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

Gemini in Google Calendar now helps you find the best meeting time for all attendees

Quickly identify meeting times that work for all participants without manually checking schedules.

Add as a preferred source on Google
An image showing Google Calendar's new Gemini-powered Suggested times feature.
Google

Google introduced a handy Gemini-powered feature in Gmail last year that helps you schedule meetings. Appropriately named Help me schedule, the feature scans your calendar and the email you’re replying to, then suggests meeting times that fit your schedule.

It lets you offer a few options with a click, and once the recipient picks a time, the event automatically appears in both calendars. It’s a small but useful feature that has already saved users from countless back-and-forth emails. Now, Google is bringing a similar scheduling feature to Google Calendar.

Recommended Videos

According to a recent post on the Workspace Updates blog, Gemini in Google Calendar can now help you quickly identify optimal meeting times when creating an event, as long as you have access to the attendees’ calendars. The new “Suggested times” feature scans everyone’s calendars and highlights the best time slots based on availability, working hours, and potential conflicts, eliminating the need to manually check schedules.

Google has also made rescheduling simpler. The company explains that if multiple attendees decline your invite, you’ll see a banner in the event showing a time when everyone is available, letting you update the invite with a single click.

Availability and limitations

The Suggested times feature is rolling out starting today to Workspace Business Standard and Plus, Enterprise Standard and Plus users, as well as accounts with the Google AI Pro for Education add-on. It will be enabled by default and is expected to reach all eligible users over the next few weeks.

A support page about the feature notes that Suggested times won’t be available while using the Google Calendar app for Android, iPhone, or iPad, for events longer than 8 hours, if there are too many attendees, or if the date range is in the past.

Pranob Mehrotra
Pranob is a seasoned tech journalist with over eight years of experience covering consumer technology. His work has been…
Microsoft is finally fixing the most annoying thing about Windows 11
Windows 11 Laptop

For many Windows users, the taskbar in Windows 11 has always felt strangely restrictive. Microsoft redesigned the interface with a cleaner, more modern look, but in the process removed several customization options people had been using for years. One of the biggest complaints? The inability to freely move the taskbar around the screen. Now, Microsoft finally seems ready to loosen things up.

The company has started testing a major overhaul of the taskbar and Start menu for Windows 11 Insiders in its Experimental channel. And honestly, this feels like Microsoft acknowledging that users want their PCs to feel personal again.

Read more
Asus has a sleek gaming mini PC to offer, but the price will make you pinch yourself
This tiny gaming powerhouse costs more than many full desktop setups
mini PC

Asus has launched the 2026 ROG NUC 16, a compact gaming PC built for people who want a powerful setup without making room for a full desktop tower. It can sit vertically or horizontally on a desk, and there is also a Moonlight White version for buyers who want something a little cleaner-looking. The problem is the price.

In China, the refreshed ROG NUC 16 is listed at a starting price of CNY 29,999, which is around $4,405. The white version costs CNY 31,999, or about $4,699. Asus has not confirmed global pricing or availability yet, but international prices are likely to be in the same range, or possibly go even higher.

Read more
This is the coolest laptop power bank I have ever seen, and I’d wait to see if it actually ships
Krafted Edge solves the most annoying thing about laptop power banks, the fact that they never fit anywhere, and then oversells itself with battery life claims that don't quite add up.
Computer, Electronics, Laptop

I’ve seen a lot of power banks, from the chunky rectangular bricks, round puck-shaped ones, and the flat ones that sit awkwardly next to a laptop in a bag, but none of them has ever looked like this.

The Krafted Edge is a 20,000 mAh power bank built into an aluminum slab measuring 27 x 19 x 1.28 cm, which is almost exactly the footprint of a closed laptop, and that’s intentional.

Read more