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Stuff / News / Google introduces the Googlebook – an AI-powered laptop with a ‘Magic Pointer’

Google introduces the Googlebook – an AI-powered laptop with a ‘Magic Pointer’

Is Google finished with the Chromebook? Its replacement wants to be the smartest laptop you've ever used

GoogleBook Keyboard

Google has announced the Googlebook, a brand new category of laptop built around its Gemini AI. It’s the biggest rethink of the laptop since the Chromebook launched 15 years ago.

The headline feature is something called ‘Magic Pointer’. Wiggle your cursor over anything on screen and Gemini springs into action with contextual suggestions. Point at a date in an email and it offers to book a meeting. Select a photo of your sofa alongside one of a new rug and it visualises them together. It could be a gimmick, or it could be really useful… time will tell.

There’s also a feature called Create your Widget. You can prompt Gemini to build a personalised desktop dashboard pulling in data from Gmail, Google Calendar and the web. Planning a trip? It’ll pull your flights, hotels and restaurant bookings into one tidy spot. That does sound genuinely useful.

GoogleBook on black background

The Googlebook is also built to work hand-in-hand with your Android phone. You can run phone apps directly on your laptop without downloading anything. Ordering food, finishing a Duolingo lesson, or grabbing a file from your phone – it all happens without breaking the flow.

A feature called Quick Access lets you browse your phone’s files right from the laptop’s file browser. No cable and no syncing necessary.

Hardware is being handled by Acer, ASUS, Dell, HP and Lenovo.

Every Googlebook will have a distinctive “glowbar” – a coloured light strip that serves as the device’s signature look. Think of it as Google’s version of the Apple logo glow.

GoogleBook details

The OS itself combines Chrome, Google Play apps and what Google is calling an “intelligence system” – a step beyond a traditional operating system. Whether that distinction holds up remains to be seen. But the ambition here is clear: Google wants the Googlebook to feel less like a computer some intelligent AI-powered sidekick.

Pricing hasn’t been confirmed yet. Devices are expected to arrive this autumn, with more details coming later in the year.

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About

As Buying Guide Editor, Spencer is responsible for all e-commerce content on Stuff, overseeing buying guides as well as covering deals and new product launches. Spencer has been writing about consumer tech for over eight years. He has worked on some of the biggest publications in the UK, where he covered everything from the emergence of smartwatches to the arrival of self-driving cars. During this time, Spencer has become a seasoned traveller, racking up air miles while travelling around the world reviewing cars, attending product launches, and covering every trade show known to man, from Baselworld and Geneva Motor Show to CES and MWC. While tech remains one of his biggest passions, Spencer also enjoys getting hands-on with the latest luxury watches, trying out new grooming kit, and road-testing all kinds of vehicles, from electric scooters to supercars.

Areas of expertise

Watches, travel, grooming, transport, tech