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

Google Meet’s AI note-taker now lets you customize your meeting notes and track decisions

Google Meet just made it easier to track the outcome of your meetings

Add as a preferred source on Google
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone
Google

If you have ever sat through a Google Meet call and later struggled to figure out what was actually decided, Google just made your life a little easier. The company has rolled out a meaningful upgrade to its “Take notes for me” feature, giving you more control over what gets captured and making it easier to track outcomes after the meeting wraps up.

Meeting notes just got a serious upgrade. 📝

You can now toggle specific sections (like Decisions or Next Steps) with Take notes for me in Meet. Plus, our new “Decisions” tracker helps you categorize outcomes like Aligned or Needs Further Discussion so nothing falls through the… pic.twitter.com/vuot3EBI97

— Google Workspace (@GoogleWorkspace) June 5, 2026

What’s new in “Take notes for me” feature?

The biggest addition here is the ability to toggle specific sections of your meeting notes on or off during the call itself. From the in-call menu, you can now choose which of the four sections you want included: Summary, Decisions, Next Steps, or Details. These toggles only apply to your current meeting and do not change your default settings for future calls.

Recommended Videos

The Summary section has also been tightened up. It is now designed to be more concise and scannable, so you can catch up on the key points of a meeting quickly without having to wade through a wall of text.

What is the new Decisions section and how can it help you?

The Decisions section is the most interesting part of this update. Rather than just listing what was discussed, it explicitly tracks the outcome of each decision with a status label. Those labels are Aligned, Needs Further Discussion, Disagreed, and Shelved.

So instead of scanning through a long notes doc to figure out where things landed, you get a clear snapshot of what was resolved and what still needs work. For now, the Decisions section is only available in English. We can expect more languages to be added in the future.

The update is available for Enterprise Standard and Plus, Business Standard and Plus, Frontline Plus, and Google AI Pro for Education subscribers, as well as Google AI Pro and Ultra subscribers.

Manisha Priyadarshini
Manisha Priyadarshini is a tech and entertainment writer with over nine years of editorial experience.
iOS 27 could change how your muscle memory swipes notifications on a phone
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Apple is reportedly preparing a potentially disruptive change to how notifications work in iOS 27 and iPadOS 27.

According to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman, incoming notifications now slide in from the left side of the screen in internal builds of the software. On its own, that might sound like a simple visual tweak. But it appears to be part of a much larger rethink of navigation gestures — one that could force longtime iPhone users to retrain years of muscle memory.

Read more
Smartphone screens are about to enter ridiculous refresh rate territory like gaming monitors
Camera island on OnePlus 15.

For years, smartphone makers have been locked in a race for brighter screens, thinner bezels, and sharper resolutions. Now, it looks like the next battleground could be refresh rates — and things are getting a little absurd.

A new leak suggests OnePlus is exploring a roadmap that could eventually bring 240Hz OLED displays to its flagship phones. That’s a number typically associated with competitive gaming monitors, not devices that spend most of their time scrolling through social media feeds and watching YouTube videos. According to tipster Digital Chat Station, OnePlus is considering a gradual jump through 165Hz and 185Hz panels before ultimately reaching 240Hz in future devices.

Read more
The next-gen Siri in iOS 27 might still ship as a beta experience in the early days
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Apple has spent the better part of a year trying to convince users that a smarter Siri is still on the way. Now, a new report suggests the company may be preparing expectations before the assistant finally arrives.

According to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman, Apple is internally referring to the revamped Siri as a “beta” and “preview” product, signaling that the company may not present the software as a finished experience when it launches later this year. If that sounds familiar, it’s because Apple followed a similar playbook with the original Siri, which carried the beta label for roughly two years after its debut.

Read more