmos rolls out to a similar list of vehicles.
Gemini Intelligence reaches Android Auto later this year. You'll be able to order DoorDash by voice, and Magic Cue can dig an address out of an old text to drop into your reply.
Pause Point is the petty one, and I mean that as a compliment. Mark an app as a distraction. Open it. Boom—10 seconds of mandatory existential reflection. Why are you here. Try a breathing exercise instead. Look at some old photos. Open literally anything else. Want to disable it? Restart your phone. Google has finally figured out that the only screen-time tool that works is one you can't tap your way out of.
Creators are getting tools that have been on iOS for ages. Screen Reactions does face-and-screen recording in one shot, which is the entire premise of half the content on Reels. Adobe Premiere lands on Android this summer with Shorts templates, only eight months late. Instagram on Android stops being a second-class citizen—Ultra HDR capture, real stabilisation, a tablet UI that wasn't built by stretching the phone app sideways.
The cross-platform stuff is the genuinely surprising part. You can now move from iPhone to Android wirelessly with your passwords, messages, eSIM and home screen intact. Quick Share talks to AirDrop on Samsung, Oppo, OnePlus, Vivo, Xiaomi and Honor phones. And verified bank calls auto-hang-up on scammers spoofing, which should have been a thing five years ago but here we are.
For the rest of what Android 17 brings to the table, head here.
The omissions point to where I/O is heading. With Android cleared out of the way, May 19 will be wall-to-wall AI—new Gemini model versions, more agentic features, probably a Gemini Omni video model that's been leaking for weeks. Hardware reveals tend to wait for late summer, when Pixel events take over. Smart glasses remain the most-teased product in Google's lineup with the least to show.
Googlebook is a Gemini-first laptop line with a glowing logo and a phone-friendly streak
Googlebook arrives this fall, made by Acer, Asus, Dell, HP and Lenovo. Google didn't share pricing or specs. It did show off a thin "Glowbar" on the lid that lights up in the Google logo's colours—a design flex aimed squarely at the café-table crowd.The big software trick is Magic Pointer. Hover over a date in an email, an address, a flight number, and the cursor pops contextual Gemini suggestions. Cast My Apps lets you run any Android phone app on the laptop screen. A Quick Access file browser reaches straight into your phone's storage. Custom widgets sit on the desktop the way they sit on your home screen.
The underlying OS, widely reported as "Aluminium," is a fusion of Android and ChromeOS. Google confirmed Aluminium is only an internal codename and said the actual branding comes later this year. A 16-minute hands-on video of the OS leaked hours before the show, which can't have helped anyone's morning at the Googleplex.
Gemini Intelligence is Google's Apple Intelligence moment
Gemini Intelligence is the new umbrella for Google's top-shelf agentic AI. If the name sounds suspiciously close to Apple's, that's the point. The first wave lands this summer on the latest Pixel and Galaxy S26 phones, then spreads to Wear OS, Android Auto, Googlebooks and Android XR through the rest of the year.Three names worth remembering. Rambler is a Gboard upgrade that strips filler words from your dictation and handles mid-sentence language switching—useful in India, where everyone code-mixes by default. Create My Widget lets you generate a home screen widget by describing it: a weekly high-protein meal plan, a flight tracker, a Gmail-and-Calendar trip dashboard. Autofill With Google now uses Personal Intelligence to fill out long mobile forms by pulling from your connected apps.
The agentic stuff is the meat. Long-press over a grocery list in Notes, ask Gemini to build a shopping cart in the app of your choice, done. Photograph an event flyer, ask Gemini to find it on Expedia, done. You still have to confirm before anything is bought or booked, which is the right call.
Android Auto's redesign finally fits the weird-shaped screens carmakers keep building
Google calls this the biggest Android Auto update in its 10-year history. That tracks. The UI moves to Material 3 Expressive, with smoother animations, customisable widgets, and adaptive layouts that bend around the curved, panoramic and circular screens carmakers have been shoving into dashboards for years. You can add shortcuts for car-specific things like a garage door opener to the main screen.Google Maps inside Android Auto goes full 3D with Immersive Navigation—buildings, terrain, lane lines, stop signs, traffic lights. Cars with Google built-in get Live Lane Guidance, which uses the front camera to nudge you into the right lane before an exit.
Then there's video. Full HD 60fps playback is coming to supported cars from BMW, Ford, Genesis, Hyundai, Kia, Mahindra, Mercedes-Benz, Renault, Škoda, Tata and Volvo. It works only while parked. The moment you shift into drive, the video switches to audio-only. Dolby Atmos rolls out to a similar list of vehicles.
Gemini Intelligence reaches Android Auto later this year. You'll be able to order DoorDash by voice, and Magic Cue can dig an address out of an old text to drop into your reply.
Android 17 wants you off Instagram, onto Premiere, and into a wireless iPhone switch
Android 17 has been in platform stability since March, so the beta crowd already knows most of this. The show was about what actually ships.Pause Point is the petty one, and I mean that as a compliment. Mark an app as a distraction. Open it. Boom—10 seconds of mandatory existential reflection. Why are you here. Try a breathing exercise instead. Look at some old photos. Open literally anything else. Want to disable it? Restart your phone. Google has finally figured out that the only screen-time tool that works is one you can't tap your way out of.
Creators are getting tools that have been on iOS for ages. Screen Reactions does face-and-screen recording in one shot, which is the entire premise of half the content on Reels. Adobe Premiere lands on Android this summer with Shorts templates, only eight months late. Instagram on Android stops being a second-class citizen—Ultra HDR capture, real stabilisation, a tablet UI that wasn't built by stretching the phone app sideways.
The cross-platform stuff is the genuinely surprising part. You can now move from iPhone to Android wirelessly with your passwords, messages, eSIM and home screen intact. Quick Share talks to AirDrop on Samsung, Oppo, OnePlus, Vivo, Xiaomi and Honor phones. And verified bank calls auto-hang-up on scammers spoofing, which should have been a thing five years ago but here we are.
For the rest of what Android 17 brings to the table, head here.
The missing pieces are where I/O gets interesting
For all that was announced, the gaps were just as loud. No Pixel 11. No Wear OS 7 roadmap. Android XR got a single passing mention despite Samsung's Galaxy XR headset already being on shelves and the Xreal Project Aura glasses still in limbo. Aluminium OS was confirmed in spirit but not in name. A 16-minute leaked video did more to explain what the Googlebook actually runs than Google itself.The omissions point to where I/O is heading. With Android cleared out of the way, May 19 will be wall-to-wall AI—new Gemini model versions, more agentic features, probably a Gemini Omni video model that's been leaking for weeks. Hardware reveals tend to wait for late summer, when Pixel events take over. Smart glasses remain the most-teased product in Google's lineup with the least to show.
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