I’ve been keeping one eye on the AI news feed and the other on my inbox, and this one’s the real deal: Google has said its Search bar is now powered entirely by Gemini 3.5 Flash, with AI-summarised pages instead of the old tidy stack of blue links.[1]
What changed, in plain English? Search is becoming less of a list and more of a conversational helper. You can ask follow-up questions, search with images or video, and even hand off background jobs to what Google calls “information agents”, which is a rather grand way of saying the system can do a bit of the legwork for you.[1]
| New Feature / Update | What it means |
|---|---|
| Gemini 3.5 Flash-powered Search | Google Search now uses Gemini to generate custom AI summaries rather than just surfacing links.[1] |
| Follow-up questions | You can keep asking in the same thread, which makes research feel less like hopping between tabs and more like having a brisk little back-and-forth.[1] |
| Image and video queries | Search can now handle visual input, which is handy when you’ve got a screenshot, a product shot, or a messy phone photo and no clean keywords.[1] |
| Information agents | Google says these can run background tasks on your behalf, which points towards more delegated, workflow-style search.[1] |
Why does it matter?
For marketers, this could speed up campaign brief drafting, competitor research, and quick checks on product positioning without the usual tab-hopping circus. For analysts and ops teams, it could make it easier to pull together a fast first pass on a topic, then refine with follow-up questions instead of starting over each time.[1]
I can already picture the slightly frantic Monday morning use case: you paste in a screenshot from Slack, ask what the spreadsheet error means, then keep poking at it until the shape of the problem finally stops being coy. Très practical, a little bit smug, and mercifully less faff.
Dictation version, because I said I’d keep it human: “I’m seeing more people use search like a workbench now, not a library. You ask, you refine, you shove in a screenshot, and the thing does the first ugly draft for you.” That’s the shift here. Less hunting, more doing.[1]
For anyone writing campaign briefs, updating product docs, or trying to sanity-check a pile of customer notes, this matters because the first pass is often the hardest bit. If Search can give you a cleaner starting point, that’s fewer dead ends, fewer open tabs, and a lot less of that ‘why am I still here at 6:40 pm’ energy.[1]


