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Chrome on iPhone is putting Gemini front and center in your browsing

Google wants you to browse the web with Gemini, not just Chrome.

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Google has been big on AI, pushing many of its services to include Gemini. Chrome is no exception, with the latest build on the iPhones making this AI-first direction even clearer.

A new “Ask Gemini” shortcut is being tested in Chrome for iOS, which brings instant access to an AI assistant directly from the browser interface. The feature isn’t buried in menus; rather, it is now a persistent bottom bar that sits alongside other options like new tab and tab switcher.

What does this mean from Chrome on iOS?

If you tap the Gemini button, Chrome launches an AI panel that is layered directly on top of the webpage you’re viewing. So, it is integrated seamlessly into the browser instead of opening a new app or tab. The page still stays visible in the background, allowing you to read an article, ask questions about it, and get summaries or explanations without breaking your browsing flow.

Why is Google pushing for deeper Gemini integration?

The new feature in the Chrome browser on iOS isn’t an isolated experiment. Google has been steadily pushing Gemini deeper into Chrome, positioning it as a built-in assistant that is contextually aware of what you’re looking at. This brings quick access to handy AI-powered tools. On desktop, Gemini can already summarize pages, answer questions based on open tabs, and help complete tasks.

So the update brings the same experience to iPhones. Making it this accessible also suggests Google wants AI to be the default way you interact with the web. As of right now, the feature is currently hidden behind experimental flags and TestFlight builds, meaning it’s not widely available yet. But the company’s intent is clear here: Gemini isn’t just an add-on, it’s integral now.

Vikhyaat Vivek
Vikhyaat Vivek is a tech journalist and reviewer with seven years of experience covering consumer hardware, with a focus on…
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