Google's Googlebook is the Android laptop OS we've been waiting for

Daniel Sims

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In brief: Years of leaks and statements from Google have teased the company's plans for ChromeOS to evolve into a more direct competitor to Windows and macOS. Googlebook represents a first major step in that direction. Centered on Gemini, the new OS brings Android's software stack into a full-blown PC environment.

Google devoted much of its Android Show event to Googlebook, a new operating system and product line designed to replace Chromebooks, with an emphasis on both local and cloud processing.

While turning Android into a laptop and desktop operating system alone represents a significant step for Google, the presentation made it clear that Gemini integration was the headline story.

The company describes Googlebook as an evolution from an OS to an "intelligent system," with generative AI woven into many of its core functions. Much of this integration occurs through new cursor functions, which Google describes as the most significant addition to the mouse since the introduction of the right click.

Wiggling the cursor activates an AI mode that automatically consults Gemini whenever users hover over images, text, or user interface elements.

For example, users can quickly ask Gemini about various topics by hovering over text, make plans by clicking on a date and time, or combine multiple images by dragging them together. Users can also create widgets using prompts.

Phone integration was a second major theme of the presentation. Mirroring a feature Apple offers between iPhone and Mac, Googlebook can surface everything on a connected Android phone, including apps and locally stored files, inside a small window with no need to unlock the device.

Hardware partners at launch will include Acer, Asus, Dell, HP, and Lenovo, with devices expected later this year.

Reports about a new Google desktop OS, codenamed Aluminium, initially leaked in 2024. The following year, the company confirmed its plans to combine Android and ChromeOS into an AI-centric OS, and a job listing suggested the new OS would ultimately retire ChromeOS entirely.

Video clips that emerged in January offered an early look at integrations with Google Chrome and the Play Store, alongside a user interface blending elements from both Android and ChromeOS. Those leaks also hinted at broader ambitions: Googlebook is expected to eventually support tablets, cloud-based notebooks, 2-in-1s, and desktops running both Arm and x86 processors.

The Android Show also featured major updates to Android Auto and Gemini on Android phones.

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"Mirroring a feature Apple offers between iPhone and Mac, Googlebook can surface everything on a connected Android phone, including apps and locally stored files, inside a small window with no need to unlock the device."

So they aren't even pretending they care about security now. Good, at least they've finally come clean.
 
I have no desire for this to be a bad product, very few new tech products give me much reason to get excited. They have the resources to make this a great product, but this is Google.....
 
How come they have not used Jason Derulo’s “Wiggle” for the cursor ad?
I was wondering when will G strike on MS crumbling empire ruins! The time has come.
With clever MS management shutting the Phone business, this was only a matter of time…
“Ecosystem” can’t be formed without a phone.
 
How come they have not used Jason Derulo’s “Wiggle” for the cursor ad?
I was wondering when will G strike on MS crumbling empire ruins! The time has come.
With clever MS management shutting the Phone business, this was only a matter of time…
“Ecosystem” can’t be formed without a phone.

iPhones hold over 50% of the phone market in the US and macOS has a much smaller fraction of the PC OS market share, even smaller on desktop despite offering the best laptop experience and hardware for 95% of people. Phones aren’t everything
 
I'm just so disappointed in Google. Despite it not being a surprise.
They unveiled a new desktop OS. And rather than showing off why it's such a good laptop choice, like being power efficient and having low resource consumption, or how it's a Linux machine prefect for developers, or the application ecosystem, they decided to show gemini. Like what were they thinking. Or were they even thinking, or left that part to Gemini. That would explain it tbh.
 
"Google's Googlebook is the Android laptop OS we've been waiting for" I do not know who is we, but I'm surely not one of them. Chrome OS is a castrated OS, while android is even more restrictive. This "new" OS looks the same, only adding a phone mirror function and "AI integration" that could be a simple integration in any OS.
 
Really a bad time to launch ANY Premium priced products now. Couldn't have been worse.

Now? It will be worse just wait, the next 5 years minimum, consumer stuff will be scarce and with little focus. Low-end stuff will vanish, low-end makes no sense when RAM/SSD prices are high. These parts are better used in medium to high-end stuff.

I find it funny that many think AI peak right now. You literally have seen nothing yet. Companies want 10 times the chips they can actually buy right now. Production is the bottleneck. Demand is vastly higher than supply.
 
Google, famously meh at hardware and of course working in every opportunity to push in data farming into their products to feed their machines, how awful
 
This needs to fail. The last thing the world needs is Google doing well in the OS market. Their entire business model is about scraping as much data about you by as misleading and often illegal ways as they can then selling it without your real knowledge. There's a reason 90% of Googles products and services are 'free'...
 
Now? It will be worse just wait, the next 5 years minimum, consumer stuff will be scarce and with little focus. Low-end stuff will vanish, low-end makes no sense when RAM/SSD prices are high. These parts are better used in medium to high-end stuff.

I find it funny that many think AI peak right now. You literally have seen nothing yet. Companies want 10 times the chips they can actually buy right now. Production is the bottleneck. Demand is vastly higher than supply.
And yet the grid in some places can't even pump out enough power for the AI farms. Time to start building mini nuclear plants.
 
Now? It will be worse just wait, the next 5 years minimum, consumer stuff will be scarce and with little focus. Low-end stuff will vanish, low-end makes no sense when RAM/SSD prices are high. These parts are better used in medium to high-end stuff.

I find it funny that many think AI peak right now. You literally have seen nothing yet. Companies want 10 times the chips they can actually buy right now. Production is the bottleneck. Demand is vastly higher than supply.

Until the bubble pops because there hasn’t actually been a profitable product made and the software performance is not scaling as well with hardware as was hoped
 
Until the bubble pops because there hasn’t actually been a profitable product made and the software performance is not scaling as well with hardware as was hoped

Bubble won't pop, made millions in the last 5 years, will make millions in the next 5 too

Even if bubble actually popped, I'd be set for life due to AI boom

Some missed out, others cashed in

Be smart next time, then you don't have to worry about higher prices
 
And yet the grid in some places can't even pump out enough power for the AI farms. Time to start building mini nuclear plants.
Well, regardless of datacenters and AI, nuclear plants is the future

We need 10 times the energy of today, in 10 years from now

Highly invested in the energy sector too, for this exact reason
 
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