Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Chrome’s Gemini side panel now speaks your language

Google brings its AI browser assistant to India, New Zealand, and Canada with support for over 50 languages including Hindi, French, and Spanish.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Google Chrome
Google Chrome Unsplash

Google is finally bringing Chrome‘s Gemini side panel to India, New Zealand, and Canada starting today. The move adds support for more than 50 languages, including Hindi, French, and Spanish, which means millions of new users can now access the AI assistant on desktop, iOS, and Chromebook Plus devices without switching their browser language.

The assistant runs on Gemini 3.1 and lives in a side panel so you can keep browsing while asking for help. Need to summarize a dense article? Just ask. Wondering if you can make that recipe vegan? The AI can figure it out. It can even recall pages you visited earlier, which might finally let you close those tabs you have been hoarding for weeks.

Your other Google apps work inside the panel

The panel connects directly to Gmail, Maps, Calendar, and YouTube. That means you can schedule a meeting while reading an event page, pull location details when planning a trip, or ask questions about a YouTube video and get the key points pulled straight from the transcript.

The Gmail hook is particularly handy. You can compose and send emails without ever leaving your current tab. Just tell the panel what you want to say, and Gemini drafts the message. You get to edit before sending, so there is no risk of the AI going rogue with your words.

Gemini works across your open tabs and images

Here is where it gets interesting. Gemini can look at multiple tabs you have open and synthesize everything into something useful. Researching protein powders? The assistant can build a comparison table showing ingredients and prices across different sites. Planning a team offsite? It can gather suggestions from various pages and propose ice breakers.

The update also includes Nano Banana 2, an image tool built directly into Chrome. You can transform pictures on the fly by typing a prompt in the panel, no uploading or copy-pasting required. Want to see how a different couch looks in your living room? The tool handles it in the browser window.

Security and the road ahead

Google built these features with security layered in. The models are trained to recognize prompt injection attacks, and the system asks for confirmation before taking sensitive actions like sending emails. Automated red-teaming runs constantly to find weak spots, and Chrome’s auto-updates push fixes quickly when threats emerge.

Recommended Videos

This rollout covers India, New Zealand, and Canada for now, but Google plans to expand to more regions and languages throughout the year. If you are in one of these countries, the side panel should be live in your browser starting today.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
A simple coding mistake is exposing API keys across thousands of websites
Security gaps that are easier to miss than you think
Computer, Electronics, Laptop

After analyzing 10 million webpages, researchers have found thousands of websites accidentally exposing sensitive API credentials, including keys linked to major services like Amazon Web Services, Stripe, and OpenAI.

This is a serious issue because APIs act as the backbone of the apps we use today. They allow websites to connect to services like payments, cloud storage, and AI tools, but they rely on digital keys to stay secure. Once exposed, API keys can allow anyone to interact with those services with malicious intent.

Read more
AMD’s latest Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 pushes X3D to the limit
Dual 3D V-Cache, higher power, and a focus on enthusiast performance
AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 FEatured

AMD has unveiled what might be its most extreme desktop CPU yet, the Ryzen 9 9950X3D2. And it’s going all-in on one thing: cache.

https://twitter.com/jackhuynh/status/2037159705395491033?s=20

Read more
Next-gen AI breakthrough promises chatbots that can read the room better
Researchers are teaching AI chatbots to read between the lines
Generative AI

Have you ever asked a chatbot something and felt like it completely missed your point? You say something with a bit of nuance, and the AI misses the subtlety entirely. That is exactly the problem researchers are trying to solve.

Even though the emotional connection with AI can feel deeper than human conversation for many users, most AI systems today still treat a sentence as a single block of sentiment. If you mix praise and criticism, the nuance often gets lost.

Read more