Google reveals Googlebook, a new laptop category built around Gemini Intelligence
Google has announced Googlebook, a new AI-first laptop platform built around Gemini AI. Here is what the people can expect when devices arrive this fall.
Fresh off the announcement desk — google’s Googlebook is a glimpse at what an AI-first laptop could look like. There are no devices to buy yet and no core specifications to speak of, but the announcement gives a clear enough picture of where Google wants to take the laptop. Devices are expected to arrive this fall, likely sometime between September and November 2026. Let’s discuss this new device, or what Google deems a new category of products, in a little more detail below.
Not a Chromebook replacement
What Gemini on a laptop could mean for everyday use
What to expect when devices arrive
Google is careful not to call this a Chromebook successor and explains its reasoning as “the world is moving from cloud-based to intelligence-based systems”. The Chromebook was built for a cloud-first world, which in practice meant a lightweight browser-based OS that relied on Google’s servers to do the heavy lifting. With Googlebook, it intends to flip that slightly: it still runs Chrome and Google Play apps, but the intelligence layer is meant to live much closer to what you are actually doing on screen, in real time.
To do that level of local, low-latency AI processing, This product needs appropriate hardware. That is where the difficulty comes in, as Google has not revealed any specifications as of yet. Devices in this category, That said, will most certainly need a capable NPU, the dedicated neural processing unit that handles AI workloads without hammering the main CPU or draining the battery.
This makes the new Intel Core Ultra series 3 processors and AMD’s Ryzen AI series likely candidates for the first wave of Googlebooks. Both of these lineups pack substantially improved NPUs compared to their predecessors and are already powering a generation of thin-and-light laptops. 1 of 3
Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X series is another possibility, especially given Google’s existing Android and ChromeOS work well with ARM chips. RAM and storage configurations are likely to follow standard mid-to-premium laptop norms, likely 8GB or 16GB options with NVMe SSDs.
Google’s headline feature is Magic Pointer, which puts Gemini directly on the cursor rather than tucked inside a separate app. The idea is that pointing at something on screen, like a date, an image, a block of text, is enough to trigger a contextual action. That is different from how AI assistants work today, where you typically copy something, switch to a chat window, paste it, add a query and wait. If Magic Pointer works as shown, it compresses that into a single gesture.
The other highlight is ‘Create your Widget’, which lets you build a personalised desktop dashboard just by describing what you want. You could pull in your Gmail, your calendar, a flight tracker, or a countdown and have Gemini arrange them for you. While we don’t know exactly how this feature can come into play, it does seem helpful in terms of saving time as people can maintain three or four browser tabs open permanently to do exactly this.The Android phone integration is probably the most practical feature, though. Rather than a separate app or a Bluetooth pairing menu, Googlebook lets you run phone apps directly on the laptop and access phone files without transferring them. For anyone who has tried to send themselves a photo from their phone to edit on a laptop, that alone is a real quality-of-life improvement. Imagine the seamlessness between Apple devices, now achievable with your Android phone and the Googlebook.
Google is building Googlebooks with Acer, ASUS, Dell, HP, and Lenovo, which suggests a range of price points and form factors rather than a single reference device. Every Googlebook will carry the glowbar, a light strip along the lid that carries Google’s colours and serves as the visual identity of the platform.
With devices expected in the fall, a reasonable guess is that we will see the first announcements at or around IFA in September 2026, which is where many of these OEM partners traditionally launch new laptop lines. Pricing is hard to guess, especially considering the volatile situation with memory costs.
For now, Googlebook is a promising idea with a real hardware ecosystem behind it. Whether it becomes as significant as Chromebook was in 2011 depends on whether the Gemini features deliver as they promise outside a demo environment.
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