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

Google is bringing AI superpowers to your smartphone camera, and it looks ridiculous

Add as a preferred source on Google
Google Astra on a phone.
Google

It seems AI assistants are antique, or that’s what Google wants you to believe, for we are in the era of AI agents — and Google I/O 2024 has quickly proven that. Say hello to Project Astra, a generative AI agent with vision, text, and speech capabilities, with a sprinkling of memory and spatial awareness capabilities in tow.

Think of it as eyes for your phone that can make sense of the world around you. Point it at a mathematical equation, and it will solve it. Pointing the camera at a cat? Astra will suggest an apt name for the feline meow-ster. Ask it where you left your earbuds, and if the camera sensor has seen them, it will say something like, “You left them on the sofa.”

Recommended Videos

Astra can make sense of code appearing on a screen, identify objects and explain what they do, identify buildings, and more. Think of it as Google Lens but for the entire world, and can make sense of most anything in front of the camera’s lens.

Unlike Google Assistant, you don’t need to prompt it. Just point the camera at anything, utter the audio query, and Astra will explain in a natural language response. Google says Project Astra will be rolled out via the Gemini app later this year.

An all-seeing AI agent?

Project Astra demonstration on a phone.
Google

If Project Astra sounds familiar, that’s because OpenAI demoed a similar feature for ChatGPT — powered by the new GPT-4o model — just a day ago. OpenAI’s tool is currently under the red-teaming phase for safety testing and will be released in a phased manner, starting with ChatGPT Plus subscribers.

Google won’t say whether Astra will have a price tag. But given the near spontaneity of responses, the kind of visual data crunching involved, and the generative chops required to offer a meaningful response, it’s unlikely Astra will be served as a free perk owing to the compute requirements.

The best example would be the Google One AI Premium subscription, which already hides some of the new Gemini-powered experiences behind a paywall. But so far, Astra looks like the most amazing AI innovation Google has showcased ever since it wowed the world with Duplex’s capabilities a few years ago.

Nadeem Sarwar
Nadeem is the Managing Editor at Digital Trends.
Google Photos on Android finally gives your custom stickers a home
A new dedicated Stickers folder in Collections saves every custom sticker you create, so you never have to hunt for them again.
Google Photos Stickers folder on phoneGoogle Photos Stickers folder on phone

After debuting a nifty sticker-creating feature on iOS last year, Google Photos extended it to Android users this February. The feature lets you quickly create stickers with a simple long-press gesture, making it incredibly easy to share custom stickers with friends and family. Now, Google is adding one more layer of polish to the experience: a dedicated folder that automatically stores every sticker you've ever made.

Where to find the Stickers folder

Read more
Leaked Pixel 11 wallpapers hint at what color options you’ll likely get to choose from
The full wallpaper collection for the Pixel 11, Pro, Pro XL, and Pro Fold has leaked, offering clues about the colorways Google may announce at launch.
Google Pixel 10 Pro in the official silicon case

The Pixel 11 series isn't due until August, but a steady stream of leaks has already revealed details ranging from design to specs across all four upcoming devices. The latest addition gives us a look at the wallpapers Google may ship with the lineup, and they offer a strong hint at the color options likely at launch.

A toned-down palette across the board

Read more
Got a missed call from an unknown number? Malwarebytes’ new free tool will tell you if it’s a scam
With $21 billion stolen from Americans last year through phone scams, a free no-friction reverse lookup removes the guesswork entirely.
Business Card, Paper, Text

Missed calls from unknown numbers used to be easy to ignore, but now they’re harder, especially since scammers spoof real local numbers and clone familiar voices with AI. Malwarebytes has launched a direct answer to that problem.

A free, standalone reverse phone lookup tool that tells you whether a number is safe, suspicious, or a known scam, so that you don’t call it back unnecessarily. It’s called Scam Number Check and it is available now at malwarebytes.com/scam-check/phone. The best part is that you don’t need an account or subscription to access it. 

Read more