Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. News

Google Photos rolls out AI Enhance and video playback speed controls

New tools aim to simplify editing and improve video viewing on Android.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Google Photos AI
Google

Google Photos is introducing an Android update focused on faster editing and improved video controls. The changes center on a one-tap AI editing option and long-requested playback speed settings, both starting to appear now.

The update adds an “AI Enhance” button built to streamline photo edits. Instead of working through multiple sliders, it applies automatic changes to lighting and contrast in a single tap, reducing hands-on tweaking while still improving image quality.

It also brings video speed options into the app, letting users control how fast clips play without leaving Google Photos. That expands the app beyond storage into a more capable viewing and editing tool.

Recommended Videos

Availability still varies by device and region, so not every user will see both features at the same time.

One tap edits replace manual tweaks

AI Enhance works like a built-in shortcut for quick edits. Rather than navigating multiple controls, it applies lighting and contrast adjustments automatically inside the editor, shifting focus away from manual precision toward consistent results.

It’s also reaching Android users globally, making it one of the more immediate parts of this update. The tradeoff is control, since the system makes decisions that won’t always match more detailed editing preferences.

Did you see the new button in your photo editor? AI Enhance is now available to Android users worldwide! ✨🌎

Elevate your images with a tap, balancing light and color instantly. Because your best memories deserve better than “okay” lighting. 🪄

Output varies by device. pic.twitter.com/eCocp55ybt

— Google Photos (@googlephotos) April 6, 2026

Video controls catch up

For video, a long-missing option is now being added. A menu inside each clip includes playback speed settings, with choices ranging from 0.25x to 2x.

That brings Google Photos closer to dedicated video apps, where speed adjustment is standard. It also makes reviewing clips more flexible, whether slowing things down or moving quickly through longer recordings.

Early availability suggests a phased rollout rather than a full global release right away.

Rollout timing and what to expect

The two updates are arriving at different speeds. AI Enhance is positioned as a broad release across Android, while video playback features remain in earlier stages with more limited availability so far.

That staggered approach means some devices will get the photo update first, with video controls following as rollout expands. Device differences may also affect when features appear and how well they perform.

The direction is clear. Faster edits and more flexible playback are becoming built-in expectations inside Google Photos, reducing the need for separate apps as rollout continues.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
Shared Albums in iOS 27 feels like a private social media universe of its own, and I love it
No algorithm. No strangers. No follower count. Just the people you actually want to share things with.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

It has been a year since I uninstalled Instagram from my phone and reclaimed about two hours of my time every day. I was tired of seeing what random people were up to on the weekend, how I was still filing articles on a Sunday, and quietly getting jealous of people I don’t even know.

What I’d rather have any day is a place to share and relive moments with people I genuinely care about, without an algorithm, strangers, or the dopamine trap. Oddly enough, iOS 27’s Photos App comes with an overhauled Shared Albums that is exactly that. Ever since I started using it, I haven’t looked back.

Read more
HMD just launched four dumb phones with a Nokia badge and an AI button
These new Nokia dumb phones bring AI help without the smartphone doomscrolling
HMD is releasing new Nokia branded dum phones

AI has been pushed on all your latest smartphones, laptops, browsers, and anything else manufacturers can cram it in. Now, HMD has decided that even your basic dumb phone shouldn't be left out either. The company is bringing back the Nokia branding for this one, and yes, you also get a keypad.

HMD has quietly unveiled four Nokia-branded 4G feature phones, namely the Nokia 210 4G, Nokia 200 4G, Nokia 215 4G 2nd Edition, and Nokia 235 4G 2nd Edition. All four have physical number pads and a dedicated button for activating a voice-based AI assistant. Press it, speak a command, and the phone can switch on its torch, set an alarm or reminder, open the camera, or call someone from your contacts. It can also answer basic questions, offer simple recipes, and help with common foreign-language phrases.

Read more
Ahead of Apple, Caviar is showing off the foldable iPhone Ultra with a tinge of luxury
The yet to launch iPhone Ultra is already getting a 19-unit luxury run from Caviar
Apple iPhone Ultra Custom Caviar models

Apple has not announced its first foldable iPhone yet, but Caviar is already trying to sell a luxury version of it. The custom phone brand has revealed its “Flagship” collection for the rumored iPhone Ultra, giving Apple’s expected foldable a gold, silver, leather, and carbon fiber makeover months before the real device is likely to appear.

Caviar has made plenty of wildly expensive Apple accessories and custom phones before. We recently saw the company put a Tyrannosaurus fossil fragment into a $4,490 magnetic case for the iPhone 17 Pro Max. Its foldable iPhone Ultra collection is playing in the same absurdly expensive territory, only this time the luxury treatment is arriving before Apple’s own version.

Read more