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Android Halo could be the missing link between Android and AI agents

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Sundar Pichai stands in front of a Google logo at Google I/O 2021.
This story is part of our complete Google I/O coverage
Updated less than 6 minutes ago

Google is trying to solve one of the biggest problems with AI agents on smartphones: you rarely know what they are doing. At Google I/O 2026, the company previewed a new Android feature called Android Halo, designed to keep users updated on their AI agent’s activity without constantly interrupting them.

So, instead of opening a separate app or waiting awkwardly for an AI task to finish, Android Halo places subtle status updates at the top of your phone’s screen. Whether your agent is working in the background, entering live interaction mode, or sending a message, Halo keeps that progress visible in real time. And honestly, this feels like a smart direction for AI on phones.

AI agents definitely need better communication

Right now, most AI assistants still feel disconnected from the operating system. You ask them to do something, and then… silence. There is often no clear indication of whether a task is still being processed, is partially complete, or has been forgotten entirely. Android Halo appears to fix that communication gap.

Google says the feature is designed to let users continue whatever they are doing while their AI agent works in the background. Instead of forcing attention shifts, Halo acts more like a lightweight live activity system for AI tasks. That could make AI agents feel like integrated parts of Android itself.

Gemini Spark will be front and center

Google confirmed that Android Halo will work with Gemini Spark and other supported AI agents when it launches later this year. On devices powered by Gemini Intelligence, Halo will also unlock additional features, though Google has not shared those details yet.

The bigger takeaway here is that Google clearly wants Android to evolve beyond apps and toward persistent AI-driven experiences. Android Halo may look like a small interface tweak, but it changes how people interact with AI throughout the day — and potentially makes these agents feel much more alive.

Shimul Sood
Shimul is a contributor at Digital Trends, with over five years of experience in the tech space.
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