“Visual layout generates an immersive, magazine-style view complete with photos and modules,” says Josh Woodward, VP of Google Labs, Gemini, and AI Studio. “These elements don’t just look good but invite your input to further tailor the outcomes.”
With Gemini 3, Google can also be introducing Gemini Agent, an experimental feature designed to handle multi-step tasks directly contained in the app. The agent can connect with services resembling Google Calendar, Gmail, and Reminders. Once granted access, it may well execute tasks like organizing an inbox or managing schedules.
Just like other agents, it breaks tasks into discrete steps, displays its progress in real time, and pauses for approval from the user before continuing. Google describes the feature as a step toward “a real generalist agent.” It can be available on the net for Google AI Ultra subscribers within the US starting November 18.
The general approach can seem loads like “vibe coding,” where users describe an end goal in plain language and let the model assemble the interface or code needed to get there.
The update also ties Gemini more deeply into Google’s existing products. In Search, a limited group of Google AI Pro and Ultra subscribers can now switch to Gemini 3 Pro, the reasoning variation of the brand new model, to receive deeper, more thorough AI-generated summaries that depend on the model’s reasoning fairly than the prevailing AI Mode.
