AI review series • Google-native multimodal AI & web-acting agents

Gemini is Google’s AI layer for search, workspace, Android, and cloud.

Gemini’s strategic advantage is distribution. It is designed to live across Google Search, Workspace, Android, Chrome, and Google Cloud, making it a broad AI layer for productivity, discovery, and multimodal work. Gemini Agent now adds autonomous, action-taking capability — browsing, filling forms, and completing multi-step tasks — folding in technology from Google’s discontinued Project Mariner experiment.

In-depth review

What Gemini does well — and where caution is required.

Strength

Deep integration potential across Gmail, Docs, Sheets, Slides, Drive, Android, and Search.

Strength

Gemini Agent can take autonomous action on the web — navigating sites, filling forms, and completing tasks like bookings or research — alongside strong multimodal image, video, and audio capability.

Strength

Enterprise path through Google Cloud, Workspace administration, and Gemini Enterprise (formerly Agentspace), including an open Agent2Agent protocol for cross-platform agent coordination.

Risk / limitation

Product naming and feature availability can be confusing across tiers and regions, and standalone experiments like Project Mariner have already been folded into other products.

Risk / limitation

Results may vary significantly between app, Workspace, and developer environments.

Risk / limitation

Enterprise controls and data-handling configuration must be reviewed carefully, especially as agents take real actions.

Graphics & stats

Gemini adoption and capability signals.

Google-scaledistribution across Search, Workspace, Android, and Cloud.
Gemini Agentweb-acting agent absorbing Project Mariner’s autonomous browsing technology.
Gemini Enterpriseunified enterprise agent platform with an open Agent2Agent (A2A) protocol.

Capability profile

This chart provides a practical, directional view of where Gemini is strongest based on its product positioning and common workflows.

Workspace
High
Search
High
Agents
Strong
Coding
Strong

Typical work mix

Gemini is strongest when used with a defined workflow, clear source material, and human validation.

Productivity and workflow support Research, writing, or technical work Learning and exploration Other specialized uses
Business and personal impact

Where Gemini is most useful right now.

Use CaseValueRecommended Control
Workspace productivityDrafts emails, documents, slides, and spreadsheet insights.Confirm sharing and data settings.
Web task automationGemini Agent navigates sites and completes multi-step tasks like research and bookings.Review actions before they’re finalized.
Search assistanceBlends AI summaries with web discovery.Verify cited sources.
Cloud developmentSupports AI development on Google Cloud, including multi-agent orchestration via A2A.Validate architecture and cost.
Multimodal analysisWorks across files, images, and media.Check source fidelity.
1-year projection

Where Gemini is likely to be by mid-2027.

Projection

By mid-2027, Gemini is likely to be more deeply embedded into Google’s consumer and enterprise stack, with Gemini Agent and Gemini Enterprise maturing into a default action-taking assistant for users already standardized on Google services.

Near-term product direction: stronger reasoning, faster responses, better tool use, and more reliable task execution.

Business adoption: more organizations will standardize approved AI workflows, governance, and security controls.

User behavior: AI will continue moving from occasional novelty to daily productivity layer.

Risk direction: governance, privacy, accuracy, and provenance will become more important as usage expands.

References

Sources used for this review.

  1. Google Gemini product announcements.
  2. Google Workspace AI, Gemini Agent, and Gemini Enterprise documentation.
  3. Google Cloud Vertex AI, Gemini model documentation, and Agent2Agent (A2A) protocol materials.

Last updated: June 30, 2026

Author: Alan McLaughlin

Alan McLaughlin Review Series