According to Android Authority, Google is actively testing upgrades to the Gemini Live floating interface, enhancing its functionality with contextual cards. This upgrade aims to provide a more seamless user experience, allowing for easier switching between apps and Gemini Live. The move aligns with Google’s plan to replace Google Assistant with Gemini on Android phones by the end of the year.
Google is focused on optimizing Gemini Live’s interface to facilitate real-time conversations and a more fluid exchange of information. This optimization includes refining the user interface to be less intrusive and more efficient. The goal is to create a more streamlined experience compared to the standard Gemini interface.
Recent experiments have involved a more compact Gemini Live interface, designed to occupy only a portion of the screen. The latest updates extend the overlay’s capabilities by incorporating support for other applications through extensions. This mirrors the existing support for extensions in the standard Gemini chatbot, which includes compatibility with apps like Google Calendar, Keep, Maps, and Tasks.
Complementing the extension support, Google is exploring the integration of context cards from these apps within Gemini Live. The aim is to present information in a clearer, more easily digestible format. While the feature has yet to be officially released, internal testing suggests a cleaner format for these cards within the condensed Gemini Live interface. The intention is to provide helpful information while minimizing screen space usage, addressing the limitations of the current Gemini Live UI, which covers the entire screen.
The discovery of this sleeker Gemini Live interface was made possible by modifying internal settings within version 16.32.48 of the Google app. This interface is not yet available to the public, indicating that it is still in the testing and development phase.
A key advantage of the new interface lies in its ability to minimize screen occupancy. Beyond this, it offers a significant improvement over the current user experience. Currently, exiting Gemini Live redirects users to the standard Gemini chatbot interface, requiring an additional step to fully close the application and return to the previously used app. This can sometimes lead users back to the phone’s home screen unexpectedly.
The updated floating Gemini Live UI seeks to address this issue by enabling users to easily resize Gemini Live and seamlessly return to the application running in the background. This functionality is particularly useful when using Gemini Live to input information into another app, allowing for intermittent interaction without disrupting the workflow.
The upgraded floating interface showcases the ability to view notes from Keep or explore locations in Maps using interactive cards. Functionality extends to the Pixel Weather app, which is also supported through extensions within Gemini Live. These integrations highlight the potential for a more interconnected and efficient user experience.
The timeline for a wider release of these experimental features remains uncertain. Google is currently testing a floating interface for the standard Gemini chatbot in beta, suggesting a potential future release of a similar interface for Gemini Live. An APK teardown, as utilized in this instance, provides insights into potential future features based on work-in-progress code. It’s important to acknowledge that predicted features may not always be implemented in a public release.