Google released the first Android 16 developer preview earlier this week and keen-eyed observers are already uncovering interesting tidbits, including one that hints about a much more useful future for Googleâs AI assistant. In Android Authority, Mishaal Rahman writes about a mysterious new API in Android 16 called âapp functions,â which appears to give Gemini Assistant agentic-like abilities to take action in apps. It sounds awfully similar to the upgraded âapp intentsâ Apple supports in iOS 18, and itâs exactly the kind of thing that could make AI assistants much more useful than they are in their current state.
A page on Googleâs developer site describes an app function as âa specific piece of functionality that an app offers to the system. These functionalities can be integrated into various system features.â Really clears things up. But Rahman points to a specific example buried in the documentation that sheds some more light. It details how an app developer could use app functions to expose certain actions to the system â in this case, ordering food. With this function available to Gemini, you might be able to place an order with your neighborhood Thai restaurant without having to open the DoorDash app. Kinda neat.
Appleâs working on a similar approach to a smarter assistant. One of its promises for the smarter Siri weâll supposedly get in iOS 18 is that it will be able to take action in apps for you. By updating its app intents framework, Apple has created a way for developers to expose âorder foodâ-type functions to Siri. According to rumors, we probably wonât see that update until spring of 2025, though.
âDoing things for youâ was kind of the whole promise of smart assistants from the beginning, but that hasnât started materializing until very recently. Gemini can access information in certain apps with your permission, but currently itâs mostly limited to searching things like Gmail and Google Maps. And Siriâs biggest update in iOS 18 so far added a ChatGPT extension so you can ask more complicated questions, but it still falls short on âtaking action.â Now, both platforms appear to be laying the groundwork for better assistants â and 2025 could be a very interesting year for AI on smartphones.
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