Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124

Google is expanding its AI-powered browser tools to more places. Now users in India, Canada and New Zealand can start using it Gemini on Chrome.
This release includes support for more than 50 additional languages, including Hindi, French, and Spanish. These new capabilities are built directly on Twins 3.1 model. If you’re in one of the new regions, you’ll see these features hit desktop and iOS platforms first. Android users get a slightly different approach: you can activate Gemini in Chrome by holding down the power button.
So what exactly do you get when you click the new Gemini icon in the top right corner of your current tab? You can start a conversation with your personalized browsing assistant for a quick answer or a creative spark without losing your place on the web.
Article continues below
Chrome’s AI can also summarize long web pages, create practice tests for your next exam, or answer questions like making a recipe vegan. It even remembers the pages you’ve visited before, so you can finally close those old tabs.
Besides, Twins can scan multiple open tabs, cross-reference to consolidate information into a single view. It could be pulling together research for a team-building icebreaker or building a comparison chart of key details when shopping for vegan protein powder.
In addition, the browser connects directly to popular applications such as Gmail, Maps, Calendar and YouTube. With a few clicks, you can schedule meetings, view venue details, ask questions about videos, or create an email from the sidebar and edit it and send it with one click.

Google adds Nano Banana 2 Model directly in Chrome, allowing you to change images on the web. No need to download files or open a new tab – just type what you want to do in the sidebar and the AI takes care of it. For example, you can use Nano Banana 2 to try different furniture combinations on one page before buying something.
Ensuring access to your calendar and email requires strong security measures, which is why Google built Gemini in Chrome with security as a top priority. The company has trained its models to detect and block known threats, such as rapid injection attacks, to help keep you safe while browsing.
The system also asks for your approval before doing anything sensitive like sending an email or adding an event. To make sure these protections work, Google uses automated red grouping and relies on Chrome’s automatic updates to quickly remove new threats.
I often have dozens of tabs open while checking for new software updates and mobile hardware features, so having an assistant that summarizes reports and cross-checks data without interrupting my work saves a lot of time. For users in India, Canada and New Zealand, these new tools will truly change the way you browse.
Just be careful what permissions you allow, because turning your browser into a smart assistant is a productivity boost until it accidentally messes with your calendar.