- Google has made the screen and the sharing of gemini live cameras for all Android users for free.
- The opposite version The previous option only subscribed.
- The function allows gemini to respond to the real -time visual input of your screen or camera.
In a surprise turn and a reversal of its previous paid walls plans, Google has announced that the features of the screen and sharing of Gemini Live cameras now take place for all Android users. No subscription or property of pixels required, just Gemini Live, accessible to anyone with the Gemini application on Android.
This update means that your AI assistant can now see what’s on your screen or via your camera goal and react in real time. Gemini Live with screen sharing allows you to show GEMINI a web page, a spreadsheet or a tangled mess of the application settings and request help. Or you can point your camera to a real world object, such as a product label, a confusing failure or manual, and let gemini identify and explain what you look at.
The functionality made its debut earlier this month, but only for Gemini Advanced subscribers and only for certain phones, such as Pixel 9 and Samsung Galaxy S25. At the time, Google said the visual capabilities would end up developing, but even then to other subscribers. Google apparently had a change of heart, or at least he claims to have decided to open access due to the quantity of people who seem to like functionality. Now it takes place on each Android in the coming weeks.
We have heard excellent comments on Gemini Live with the camera and screen sharing, so we decided to bring it to more people in hitchhiking today and in the coming weeks, we deploy it to * all * Users @android with the gemini application. Take advantage! PS if you don’t have the application yet,… https://t.co/dtsxlzlxniApril 16, 2025
AILS AI
The idea of functionality is to make Gemini more flexible as an assistant. Instead of simply answering the questions you type or talking, it is visually interpreting the world around you. This decision also coincides with Microsoft by announcing that Copilot Vision, his own version of the Eyes AI, is now available for free in the Edge browser. It may be a coincidence, but probably only of how you meet your crush outside their class in high school is a coincidence.
But while Microsoft’s co -pilot lives in the browser, Gemini’s advantage is its integration directly into the Android ecosystem. No need to trigger Edge or download a separate tool. Gemini Live is cooked in the same system that already performs your device.
The new capacity corresponds to many other additions and upgrades that Gemini has added in recent months. The AI assistant is now delivered with a vocal chat in real time, a new superposition so that you can invoke Gemini in addition to other applications, and the inclusion of the in -depth research of the long report writing tool.
Once the new feature is live, you will see the option of “sharing the screen” or “using the camera” in some Gemini prompts on Android devices. And because Google gives it for free, it defines a new bar. If Gemini can monitor your screen and camera without invoicing the privilege, what happens to the idea of access to the “Premium” AI? The developers probably debate that the features of the AI are worth paying and the quantity to be invoked, while, at least for the moment, all these tools become free.