Google has officially integrated native "computer use" functionality directly into its flagship lightweight AI model, Gemini 3.5 Flash. The feature, which previously required developers to run a standalone, experimental Gemini 2.5 computer use model, is now fully embedded.
The update bridges the gap between text reasoning and active agent automation across browser, mobile, and desktop operating systems.
As reported by Investing.com, the capability is aimed directly at enterprise workflows.
It allows developers to build specialized AI agents that can look at digital user interfaces via screen captures, analyze layout architecture, and execute precise actions like clicking buttons, typing data, or scrolling through multi-step platforms.
The integration targets long-horizon tasks such as continuous software testing, bulk form filling, and knowledge work across standard corporate systems.
Early adopters including Salesforce, Shopify, and Ramp are already leveraging the capability for automated data workflows.
Recommended for You
Loading stories...
"The computer use tool allows developers to build agents that can see, reason and take action across browser, mobile and desktop environments," Google stated in the official announcement.
"The capability improves performance for long-horizon and enterprise automation tasks including continuous software testing."
Because giving an autonomous AI control over a live operating system presents severe digital security risks, Google has instituted a comprehensive defense-in-depth safety framework.
The model has undergone rigorous adversarial training to block indirect prompt injections—malicious instructions hidden on web pages that could hijack an active agent.
Enterprises can deploy two newly launched, optional safeguard layers that halt tasks automatically if a threat is flagged or demand explicit human confirmation before executing sensitive transactions.
#GoogleGemini #Gemini35Flash #AIAgents #ComputerUse #EnterpriseAutomation #TechNews #GoogleDeepMind #AIVision
Latest News
Loading...
Tags:
tech
