Skip to main content

Gemini gets image creation trick in Docs and Calendar access in Gmail

Gemini running on the Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold.
Ajay Kumar / Digital Trends

Google has announced a laundry list of feature updates for Workspace users, with a focus on using its Gemini AI across products like Gmail, Docs, and Calendar. 

For folks who rely on the side panel in Gmail, there is some good news. Gemini can now directly access the Calendar information from within the inbox side panel and perform relevant actions. 

Recommended Videos

Let’s say you are drafting an email and need to reference your calendar entries; Gemini will now do that for you. You can ask it to check the schedule for a particular date, create an entry (one-off or recurring), and create a new event without leaving the Gmail interface.

Using Gemini for Calendar access in Gemini side panel.
Google

The new capability is helpful but not holistic. For example, Gemini in Gmail can’t perform tasks such as adding or removing a person from an event, showing attachments, synchronizing schedules to find the best spot for a meeting, specifying work location, or handling meeting rooms. 

Gemini in Gmail will be able to access Calendar details for paid Gemini users or subscribers of the Google One AI Premium plan. Moreover, it is limited to English language support at the moment. 

Google’s AI toolkit is also bringing image creation superpowers to Docs. Back in September, Google introduced the ability to upload full-bleed cover images in Docs. Users are able to pick from a curated gallery they can access from the new Cover Image option in Docs or upload from a local gallery. 

Now, users can use Gemini to directly create media that they can use as a cover image or even as inline photos. The text-to-image pipeline is handled by Google’s Imagen 3 image-generation model. Notably, users can create photorealistic images, as well.

Using Gemini to directly create images in Gemini.
Google

More importantly, users will also be able to specify not only the style of picture but also dictate the aspect ratio. To create images, just follow this path: Insert > Cover image > Help me create an image

In order to add an inline picture, this is the pipeline: Insert > Image > Help me create an image, then type in an image description.

This feature has already started to roll out for business and education Gemini users, plus folks paying for the Google One AI Premium subscription plan. On a related note, Google has also finally launched the standalone Gemini app for iPhone users.

Earlier this week, Google also added support for uploading Docs and Sheets directly from Google Drive while creating a custom Gem assistant. The updated list of document and text files now includes “TXT, DOC, DOCX, PDF, RTF, DOT, DOTX, HWP, HWPX, and Google Docs,” says Google.

Nadeem Sarwar
Nadeem is a tech and science journalist who started reading about cool smartphone tech out of curiosity and soon started…
You can now have secret chats with Google’s Gemini in incognito mode
Launching Gemini Deep Research query on Chrome desktop.

You can now have a quick chat with Gemini on your web browser without having to sign in first. And, to speed up the process, the Gemini website even takes you directly to the chat window instead of showing you a landing page first.

This move, spotted by 9To5Google, is pretty smart as it allows unconvinced users to try out the product with no strings attached. With any luck, they'll enjoy the experience and decide to sign up to get access to more of the features.

Read more
Chromebooks are about to get a lot smarter, and more accessible
Acer Chromebook Spin 513 top down view showing display and keyboard deck.

Google recently announced that Gemini will soon replace Google Assistant everywhere, from your phone and smartwatches to smart home speakers. ChromeOS has now joined the transition bandwagon, starting today.
The company has kicked off the stable rollout of Chrome OS M134, and it marks the silent exit of Google Assistant. “When triggering Assistant, you will automatically be directed to the Gemini app on your Chromebook,” Google says in a community update note.
Google says the feature update will be rolling out in a phased manner, so you might not be able to access the Gemini interface immediately after installing the latest software. Just to clear any confusion here, Gemini has been accessible on Chrome OS, but with the new build, it replaces the Google Assistant.

Once the transition takes effect, users will see the sparkly Gemini icon in the top-right corner of the launcher window. For now, support for the “Hey Google” hotword for summoning Gemini is absent, even though it works fine on mobile platforms where Google Assistant is in the phase-out process.
Another noteworthy aspect is that Chrome OS will offer Gemini as a Progressive Web App (PWA), instead of a native application experience. That’s not necessarily a bad thing, considering you get access to a whole new world of capabilities with Gemini.

Read more
Gemini’s new feature might make it your new favorite group project partner
EMBARGO: 18 March 2025 9am PT - new Gemini features.

Google has released new content for its Gemini assistant called Canvas -- a split-screen feature that lets you chat to Gemini on the left and see your changes appear in real-time on the right.

The idea is to make editing and iteration a smoother experience -- instead of scrolling up and down the chat to copy sections of output you're not happy with, you can just highlight the text in question on the right and tell Gemini what to change. The assistant will then edit the specified section and update the document, rather than generating a whole new version or spitting out additional paragraphs you need to splice together yourself.

Read more