At its annual Google I/O event on Tuesday, Google announced a series of new updates to its Gemini app, including a “Daily Briefs” feature, a redesigned interface, access to a new AI video model called Gemini Omni, and a new personal AI agent called Gemini Spark.
The update signals Google’s efforts to turn the Gemini app into a multipurpose AI hub rather than a standalone chatbot, making the AI assistant more competitive with apps like ChatGPT and Claude.
Google describes the new Daily Brief feature as a personalized digest designed to be your first thing every morning. It collects information from users’ inboxes, calendars, and most important tasks and organizes them into a clear overview. According to the company, Daily Brief not only summarizes this information, but also prioritizes tasks, showing the most important items first and suggesting next steps.
Daily Brief is rolling out to Google AI subscribers in the US today.

The Gemini app already has a significant reach. The company says it has more than 900 million monthly users and is available in more than 230 countries and more than 70 languages. But it’s clear that Google wants to do more without losing its existing customers.
Google said it has rebuilt the app from scratch. When users open the app, they’ll see a new design language called Neural Expressive that brings fluid animations, vibrant colors, new typography, and haptic feedback.

Gemini’s responses no longer appear as a wall of text, as is the case with most AI chatbots. Instead, important information is displayed in bold at the top. As the user scrolls down, additional text and possibly other elements such as images or timelines appear.
Google describes Gemini Spark as a 24/7 personal AI agent that helps you navigate your digital life. Spark turns Gemini from an assistant to an active partner that does real work for you. Spark is a cloud-based agent, so it continues to work in the background even when your phone is locked. The Gemini app, Gemini Spark, allows users to create their own custom workflows.
Spark is currently in testing, and the company plans to make it available to Google AI Ultra subscribers next week.

Gemini Omni, the company’s new AI video model, combines Gemini and Google’s generative media models to create knowledge-based output. For example, you can give a simple prompt like “Describe claymation of protein folding.” According to Google, this model allows you to upload audio, images, and video to produce consistently high-quality videos.
By adding access to new video generation models like Gemini Omni, Google is increasing competition among the leading AI platforms in the ongoing race to lead multimodal content generation. This model is being rolled out across Google Flow and YouTube Shorts for Google AI subscribers, highlighting the company’s broader commitment to multimodal content creation and AI-powered video tools.
Check out the rest of the important news from Google IO 2026
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Google updates Gemini app to support ChatGPT and Claude
Google launches Gemini Spark, a 24/7 agent assistant integrated with Gmail
How to use Google’s new information agent
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