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    Google begins the Gemini for Home rollout, here’s how you can get early access

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    What’s happened? Google has begun rolling out Gemini for Home to users who enrolled in Early Access. The update adds Ask Home, a natural language search for devices and video history inside the Google Home app. Cameras and doorbells are first, with speakers and smart displays to follow.

    • Rollout began October 1 for cameras and doorbells in the US, Canada, the UK, Australia, New Zealand, and Ireland.
    • Speakers and smart displays are set to receive updates later this month in the US, with additional countries planned in early 2026.
    • Early Access is separate from Google Home’s public preview, so you must enroll again even if you’re already in that program.
    • Google says Gemini will replace Google Assistant on speakers and smart displays.

    This is important because: The shift positions Gemini as the default assistant for Google’s smart home devices. That affects daily routines, voice commands, and how alerts are delivered.

    • Ask Home centralizes device queries and video lookups in plain language, reducing app-diving and guesswork.
    • A single assistant across speakers and displays should smooth out odd inconsistencies that crop up between devices.
    • Features like Gemini Live, AI-powered Notifications, Home Brief, searching your video history, and creating automations with Ask Home sit behind a Google Home Premium subscription.
    • Plans start at $10 a month and are also included with Google AI Pro and Ultra subscriptions at no extra cost.
    • Rollout is staggered, so features may show up in phases.

    Why should I care? If you use Google Home, this changes how you interact with cameras, doorbells, and later, speakers and displays. You can also opt in now.

    • You can enroll from the app, test the new queries, and see if it helps with your daily tasks and chores.
    • Premium is optional, but it unlocks better notifications, Home Brief, deeper video search, and automation via Ask Home.
    • Public preview status doesn’t grant access by default, so you’ll need to enroll separately.

    Okay, so what’s next? Enroll now and wait for the updates. According to Google, features will land in stages. Since this is Early Access, expect some hiccups and some more fine-tuning.

    • To get into Early Access, updated the Google Home app on your phone to 4.0 or newer.
    • Tap Settings in the nav bar at the bottom of the app, scroll down and tap Early access. From there, follow the on-screen instructions to sign up.

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