- Reaction score
- 1,936
Google just unveiled Googlebooks, a new Gemini-first laptop category that fundamentally rethinks what’s possible from your PC — for better and worse.
For decades, personal computers weren’t smart devices. They were open-ended tools that gave you total control of how you worked with information presented to you. You installed whatever you wanted, deleted whatever you wanted, organized folders how you liked. It was a neutral, passive thing until you told it otherwise. There were no suggestions from the PC itself.
That model is starting to shift, and I’m having a hard time getting on board.
Google is now thrusting Googlebooks out onto the stage. They’re the new generation of AI-first laptops, powered by Android and ChromeOS. And it’s not just upgrades, either. It’s an entirely new philosophy. Instead of waiting for your input, they’re designed to predict your intent and suggest actions before you’ve finished a thought. It is Google’s computer acting on your behalf — not your computer under your control.
www.pcworld.com
For decades, personal computers weren’t smart devices. They were open-ended tools that gave you total control of how you worked with information presented to you. You installed whatever you wanted, deleted whatever you wanted, organized folders how you liked. It was a neutral, passive thing until you told it otherwise. There were no suggestions from the PC itself.
That model is starting to shift, and I’m having a hard time getting on board.
Google is now thrusting Googlebooks out onto the stage. They’re the new generation of AI-first laptops, powered by Android and ChromeOS. And it’s not just upgrades, either. It’s an entirely new philosophy. Instead of waiting for your input, they’re designed to predict your intent and suggest actions before you’ve finished a thought. It is Google’s computer acting on your behalf — not your computer under your control.
Googlebooks are the first anti-personal computers
Computers used to wait for your commands. Now AI-first machines (like the Googlebook) try to predict your intentions before you’ve fully fleshed them out.


