This is a submission for the Google I/O Writing Challenge
I spent some time watching the Google I/O 2026 “What’s New in AI” session, and one small detail personally stood out to me.
One of the presenters was Paige Bailey. Years ago, I used to watch her GenAI workshops on Kaggle while learning AI on my own. Seeing her present at Google I/O felt like a reminder of how quickly this space has evolved.
But beyond the announcements themselves, I think the biggest message from Google I/O was this:
AI is no longer being treated as a standalone product.
It’s becoming ambient infrastructure.
AI is becoming ambient
What stood out to me most was how deeply AI is now integrated across Google’s ecosystem.
Search, Workspace, Android, Chrome, YouTube, developer tools — AI is quietly being embedded everywhere.
Not as a separate chatbot tab, but as an invisible layer sitting behind the products people already use every day.
AI is becoming ambient.
Multimodal AI is becoming the default
Another thing that stood out was how natural multimodal interaction now feels.
Text, voice, images, video, screen understanding, and real-time context are all starting to blend together into a single experience.
Instead of switching between different tools, the AI increasingly understands multiple forms of input at once.
That feels like a major UX shift.
The Shift Toward “Agentic” AI
Another word that repeatedly appeared during the presentations was “agentic.”
The industry is clearly moving away from AI that simply answers questions toward AI that can actually perform tasks, make decisions, and operate across tools.
That shift feels important.
The conversation is no longer:
“Can AI chat with you?”
Now it’s:
“Can AI do things for you?”
Google Search is long gone
One thing became very obvious during the demos:
The old version of Google Search is quietly disappearing.
Typing keywords and manually digging through links is slowly being replaced by AI-generated summaries, conversational search, and agents that help organize information for you.
Whether that change is good or bad is still open for debate, especially for creators and websites across the internet.
But the direction feels clear.
Comparing Google with OpenAI and Anthropic
What’s interesting is how differently each company seems to be approaching AI.
Google still feels strongest in consumer AI momentum and product experience.
It has built a strong reputation around reasoning quality and safety-focused systems.
But it may have the biggest advantage in ecosystem integration.
Google already owns platforms used by billions of people daily:
- Search
- Android
- YouTube
- Chrome
- Workspace
That means AI can spread across everyday life extremely fast.
And after watching Google I/O, it feels like that’s exactly where things are heading.