Android 17's 12 biggest new features, from Gemini doing your shopping to a panic button for doomscrolling

Android 17's 12 biggest new features, from Gemini doing your shopping to a panic button for doomscrolling
Android 17 isn't trying to sell you one thing, which is unusual. Google's second Android Show on Tuesday, a week before I/O, ran through features that touch almost every part of the phone: the homescreen, the camera, the dictation, the way you switch from an iPhone, the way you don't get scammed.Some of it is AI-led, some of it isn't, and a few of the smartest additions are the ones that won't show up in a demo reel. Most land first on the latest Galaxy and Pixel phones this summer, with watches, cars and Google's new Googlebook laptops following later in the year.Here are the 12 that count.

Tell Gemini to build a shopping cart from your notes app, and it will

Gemini can now stitch actions across apps from a single prompt. Long-press the power button over a grocery list in your notes app, ask it to build a delivery cart, done. See a travel brochure in a hotel lobby, snap a photo, ask Gemini to find a similar tour on Expedia for six people. It runs the legwork in the background, pings you with progress, and stops just before the final tap—you're still the one placing the order. The food and rideshare automation that shipped on the Galaxy S26 earlier this year now extends to many more apps, and Gemini can fall back to Chrome if the relevant app isn't installed.

Rambler listens to you ramble and writes what you meant

Rambler turns your ums and U-turns into a clean message
Gboard's dictation already works, but it faithfully transcribes every "um" and every U-turn. Rambler fixes that. Speak naturally, change your mind, get interrupted by your flatmate. It figures out what you actually meant. In Google's demo, a rep dictated a grocery list, then said "actually, no, I don't need bananas." The final message left bananas out. It also handles language switching mid-sentence, so blending English with Hindi in one message should hold up. Audio is processed in the cloud but isn't stored, Google says.

Talk a widget into existence with Create My Widget

Describe a widget out loud, get one on your homescreen
The trick of prompting a widget into existence isn't new. Nothing's Phone 3 has been doing it through its Essential App for a while now, and Google's Create My Widget brings the same idea to Pixel and Galaxy—with voice instead of typing. Three high-protein meal prep recipes that refresh every week? Ask. A cyclist's weather widget that only shows wind speed and rain? Ask. The widgets aren't tied to any specific app. They pull from wherever Gemini can reach, including your own data if you opt into Personal Intelligence. Product VP Mindy Brooks is calling it the first step in generative UI for Android. Wear OS watches and the new Googlebooks get it too.

Chrome stops being a browser and starts running errands

Gemini's Chrome auto browse, already familiar from desktop, comes to Android in late June. Ask it to reserve a parking spot through SpotHero using details from your ticket confirmation, and it will. Swap puppy food for dog food on a Chewy order? Same thing. It pauses for confirmation before any purchase or social post, which is the only thing standing between you and a regrettable midnight basket. The feature needs an AI Pro or Ultra subscription at launch, runs on Gemini 3.1, and rolls out in the US first on devices running Android 12 or higher.

Autofill can now dig your passport number out of an old email

Filling out fiddly fields on mobile is no one's favourite chore. Android 17 wires Autofill into Gemini's Personal Intelligence, so it can pull your passport number from an old email or your licence plate from a Drive photo and drop it into the right field. The whole connection is opt-in, and you can switch it off in settings whenever the idea gives you a chill.

Pause Point puts a 10-second speed bump before Reels

A breathing exercise stands between you and the doomscroll
Tag certain apps as "distracting" and Android adds a 10-second timer before it lets you in. The screen offers a breathing exercise, a session timer, a few favourite photos to flip through, or a suggested alternative like an audiobook. None of it physically stops you from opening Reels—but it forces a beat to ask why you're there. Turning Pause Point off requires a full phone restart, which is a clever bit of friction. Google says more digital wellbeing tools are due later this year.

Screen Reactions kills the green screen for good

Film yourself reacting to your screen, no third-party app required
If you've ever wanted to make one of those reaction videos with the talking head in the corner and the trending clip behind, Screen Reactions does it without a green screen or a third-party app. Record your selfie camera and your screen at the same time, and the front camera overlays as a cutout. A few taps, no editing tax. Pixel phones get it first this summer.

Instagram on Android finally stops looking worse than on iPhone

Google and Meta have patched up a long-standing gripe: Instagram captures looked worse on Android than on iPhone, and everyone knew it. Android 17 brings Ultra HDR capture and playback to the Instagram camera, built-in video stabilisation, and Night Sight integration. Google ran side-by-side tests using the Universal Video Quality model and says flagship Android uploads now match or beat the leading competitor.The Edits app picks up Android-exclusive tools too: Smart Enhance, which upscales blurry photos and videos on-device, and sound separation, which splits wind, music and voice into tracks you can mute or boost. Adobe Premiere is also coming to Android soon—with templates for YouTube Shorts.

4,000 emoji get a glow-up, and the ramen actually looks like ramen

Google has redrawn every emoji it ships. The new Noto 3D set adds depth, shading and a more sculpted look. The bowl of ramen Google showed off actually looks like it has noodles in it. They roll out across Gmail, Gboard, YouTube and the rest of Google's apps, starting on Pixel phones later this year. RIP blob emoji, again.

AirDrop opens up to Xiaomi, Oppo and friends

The cross-platform sharing trick Google built last year without Apple's help is opening up. Oppo, OnePlus, Vivo, Xiaomi and Honor phones get Quick Share to AirDrop compatibility later this year, joining Pixel and Galaxy. If your phone isn't on the list, Quick Share can now spit out a QR code that any iPhone can scan to pull a file from the cloud. The feature is also coming inside specific apps, starting with WhatsApp.

Apple and Google finally make the iOS-to-Android transfer painless

Switching from iPhone is wireless, and your homescreen comes too
Google and Apple have built a proper wireless transfer from iPhone to Android. Passwords, photos, messages, apps, contacts, eSIM and even your homescreen layout cross over. Apple shipped its side of the bridge in iOS 26.3—but you needed a compatible Android 17 phone to use it. Pixel and Galaxy get it first this year, with other brands following.

Spoofed calls die, OTPs hide, biometrics lock the lost phone

A spread of smaller upgrades rounds out the release. Android can now end calls from numbers spoofing your bank, but only if you have the bank's app installed and Google has partnered with it. Mark a phone as lost via Find Hub and you can now require biometric authentication to unlock it, so a stolen PIN no longer hands a thief your data or tracking settings. Android will also hide one-time passwords from most apps for three hours after they arrive, cutting off a common scam vector. Live Threat Detection has been expanded to flag more suspicious behaviour, and Chrome's safe browsing will scan APK downloads for known malware before they install.Google I/O kicks off on May 19. Given how much landed today, the keynote should pivot to smart glasses, more Googlebook detail, and whatever else Google has kept back.

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