“Hey Google” should be changed to “Hey Gemini”
As cool as this all is, and I think using AI as an assistant is really cool, I still have to use the “Hey Google” hotword to activate Gemini on my Pixel. Would it be too much to ask if we could say, “Hey Gemini,” or “Hello Gemini” to request the Gemini overlay? Not only does it make more sense, but it also is a great way to promote Gemini. The only people who will continue to use Google Assistant are those Luddites who keep reading about AI and think that we are writing about a steak sauce.
Android users with a question that they need to get answered before they explode or have a tune they must get the name of before they end up going nuts, tap on the Google Search bar at the top of the Google app, the Pixel launcher or in search results, and type in their question. That is a pain in the derriere if your query is long-winded. And since you can hum a song or a riff to find out the name of the tune, how can you do that by typing? Someone I know tried to find out the name of the Knack’s hit “My Sharona” by typing “Ditdaditdaditdit ditdit ditadadaditdit Dadadadaditdit My Sharona.”
The new UI has aspects of AI Mode, Search Live, and the new Google Lens redesign
Obviously, typing your long queries and requesting a song title by humming the tune works better when using your voice. When you use your voice to ask your question, you tap the microphone icon on the search bar. Four dots appear in the Google colors (blue, red, yellow, green) that turn into vertical lines, and the word “Listening ” appears above the animation of a bodyless face talking. Voice search results are spoken aloud and appear in the search results page. Many, including this writer, are happy that Google is getting rid of that ridiculous-looking face moving its mouth to match your voice input.


The old UI on the left and the new one in the middle and on the right. | Image credit-9to5Google
The aforementioned “Search a song” shortcut is used to open the redesigned UI. Instead of seeing a ball of dots, the new UI gives you directions to follow with three words stacked up one on top of the other: Play, Sing, Hum. Do one of the three for the tune in your mind and you’ll find out the name of the song that your brain can’t get rid of.
Google Voice Search launched in 2008
Google launched voice search on Android all the way back in November 2008 with the release of Android 1.1. It was a feature on the Google Search widget available for the “Google Experience” phones which had a clean, stock version of Android that came directly from Google. Officially, the Nexus One was the first Google Experience phone which was designed by HTC and developed by Google.
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