Chipping away at the Apple-native stronghold is never easy; dedicated Mac addicts often harbor a curious proclivity for Mail and Safari, sometimes forgetting that they still use Google Search, Maps, and YouTube, as well as Google Workspace for Docs, Sheets, and Slides.
Aiming to add an extra layer of Google-centricity to the Mac ecosystem, Google confirmed on Wednesday that it has released the Gemini app for macOS. It’s the last of the AI “Big Three” to arrive on Mac. (OpenAI and Anthropic already have native Mac apps.)
A downloadable Apple macOS app in its own right, Windows users have been able to use the Google App for Desktop service with its integrated AI mode since April of this year. Given the presence of Microsoft Copilot for Windows users, the number of eager AI services waiting in the wings is truly mushrooming.
“With the new native desktop experience, users can share anything on their screen with Gemini to get help with exactly what they’re looking at, including local files.” – Gemini App product manager at Google.
Brainstorming on the fly
Google says that users can access Gemini from any screen (inside any app) on their desktop to clarify a topic, recall a formula, or “brainstorm on the fly”, all without opening a tab. Michael Friedman, group product manager for Gemini App at Google, says the service is “a native desktop experience, just a keyboard shortcut away.” He also clarifies more of how it works.
“With our new native desktop experience, you can share anything on your screen with Gemini to get help with exactly what you’re looking at, including local files. If you’re reviewing a complex chart, you can share your window and ask, ‘What are the three biggest takeaways here?’ to get an instant summary,” writes Friedman, on his company’s Gemini Google Mac page.
Essentially, Google is playing to convenience and usability, knowing that moving between one (browser, spreadsheet, text document, or other) window and the gemini.google.com/app home page can be a clunky experience. The new macOS app lets users bring up Gemini from anywhere with the Option + Space shortcut.
“Whether you’re drafting a market report and need to verify a date or building a budget in a spreadsheet and need the right formula, you can get an answer and get right back to work,” enthused Friedman, also pointing out that Mac owners can use the app to generate images with Nano Banana or videos with Veo, the search and cloud company’s generative video model.
Spotlight déjà vu for Google?
This new app aligns with a template that we’ve seen before. Apple introduced Spotlight back in 2005 as a means of searching and navigating between applications, web search, and local storage file search. Spotlight’s service challenges across its iterations are somewhat reminiscent of those faced by the Gemini app for macOS.
As highlighted in PC World in April of this year by Mark Hachman, the Windows Google App for Desktop can access Google Drive, but isn’t as sharp with Google Photos or non-Google services such as Microsoft OneDrive. Whether services of this kind find themselves more narrowly channeled than users might prefer by dint of their original DNA remains to be seen.
Regardless, for now, Google’s Friedman says that this first release is “just the beginning” and that it will serve as the foundation for a more personal, proactive, and powerful desktop assistant services from Google inside the macOS universe.
Sign in anywhere, almost
The native macOS app is available to all Gemini users at no cost. Users can access the Gemini app for macOS across desktop, web, and mobile from the same single Google account as long as they are securely signed in on all devices.
Gemini can be used around the world on existing Android, Windows, Linux, and the Gemini app for macOS. Global usage exceptions here include mainland China and Hong Kong with their access restrictions, and perhaps more obviously, Russia, North Korea, Iran, Cuba, and Syria.
Windows or Linux desktop users using Oracle VirtualBox or any legacy reworkings of a Hackintosh approach will be out of luck; the Gemini app for macOS requires macOS Sequoia (15.0) or later and runs exclusively on Apple Silicon.
Google, that “search” company, right?
For a company that has built its reputation on a foundation of effective search across the web and its browser-based application suite (with Gmail particularly lauded for its ability to archive and find), putting Gemini AI search intelligence on every possible device platform makes logical sense.
The company has also famously experienced project stagnation and cessation over the years, so it will want to bring Gemini into the Apple universe with ubiquity, sensitivity, and a focus on utility. Apple users might like shiny devices, but they will demand efficient AI functionality for this launch to stick.
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