Google Gemini is moving into your television today, starting with the TCL QM9K series. Viewers also won’t just get some smarter voting commands with the upgrade. Gemini will act as a full -blown interlocutor on your big screen.
Google boasts that Gemini will help you decide what to look based on your general mood to summarize the last season of a show you last saw three years ago. It will also make your TV more a generalized smart screen that offers recipes and educational hours for children.
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Unlike Google Assistant already on many TVs, Gemini is not just about performing commands. It’s about understanding context and engaging in back and forth conversations. You don’t have to remember the name of a show or talk in keyword-see. As the example suggests, you can just say, “What is the new hospital drama that everyone is talking about?” And Gemini will offer suggestions as PittComplete with trailers and reviews. You can follow up by asking for reviews or appropriate for children or any other detail you want.
Google is also eager to hype Gemini’s educational abilities. You can ask about black holes and how they form, but “in a way a third grade level would understand,” and it delivers a tailor -made answer and maybe even a relevant YouTube video. The same goes for things that adults may want to learn like how to play a musical instrument or make a tray of brownies.
After the initial TCL roll-out, Gemini goes to an ever-growing list of Google TV devices later this year, including the new Google TV streamer. Your own TV is likely to not be able to handle it simply because of hardware requirements. Gemini’s on-TV performance needs computer muscle to provide real-time mood treatment, contextual understanding and video integration.
SMART TVS, AI -Environment
Gemini’s TV features may sound familiar if you’ve used Gemini on your phone or laptop, but it continues Google’s ambition to make its AI -all -founding in your life. The dream of ‘surrounding computing’ and an environment built around AI is not happening tomorrow, but it can be closer than you would expect.
And it’s not a one-course race. Google is eager to have an edge in the battle of smart TV assistants. Microsoft collaborates with Samsung to integrate his Copilot AI into Samsung TVs, while LG builds its own voice AI, and Amazon makes TVs a central hub for its new edition of Alexa.
Whoever controls the living room AI experience may well shape our daily technological habits in the next decade. Searching, shopping, planning and learning are all ready to get hold of because TVs are not just for entertainment anymore.
Google wants Gemini to be wherever you are, so the TV is the next logical step. Whether we are ready to talk back to our TVs is another matter.



