Google Search used to be the place you went when you had a question. Now it is increasingly trying to become the place where you finish the task that question set in motion.
That distinction matters. This week, Google began rolling out connected apps inside AI Mode in the US, allowing users to link Instacart, Canva and YouTube Music directly to Search. Ask AI Mode to help plan a barbecue, and it can move the ingredients into an Instacart cart. Ask for flyer inspiration, and Canva templates can appear. Describe the right soundtrack for a party, and a playlist can be saved to YouTube Music. Google’s announcement makes it sound pleasantly mundane. In reality, it is another unusually large step in a product that seems to change shape every few months.
The most striking thing about AI Mode is not any single feature. It is the speed at which Google has moved from “search, but conversational” to something much closer to an operating layer for everyday decisions.
In March 2025, AI Mode was still an experimental Search Labs feature pitched at difficult, multi-part questions. Google described it as a way to combine Gemini’s reasoning with the company’s web index, real-time information and shopping data. It could break a question into several searches at once, then pull the findings into one response. That was already a substantial departure from the familiar list of blue links.
By May, it was rolling out more broadly in the US. Google was showing off Deep Search for research, a live camera-and-voice experience, personalised recommendations, generated charts and early agentic tools for tickets, reservations and appointments. The company was no longer just improving search results; it was testing how much of the work around a search it could absorb. Google itself framed the shift as moving “beyond information to intelligence.”
Now Search is reaching beyond Google’s own walls and into the apps people actually use to spend money, make things and listen to music.
That is why the Instacart, Canva and YouTube Music integrations are more consequential than they first appear. A grocery list, a design idea or a playlist is not particularly difficult to create. The friction lies in moving from intention to action: opening another app, searching again, rebuilding the list, making another decision. Google is trying to turn that messy handoff into a single conversation.
It is the classic promise of an AI assistant, only placed inside the most familiar digital starting point on the internet. Instead of asking a chatbot to help you and then doing the rest yourself, the pitch is that Search can carry your request into the next app with you.
There is an obvious convenience to that. Planning a dinner party is a surprisingly good example because it is made up of tiny, annoying transitions. You look up recipes, decide what to cook, make a list, order groceries, think about music, maybe create an invitation. No one task is hard, but collectively they are the sort of low-level coordination that makes an assistant feel useful rather than flashy.
Google has been building toward this for a while. Earlier this year, it introduced Personal Intelligence in AI Mode, letting eligible subscribers choose to connect Gmail and Google Photos so Search could use personal context in responses. The company says those connections are opt-in and can be turned off, and that the model does not train directly on Gmail inboxes or Photos libraries. Still, the direction was clear: Search was becoming less generic and more aware of the person using it.
Connected apps push that idea one level further. Personal information helps an assistant understand what you might want. App integrations give it a way to help make it happen.
The trade-off is that every useful new connection makes the product feel a little less like Search and a little more like a central control panel for your digital life. That is not necessarily bad. Most people are tired of app-hopping and form-filling. But it does raise the stakes around permissions, mistakes and trust.
A search engine showing you a weak result is frustrating. An assistant that misreads your preferences, builds the wrong shopping cart or reaches too eagerly into connected services feels more personal. Google is sensibly keeping the current actions bounded: the user still completes the Instacart checkout in the app or on the web, for instance. But the company has already signalled that more partner integrations are coming. It is easy to see how quickly the boundary between “suggesting” and “doing” could blur.
There is also a broader web question underneath all this. Google has repeatedly said AI Mode will include links and help people discover content from across the web. Yet its most compelling demonstrations increasingly involve resolving a user’s need within Google’s own interface, then passing them to a chosen service at the final moment. That is efficient for users. It may be less comforting for publishers, retailers and smaller sites that once depended on the old rhythm of search: query, click, browse, compare.
This is the tension at the heart of AI Mode’s evolution. Google wants to make Search feel less like a directory and more like a capable companion. But the more capable it becomes, the more it changes the internet’s basic habits — including who gets seen, who gets traffic and who gets to own the customer relationship.
The latest update is small enough to be easy to miss. Three apps, a US rollout, a handful of everyday examples. Yet it captures the real story of AI Mode: Google is no longer iterating on a search feature. It is rapidly assembling an assistant out of Search, Gemini, personal context, commerce and third-party services.
For users, that could mean fewer tabs, fewer repeated searches and a little less administrative drag in daily life. For everyone else, it means getting used to the idea that the search box is no longer just where a journey begins. Increasingly, Google wants it to be where the journey ends.
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