What you need to know
- Gemini Spark works like a proactive AI agent that can manage tasks and workflows in the background.
- Spark integrates deeply with Gmail, Docs, Slides, and other Google Workspace apps.
- Google says Spark can summarize meetings, scan emails, and automate recurring tasks.
- Gemini Spark starts rolling out to trusted testers first, with Google AI Ultra users in the U.S. getting beta access next week.
Google just unveiled Gemini Spark, and it might be the company's clearest vision yet for what an AI assistant is supposed to become. Instead of simply acting like a chatbot that answers questions, Spark is designed to proactively manage tasks and workflows for users in the background throughout the day.
Google is calling Spark a "24/7 personal AI agent," and it's powered by the company's latest Gemini 3.5 Flash model. It uses the Antigravity harness and is deeply integrated with the Workspace tools like Gmail, Docs, Slides, and more. Unlike traditional assistants, Spark isn't tied to your device. It runs in the cloud, and it can continue working even after you close your laptop or lock your phone.
Google shared several examples of what Spark can do. Users can create recurring workflows that automatically scan credit card statements for hidden subscriptions, monitor school-related emails and flag important messages, summarize meetings, generate Google Docs, and even draft follow-up emails tied to ongoing projects.
The company is also expanding Spark through MCP integrations with services like Canva, OpenTable, and Instacart. Google says more integrations are on the way, alongside future features like custom sub-agents that can work directly in your browser, as well as the ability to interact with Spark through email or text messages.
Google says Spark remains user-controlled. The company says users decide when Spark is enabled, what apps it can connect to, and that the AI will ask for approval before performing high-stakes actions like spending money or sending emails.
Gemini Spark starts rolling out to "trusted testers" this week, while Google AI Ultra subscribers in the U.S. are expected to get beta access starting next week.
Android Central's Take
This is probably the first time Google's AI ambitions actually feel useful to me. Gemini Spark feels less like another chatbot gimmick and more like something that could genuinely save time in day-to-day life.
That said, the idea of Google constantly sitting in the background reading emails, tracking tasks, and managing workflows still feels a little too invasive. I still don't fully know if I can trust it yet