Google seems to be expanding “Help me write” to Gmail on the web, enabling users to whip up or tweak emails using Gemini AI. Similar to the mobile version, users will see a prompt to use the feature when opening a black draft in Gmail.
Google’s “Help me write” feature is only available to users who subscribe to Google One AI Premium or have the Gemini add-on for Workspace. In addition to generating an email draft, “Help Me Write” can also provide suggestions on how to formalize, elaborate, or shorten a message.
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Google Add New Shortcut With “Help Me Write” Toolset
The company has also added a new shortcut for the “polish” option available within its “Help me write” toolset, which will appear on drafts with more than 12 words. For Gmail on the web, users can click the shortcut or type Ctrl + H to quickly refine an email.
On smartphones, the option will take the place of the existing “Refine my draft” shortcut. Instead of swiping to see options to polish, formalize, elaborate, or shorten an email, the app will automatically refine the message when the “polish” shortcut is swiped.
Users will then be able to tweak the message further with Google’s other AI editing tools. Google will gradually roll out “Help Me Write” on the web, along with its new “polish” shortcut.
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Google’s Upcoming Tool Will Help You Identify AI Images
Among all the generative AI-based features, the one feature that caught the most eyeballs was the ability to generate AI images. The feature enables users to generate and even edit an existing image that looks similar to real-life images using simple text prompts.
All of this has brought a huge issue – how to differentiate a real image from the AI-generated ones. With AI evolving at an alarming rate, things are becoming more difficult. Google might have a solution or at least the company is planning to offer a solution just for that.
As per a report from Android Authority, Google is working on a new feature within the Google Photos app that will show users information to help them identify AI images. The feature has been found within the code of an unreleased version of Google Photos app – version 7.3 – to be specific. The code suggests an upcoming AI identification feature within the app.
The feature is yet to be released, but whatever the code has revealed suggests that the Photos app will show credits for given photos with details like “Made with Google AI” in the credit tab which will be accessible via EXIF data of the image.