Just last week, Google dropped a new update that’s got a fair few of us scratching our heads and muttering, ‘Well, I’ll be.’ They’ve rolled out Gemini 2.5 Computer Use, a model that can actually click, type, and fill out forms on websites all by itself. No more copying and pasting, no more jumping between tabs like a kangaroo on a trampoline. This thing can browse the web, follow links, and even book appointments or fill in data entry forms just like a real person would.
What is it? Well, imagine you’ve got a stack of invoices to upload, or you need to check a dozen product prices across different sites. Before, you’d be stuck clicking around, copying details, pasting them into spreadsheets. Now, Gemini 2.5 Computer Use can do that for you. It’s not just reading the page, it’s interacting with it. You give it a task, like ‘Find me the cheapest flights from Sydney to Melbourne next week,’ and it’ll go off, do the legwork, and come back with the answer.
Why does it matter? Let’s say you’re a small business owner trying to keep your Shopify inventory synced with your supplier’s site. Instead of logging in every day and manually updating prices, you could set up Gemini to do it for you. Or, if you’re a marketer pulling together campaign briefs, it could grab the latest stats from a few different dashboards and drop them into a report. It’s like having a mate who’s always up for the boring bits, so you can get on with the fun stuff.
Here’s a couple of real-life uses:
- Automatically updating product listings with new prices from supplier sites
- Grabbing customer feedback from multiple review platforms and summarising it into a single document
- Booking appointments or reservations without you having to lift a finger
It’s not magic, but it’s close. The model’s built on Gemini 2.5 Pro, so it’s fast and handles complex tasks without breaking a sweat. And it’s available through the Gemini API, so developers can plug it into their own tools and workflows.
So, if you’re the sort who’s sick of clicking around the web, this might be the break you’ve been waiting for. It’s not going to write your next novel or cook your dinner, but it’ll save you a heap of time on the stuff you’d rather not do.



