Google is hosting its annual I/O developer conference today, unveiling new capabilities for its Gemini AI suite and revealing further details about Android XR smart glasses. Follow live coverage of the keynote announcements.
Google's I/O 2026 keynote is underway with expected announcements spanning its Gemini artificial intelligence platform and Android XR smart glasses initiative.
■ Gemini Updates
The company is expected to showcase new features and capabilities across its Gemini AI tools, which power applications from search to productivity software. Previous iterations introduced multimodal capabilities and expanded integration across Google's product ecosystem. Today's announcements will likely detail performance improvements, new model versions, or expanded availability.
■ Android XR Smart Glasses
Android XR represents Google's push into spatial computing. The company will provide additional technical specifications and use case demonstrations for its smart glasses platform. Details may include hardware partnerships, developer tools, and timeline for consumer availability.
■ Developer Focus
As Google's primary conference for developers, I/O emphasizes new APIs, tools, and frameworks. This year's event is likely to include technical deep dives into integrating Gemini and Android XR into third-party applications.
■ What's at Stake
Google faces increasing competition in AI from OpenAI, Anthropic, and others. The Gemini announcements will signal the company's strategy for maintaining AI leadership. Meanwhile, the smart glasses reveal matters for Google's long-term hardware strategy as it competes with Meta and Apple in spatial computing.
I/O traditionally sets the tone for Android development for the following year. Announcements made today will influence how millions of developers approach their projects.
Refresh this page for live updates as announcements develop throughout the keynote.
Startups like Altur are deploying AI chatbots to handle debt collection calls, automating a process traditionally done by humans. Y Combinator has backed six debt collection and settlement startups over the past six years.
Following recent earthquakes, Venezuelan developers and citizens deployed AI-powered websites and apps to locate missing persons and coordinate disaster relief as government response lagged.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has created a dedicated AI office and committed to protecting Australian creators from copyright infringement by artificial intelligence companies. The government rejected plans to grant tech firms free access to Australian data.