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AI wallpapers and desktop sync headline ChromeOS 138 features

Google’s ChromeOS update introduces workspace syncing, advanced AI wallpapers, and reading assist tools designed to boost productivity and personalization.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jul 25, 2025, 1:59 PM EDT
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ChromeOS freeform AI wallpapers
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When Google rolled out ChromeOS version 138 this week, it didn’t just bring the usual mix of security patches and bug fixes. Instead, the update introduces two headline-grabbing features that aim to change how you work—and play—across Chromebooks: a brand-new “Desk sync” system for seamless desktop handoffs, and an overhauled AI wallpaper experience for Chromebook Plus models that finally feels as flexible as you’ve always wanted.

If you’re someone who hops between a work-issued Chromebook in the office, a personal one at home, or perhaps a shared device on the factory floor, keeping track of where you left off across multiple machines can be a nightmare. ChromeOS 138’s Desk sync feature solves this by automatically mirroring your open windows, browser tabs—even cookies—between devices signed into the same profile.

Imagine drafting an email in the hospital’s nurse station, then grabbing the next available unit’s Chromebook and opening right back into that half-finished draft—without hunting through your history or re-entering any logins. Google sees use cases beyond the typical office worker: hospitality staff sharing tablets at a front desk, or manufacturing line supervisors rotating through shift-specific kiosks all stand to gain from swift, invisible sync.

Enabling Desk sync is up to you—no one’s forcing it on you by default. Just head to your ChromeOS settings, look for “Desk sync,” and flip it on. From that point on, your workspaces are fluid, not fixed. And because it’s integrated at the OS level, it feels native—unlike browser-only tab sync, this carries over to app windows and even session cookies, so you’re never logged out unexpectedly.

If you peeked at AI wallpapers when Google first introduced them back in May 2024, you might have found the selection charming but limited—you chose from a handful of styles and prompts, and you were largely locked into Google’s templates. With version 138, Chromebook Plus owners (those higher‑end models with beefier processors and extra NPU horsepower) finally get carte blanche.

Now, instead of filling in pre‑approved fields, you have a blank prompt box. Want a surreal neon forest under a double moon? Go for it. Craving an Art Deco cityscape in the rain? Type away. ChromeOS will spin up four distinct wallpaper candidates from your single freeform prompt, giving you a mini‑gallery to choose from. If you’d rather get the creative juices flowing instead of staring at an empty field, hit the “Inspire me” button—ChromeOS will auto-generate both prompts and previews, offering a buffet of ideas to tweak to your liking.

Under the hood, this leverages the same Gemini AI integration that powers other generative features on Chromebook Plus, ensuring artwork that’s surprisingly nuanced and vibrant. And because it runs locally on your device (no cloud‑round‑trips), you get near‑instantaneous results without risking your data. It’s the kind of personalization that makes your Chromebook feel uniquely yours—no two machines will ever look quite the same once everyone starts tinkering.

Beyond wallpapers, Chromebook Plus owners also inherit the brand‑new “Help me read” feature. If you’ve ever struggled through a jargon‑packed PDF or a dense academic article on your Chromebook, Help me read will auto‑summarize and rephrase technical text into more digestible language. It’s like having an on‑demand explainer editor built into your OS, perfect for students, researchers, or anyone who blinks twice at engineering whitepapers.

Meanwhile, Google Lens functionality has quietly expanded across all ChromeOS devices. You can now select text from images—screenshots, scanned documents, or web‑embedded photos—and paste it directly into your notes or emails. Searching on‑screen content is similarly simplified: highlight any bit of text or object in your current viewport, invoke Lens, and watch ChromeOS pull up relevant info without ever switching windows.

Small but meaningful bug fixes and accessibility tweaks round out the release. Screen readers are smoother, contrast settings respect your system preferences more reliably, and a handful of memory‑leak issues have been stamped out, translating into fewer unexpected reboots.

ChromeOS 138 has begun its gradual rollout to Stable Channel devices as of July 24, 2025. If your Chromebook isn’t updating automatically, head into Settings → About ChromeOS → Check for updates, and you should see version 138.x.x download within a day or two.

For IT administrators in enterprise or education environments, the update is already listed in Google’s release notes, complete with policy controls to enable or disable Desk sync across managed devices and detailed instructions on enabling AI wallpaper capabilities on Chromebook Plus fleets.

Whether you’re bouncing between workstations in a busy hospital or you simply crave fresh aesthetics on your high‑end Chromebook, ChromeOS 138 delivers two standout features that feel long‑overdue. With seamless device handoffs on one hand and truly open‑ended AI‑generated customization on the other, Google’s latest update doesn’t just tidy up—it reimagines what a desktop can be on a Chromebook.


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