It will grocery shop from your email list, reschedule packages, book your hair appointment, or get you a dinner reservation.
The rollout positions Chrome as a productivity hub amid rising competition from Microsoft Edge and AI-native browsers, while regulators watch closely for signs of bundling and market dominance.
Google's Gemini update on Chrome no longer requires a subscription to enjoy, but there is a catch users should know about.
Among the changes are a pending expiration of subsidies that help Texans buy Affordable Care Act insurance and limits to local programs that help the uninsured.
Under a judge's ruling, Google must now share its search data with competitors. Who benefits from this arrangement, who loses – and is user privacy at stake?