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Android 17 has a cool new trick to keep AI assistants from screaming in your ears

A new separate slider means Gemini won’t automatically get louder when you crank up music or video.

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Android 17 has a cool new trick to keep AI assistants from screaming in your ears, and it fixes a problem that becomes obvious the moment it happens. You turn up your music on headphones, then a voice reply hits at the same level and cuts through everything.

The latest beta changes that behavior. Assistant audio no longer rises and falls with your media, so increasing volume for a song or video won’t suddenly make Gemini or another assistant louder too.

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The effect is immediate in daily use, as voice replies stay at a steady level even when your media volume moves up and down throughout the day.

Android 17 Beta 3 adds a dedicated control for assistant audio, separating spoken responses from music and video playback so sound levels feel more predictable.

Assistant volume finally split

The update introduces an independent audio channel for assistants, which means voice responses follow their own setting instead of inheriting your media level.

That gives you more control in real situations. You can keep music loud during a workout while assistant replies stay comfortable, or raise assistant audio without touching anything else.

Earlier versions grouped everything together, so every adjustment to media carried over to spoken responses. That approach made sense when assistants were used occasionally, but it became harder to manage as they spread across more parts of the system.

This change focuses on how the phone feels to use. When sound behaves the way you expect, interruptions feel less disruptive.

Why this small fix matters

Assistants like Gemini now show up across search, messaging, and system features, so their behavior is harder to ignore when it feels off.

Media volume changes often depending on what you’re doing, but voice replies serve a different role. They’re short, functional, and easier to follow when they stay consistent.

Separating the two reduces sudden spikes in earbuds and awkward moments on speaker in quiet spaces. It also cuts down on how often you need to adjust settings during the day.

One detail still needs clarity. The beta shows the feature is present, but it’s not yet clear how easy the control is to find, which could affect how many people actually use it.

When you’ll get it

Right now, the feature is limited to Android 17 Beta 3, so only testers have access. There’s no confirmed timing for the final release, and no clear signal on whether older Android versions will get the same update.

If it carries into the stable build, it should arrive with Android 17 later this year, though rollout timing will depend on your device.

There’s also some uncertainty around how different assistants will handle the change, since behavior may vary depending on how each one integrates with the system.

Even so, this is the kind of update that improves everyday use in a noticeable way. If you rely on voice assistants with headphones or in quiet environments, you’ll likely feel the difference right away.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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