Skip to main content

Google Gemini is now a lot more helpful on Android phones

Google Gemini running on an Android phone.
Joe Maring / Digital Trends

Google Gemini is getting a little bit smarter thanks to a small change recently discovered by 9to5Google. The AI assistant will now answer “general questions” even if your Android device is locked.

According to a Google support page, commands like “What’s the weather?” once required you to open your phone first. However, Google now lets you “get answers from Gemini without unlocking your device.”  Previously, Gemini could only control things like alarms, timers, and media while your phone was locked.

The noted support page also explains Gemini settings for when the lock screen setting is on and when the Google Assistant lock screen setting is on in your Gemini settings.

Google Gemini lock screen screenshots.
9to5Google

Google introduced its large language model, Gemini, in February. Since then, it has added significant features to the AI tool, which is now available across Android devices. In May, for example, at Google I/O 2024, the company announced an “Ask Photos” feature for Google Gemini that allows users to search for images using a conversation-style approach.

During the same event, Google announced that Search will use Gemini’s capabilities to better understand user intent and suggest solutions that may require multiple steps or planning. Video search is also being tested, at least in the U.S. Additionally, Gemini models are now integrated with Gmail, Docs, and other Workspace applications to help with email summaries and document analysis tasks.

The “general questions” Gemini feature is now offered to select Android users. However, it hasn’t arrived for everyone at the time of this writing, but that should change soon.

Bryan M. Wolfe
Bryan M. Wolfe has over a decade of experience as a technology writer. He writes about mobile.
Android 15 has reached a turning point
Android 15 logo on a Google Pixel 8.

Google is finally pushing Android 15 to the Android Open Source Project (AOSP), marking a crucial milestone when companies begin prepping their respective software experiences for their smartphones and developers start fine-tuning their apps. As far as a public release, the stable public build of Android 15 will be released for compatible Pixel phones in the coming weeks.

Android 15 will also make its way to “devices from Samsung, Honor, iQOO, Lenovo, Motorola, Nothing, OnePlus, Oppo, Realme, Sharp, Sony, Tecno, Vivo and Xiaomi in the coming months,” says Google. If you have a Pixel phone, you can install the Android 15 QPR1 Beta update to get a taste of what’s coming.

Read more
Now Playing is the best Google Pixel 9 feature you aren’t using
The Google Pixel 9 standing upright next to an Android statue.

The Google Pixel 9 is here, and if you haven't heard yet, it's excellent. Google did almost everything right this year — releasing phones with gorgeous hardware, excellent cameras, great battery life, and more.

All Pixel 9 phones also come with a host of new AI features. Some of them, like Add Me and Pixel Screenshots, are legitimately great. Others, like Pixel Studio, could have used more time in the oven.

Read more
The Pixel 9 completely changed my mind about Google Pixel phones
Pixel 9 Pro in Rose Quartz.

I confess: I've never been a Google Pixel fan. Every year, I wait for Google to release something new, I buy it, and I am left disappointed. Google's phones have never felt as premium as the competition, but the Google Pixel 9 has completely changed that. It's the best regular-sized phone I’ve ever used. It's also convinced me to go all-in on Google this year and buy the Pixel 9 Pro.

One of my disappointments with the Google Pixel 8 Pro is its size: I have been waiting for Google to deliver a Pro phone without compromises, and the Pixel 9 series finally delivers. For most people, the regular Pixel 9 is the phone to buy, but if you want improvements in the display, battery, charging, and camera, the Pixel 9 Pro is the winner.

Read more