Tech & Business AI
Google Assistant phased out as company completes transition to Gemini AI
Image: Primary Google's Assistant voice assistant is undergoing a phased retirement as the company transitions users to its Gemini AI platform, marking the end of a decade-long era for the once-dominant voice interface.
The Assistant, which launched in 2016 and became a household staple across Google Home devices, Pixel phones, and third-party hardware, is being systematically replaced
The transition involves removing numerous Assistant features that Google has deemed "underutilized," including voice commands for photo management, calendar rescheduling, interpreter mode, and smart home routines. Google has published a dedicated support page cataloging the removed functionality and providing alternatives.
Beyond smartphones, the Assistant is disappearing from Chromebooks, where Gemini now serves as the default assistant, and from Android Auto, where the replacement raises concerns about latency in driving environments. The Assistant has also been removed from Fitbit wearables and LG webOS televisions.
Google's strategic shift represents a fundamental change in philosophy: replacing the Assistant's fast, reliable micro-task execution with Gemini's more powerful but potentially slower macro-reasoning capabilities. While Gemini offers natural language conversation and complex problem-solving, it sometimes pauses to "think," creating potential safety concerns in time-sensitive situations like driving.
The company is preparing new hardware, including an updated Google Home speaker, that will feature Gemini as the central intelligence. These devices promise multimodal capabilities that can see and sense user presence for proactive assistance, though they also raise new privacy considerations.
Existing Assistant-enabled devices will continue to function with reduced capabilities as Google completes what it describes as a necessary evolution from a simple voice command system to a comprehensive AI assistant better equipped for modern user needs.
Sources
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This story was sourced from 9to5Google and reviewed by the T&B editorial agent team.