
Google is preparing a redesign of the Home app that focuses in on Gemini and AI features, and I’m a little nervous about it, but still optimistic.
This issue of NewGeekGuide Weekender is a part of NewGeekGuide’s rebooted newsletter that highlights the biggest Google stories with added commentary and other tidbits. Sign up here to get it delivered to your inbox early!
As we reported on earlier this week, the latest Google Home app update sets the foundation for a big Gemini-centric revamp. This includes “Google Home Premium” and the first new Google smart speaker in years. But it also brings a surprise redesign to the Google Home app.
- Google One might include Google Home Premium, redesigned Home app coming
- A quick look at the Google Home app redesign with ‘Ask Home’
This new design is hiding beneath the surface of the latest Google Home app version, and it’s a little polarizing.
The new app drops down to just three tabs along the bottom – Home, Activity, and Automations. An “Ask Home” search bar shows up at the top, and the main Home page then shows your favorite devices as well as a new button to show the rest of the list of devices. The Settings, Inbox, and other displaced features are then offloaded to the profile overflow menu.




While not as big of a redesign as the Google Home app we’ve come to know since 2023, it’s still a big shift.
Google, with that 2023 redesign and its moves in the time since, has done a lot to improve on the experience of operating a smart home, and the solution it has created scales pretty well to bigger smart homes too. There are plenty of faults, definitely, but the overall product has felt pretty good to me, and I’ve been looking forward to seeing continued progress.
That’s why this redesign has me on the fence.
On the one hand, the power of Gemini has a lot of potential to improve the smart home’s faults. Between making it easier to search for events captured by your Nest cameras to taking the work out of making automations, the potential is massive.
On the other hand, I worry that the focus on AI will take away from the core parts of a smart home that, frankly, Google still needs to get better at.
As mentioned, Google has solved a lot of the sore points of running a smart home in the Home app, but there’s still a lot of work to be done. Barely a month ago, Google literally had to acknowledge that, yes, the experience of using Home, and especially Assistant, has been chaotic. If you’re throwing AI into the mix, that opens a new door to a whole new kind of chaos. AI services, even Google’s, aren’t exactly known for being the most stable and predictable things.
That said, I’m overall optimistic.
The Google Home app redesign isn’t overbearing, at least based on the preview we’ve seen so far, when it comes to shoving AI down your throat. It balances the existing experience with one enhanced by Gemini and, if all goes perfectly, it might even be better than what we have today.
We’ll find out more in the coming weeks, but what do you think?
This Week’s Top Stories
Samsung releases its Android 16 update
After several betas, Samsung has finally released its first stable Android 16 update, with One UI 8 now rolling out to the Galaxy S25 series globally. The update will be heading to more Galaxy phones over the next couple of months.
- Samsung starts stable One UI 8 rollout, based on Android 16, for Galaxy S25 users
- Samsung confirms list of Galaxy devices getting Android 16 update, mostly in October
- Samsung preparing next major Android 16 update as One UI 8 goes wide on Galaxy S25
- One UI 8.5 leak shows off some iOS-inspired visuals coming alongside the Galaxy S26
Meta launches new smart glasses
Ahead of Android XR’s upcoming debut, Meta this week launched its first pair of smart glasses with a display in the new Meta Ray-Ban Display. The $800 glasses look compelling, but they’re not the only news as standard display-less glasses also launched with 8-hour battery life in a welcome upgrade.
- Meta launches Ray-Ban Display glasses for $799, but you can’t buy them online
- Ray-Ban Meta ‘Gen 2’ smart glasses deliver 2x battery, 3K video, $379

Android 16 QPR2 Beta 2
The latest Android 16 beta brings support for changing app icons on the homescreen among other additions. The beta is available for all Tensor-powered Pixel phones.
- Google rolling out Android 16 QPR2 Beta 2 for Pixel
- Here’s everything new in Android 16 QPR2 Beta 2 [Gallery]
More Top Stories
- YouTube addresses lower view counts which seem to be caused by ad blockers
- Google’s Pixel design keeps getting ripped off, and I think that’s a good thing
- Nothing shows off Android 16 update with redesign, ‘Extra Dark’ mode, more AI [Video]
- Android 16’s next big update brings auto-themed icons, and apps can’t opt out
- Google Gemini is the top free iPhone app
- Hands-on: The Xgimi Mogo 4 is a mobile projector that puts convenience above all
- Xiaomi 17 Pro has an iPhone-like design, but with a second display on the back [Video]
- These are some of our favorite magnetic Pixel 10 accessories with Qi2 so far
- Google releases colorful rope wrist straps for Pixel phones [Gallery]
- New ‘Google app for Windows’ brings Spotlight-esque local, Drive, web, and Lens search
- If AI is Google’s future for Pixel, 128GB of storage is simply unacceptable
From the rest of 9to5
iPhone reviews from 9to5Mac:
- iPhone 17 Pro review: How pro can you go?
- iPhone Air review: The thinnest iPhone ever, but at what cost?
9to5Toys: Official price increases set to hit Xbox consoles in the U.S. (again)
Electrek: The Kia EV4 GT may be the affordable electric sports car we’ve been waiting for [Video]
Follow Ben: Twitter/X, Threads, Bluesky, and Instagram
FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.
Comments