Chromebooks Are Getting a New Button and a Host of Google AI Features

It’s not often that a laptop gets a new button added to the keyboard. Windows laptops were treated to this rarity recently when Microsoft added the Copilot button, allowing users to quickly access the company’s artificial intelligence chatbot with a button press. It’s now the Chromebook’s turn, but Google isn’t introducing a button to simply summon its own AI assistant. Instead, “Quick Insert” offers helpful tools contextually relevant to what’s on the page.

This new button—not exclusive to new devices—is part of a broader update rolling out to Chromebooks and Chromebook Plus laptops this month bringing several new AI features to spruce up their capabilities. There’s also new hardware: the Lenovo Chromebook Duet and Samsung Galaxy Chromebook Plus, the latter of which is supposedly the thinnest and lightest Chromebook Plus machine to date.

Hot Button

Quick Insert is debuting on the Samsung Galaxy Chromebook Plus as a new button that rests where the Caps Lock usually sits on traditional keyboards. On Chromebooks, this used to be the launcher button that opened up the app drawer, but this has been moved below by the spacebar. Expect Quick Insert to come to more Chromebook Plus devices in the future, but anyone with an older Chromebook can use a shortcut to trigger the same functionality: Launcher + F key.

The new hot button is seen integrated into the caps key.

Photograph: Julian Chokkattu

When you press this button, it opens up an overlay much like a right-click. You’ll get the ability to access emojis, GIFs, shortcuts to turn on Caps Lock, and even use Google’s Help Me Write AI feature, which can drum up words for you if you insert a prompt, or change the tone of a sentence. It can show recently opened websites in case you want to paste a link and even has a search bar for Google Drive so you can quickly attach photos or files without leaving the tab. Eventually, you’ll be able to create AI-generated images from this menu. It works at the operating system level, so you can use it in any app or webpage.

Other new additions to Chromebook Plus laptops include “Help Me Read,” which can summarize the contents of a page and even act as a chatbot for follow-up questions so you don’t have to scroll through. (Who needs to read, am I right?) Maybe this will finally get me to spend some time on a Terms and Conditions page before blindly tapping “I Agree.”

Google is also bringing its popular Recorder app from its Pixel phones, which can automatically transcribe in real time and dish out speaker labels when different people are talking. It can summarize the recording too. There’s also Live Translate, which works in any third-party app to translate content in real time, and I saw a successful demo of this working over a Zoom call where one person spoke Spanish and the other spoke English.

The Google Recorder app.

Courtesy of Google

Speaking of, regardless of the video call app you use, Chromebook Plus laptops now have a studio-style mic option to better isolate your voice and cut the background chatter, and there are appearance enhancements to brighten up the face or adjust the lighting.

Those features outside of Quick Insert are exclusive to Chromebook Plus machines. This is a standard Google created last year that establishes a strict hardware specification manufacturers must adhere to if they want to sit under that label. The point is to ensure a certain level of polish on these Chromebooks, which start at around $350. But Google isn’t forgetting about all the non-Chromebook Plus laptops.

A few things are coming to all Chromebooks (well, ones still supported). Welcome Recap, for example, gives you an overview of where you left off, with an image of the last webpage you were on and all the other apps you still had open, in case you wanted to jump right back in the next day. Focus mode—which first debuted on Android phones—is now baked into ChromeOS, allowing you to turn on Do Not Disturb and silence notifications if you want to get in the zone. There’s even a YouTube Music integration to play soundscapes to get you in the right mood. And in the launcher tray, there’s a section to pin certain files for quick access, and ChromeOS will suggest recently opened Google Docs or Slides.

Surprisingly, Google’s Gemini chatbot is now available on all Chromebooks—this used to be exclusive to Chromebook Plus models—though Google will only offer three months of free access to the Google One AI Premium Plan if you buy a new Chromebook (which nets you access to Gemini Advanced). If you buy a Chromebook Plus, Google’s still running the promotion that gets you the same free perk for 12 months.

New Chromebooks

There’s some shiny new hardware to go along with these new software features. First up is a long-awaited update to the Lenovo Duet, a portable laptop we’ve loved in prior iterations. This 2-in-1 detachable laptop comes with a kickstand to prop the 11-inch 2K screen upright and includes a keyboard for when you don’t want to use it in tablet mode. Google says it has updated the palm rejection models in ChromeOS so drawing on this slate with a stylus will be far less frustrating.

It’s powered by a MediaTek Kompanio 838 processor with 8 GB of RAM, and remember, since this is not a Chromebook Plus model, performance on this machine likely won’t impress. But if you’re using it for word processing and a few Chrome tabs, it’ll do the job. It comes with 128 GB of storage, an 8-megapixel rear camera, and a 5-MP selfie camera. It costs $349.

The Lenovo Chromebook Duet.

Courtesy of Google

The stylus and the rear camera are showcased on the Lenovo Chromebook Duet tablet.

Photograph: Julian Chokkattu

The Samsung Galaxy Chromebook Plus is Samsung’s first Chromebook Plus laptop and it’s also the thinnest and lightest to date. It weighs 2.58 pounds despite the 15.6-inch screen—for context, a 15-inch MacBook Air weighs 3.3 pounds. This one is a clamshell, but you get an OLED display, a superior Intel Core 3 100U processor along with 8 GB of RAM and 256 GB of storage.

The Samsung Galaxy Chromebook Plus.

Courtesy of Google

Photograph: Julian Chokkattu

Both of these laptops are launching in October.


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