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With this rollout, Chrome users in these regions can interact with Gemini through a dedicated sidebar that works alongside the webpage they are viewing. Instead of switching tabs or opening another website, users can ask questions, summarize content, or get help with tasks directly inside the browser.
Gemini in Chrome acts like a built-in AI assistant for the browser. Once activated, users can open the Gemini panel and start chatting with the AI about the content on their screen.
Key capabilities include:
The AI assistant can analyze the current webpage and provide helpful explanations or quick summaries, allowing users to understand information faster without leaving the page.
One major highlight of the expansion is support for more than 50 languages, including several widely used Indian languages such as Hindi, Bengali, Gujarati, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Tamil, and Telugu.
This multilingual support makes the AI assistant more accessible to users across different regions and helps people interact with the technology in their preferred language.
Gemini appears as an icon in the top-right corner of the Chrome browser. When users click it, a sidebar opens where they can chat with the AI assistant.
The assistant can also understand context from multiple open tabs. For example, users could ask Gemini to compare products across different shopping pages or summarize several articles at once.
Google says the goal is to make browsing more efficient by helping users find information, understand content, and complete tasks faster.
By integrating Gemini directly into Chrome, Google is turning the browser into a smarter workspace. Instead of relying on separate AI tools, users can access intelligent assistance exactly where they need it—while browsing the web.
The rollout also signals Google’s effort to compete in the growing AI assistant space by embedding AI into its most widely used products.
As the feature expands globally, AI-powered browsing could become a standard part of how people search, read, and work online.
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