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Your Google Home just got a lot better with the latest April update

Google's most meaningful smart home progress right now is happening in software, and the latest update is the clearest proof yet that Gemini is becoming the backbone of everything Google Home does.

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Google Home icon on home screen.
Simon Sage / Digital Trends

Although Google didn’t make a big announcement out of it, the latest Google Home update is perhaps one of the most significant ones in my recent memory. 

It covers Gemini for home, the camera interface, and the media controls, improvements that might feel incremental individually, but collectively, it points to a future for AI-infused Google Home. 

What has actually changed in the update?

The main highlight of the latest Google Home update is speed. Gemini for Home, which is currently in early access, can now respond to device commands up to 1.5 seconds faster. This covers lights, plugs, timers, alarms, and reminders in English, French, and Spanish. 

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While it might not sound dramatic on paper, in the context of a smart home, a 1.5-second lag is the difference between a responsive, futuristic setup and a website loading in 2009. Gemini also gets better at understanding context. It can now distinguish between a new command and a follow-up question and ignore background chatter during continued conversation. 

Regarding the camera, Google Home Premium subscribers do not get AI-generated timeline descriptions. This makes scanning through footage without watching every clip quite easy. Event descriptions are cleaner, camera search is much faster, and settings have been reorganized, so features like familiar face detection and Activity Zones are no longer buried inside menus. 

What about media controls?

Previously in limited rollout, the updated media control experience is now live for all users. It puts album artwork front and center when casting music or video to Google speakers, displays, and other Chromecast devices. 

Smart home users also get a quality-of-life fix. When a device goes offline due to an expired account link, the Google Home app now tells you exactly what has gone wrong and offers a one-tap relink option, instead of the tedious troubleshooting method. 

Apart from the camera timeline descriptions, Home Premium subscribers also get Account Hold, a feature that pauses subscriptions during payment failures and does not cancel them. This helps in preserving video history and AI features until the payment issue is resolved. 

Shikhar Mehrotra
For more than five years, Shikhar has consistently simplified developments in the field of consumer tech and presented them…
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