Earlier this year, Google unleashed its shiny new AI Mode on Search users in the US, and now it’s crossed the pond to the UK. If you’ve been keeping an eye on Google’s moves, you might’ve noticed their AI Overviews popping up here since last summer—those little AI-generated snippets at the top of your search results. But AI Mode? That’s a whole different beast. It’s Google’s attempt to make search feel more like a chat with a clever mate than a slog through a pile of links. Powered by their snazzy Gemini 2.5 model, it’s rolling out with big promises: more conversational answers, fewer clicks, and a knack for tackling tricky, multi-part questions.
What’s AI Mode all about?
Picture this: you’re planning a weekend in Edinburgh with your foodie friends who love music but also want some chill, off-the-beaten-path vibes. Normally, you’d type a few keywords into Google, hit enter, and wade through a dozen tabs to piece it all together. With AI Mode, you just click a tab (or fire up the Google app on your phone), type or say that whole messy question, and boom—it spits out a tidy, custom answer. No more playing detective across ten different websites.
Google says AI Mode is built for the kinds of questions we actually ask in real life—long-winded, specific, and sometimes a bit all over the place. It’s not just about keywords anymore; it’s about understanding what you’re after. You can even throw in a photo or use your voice if typing’s not your vibe. Under the hood, it’s running on a tweaked version of Gemini 2.5, Google’s latest AI brainbox, which lets it handle everything from “how do birds migrate?” to “compare these two laptops for gaming.”
How does it actually work?
Here’s where it gets geeky but cool. AI Mode uses something called a “query fan-out” trick. Basically, when you ask something complicated, it doesn’t just run one search and call it a day. It breaks your question into bite-sized chunks—like subtopics—then fires off multiple searches at once across different corners of the web. Say you ask, “What’s the best way to spend a rainy day in London with kids?” It might dig up family-friendly museums, indoor play spots, and rainy-day travel tips, all in one go. Then it stitches those bits together into a single, readable answer, tossing in some links if you want to dive deeper.
It’s a bit like having a super-smart assistant who can multitask without breaking a sweat. And because it’s conversational, you can follow up with stuff like “What about if we’re on a budget?” without starting from scratch. Oh, and that multimodal thing? You could snap a pic of a weird plant and ask what it is, or bark a question while you’re cooking dinner. Pretty slick, right?
Discover more from GadgetBond
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
