Starting this October, Google is replacing Google Assistant on its Nest smart speakers and displays with a new AI assistant called Gemini for Home, offering both free and paid tiers; it promises more natural language understanding, deeper contextual reasoning, tighter integration with Nest devices, and continuous conversational capability via Gemini Live—though support for some older Assistant features has already been phased out, and ongoing reliability and hardware concerns have prompted apologies and assurances of improvements from Google.
Sources: Tom’s Guide, Google Blog, The Verge
Key Takeaways
– Natural-language, context-aware control: Gemini for Home enables more nuanced and flexible commands—like controlling lights in specific rooms or crafting complex requests—beyond what Google Assistant could handle.
– Conversational depth via Gemini Live: Users can engage in ongoing, uninterrupted back-and-forth dialogue with their assistant, including help with cooking, troubleshooting, planning, and more.
– Transition pains and hardware lag: As Google phases out Assistant, some features (photo sharing, remote access, routines) have disappeared; meanwhile, users report reliability problems, and the Nest hardware lineup hasn’t seen major updates since 2021.
In-Depth
Google’s new Gemini for Home marks the most significant upgrade to its smart-home assistant since the original Google Assistant. Launching in October via early access, this AI-powered assistant aims to elevate how you talk to your devices—no more rigid voice commands. Instead, you’ll speak naturally, making requests like “turn off every light except in the bedroom” or “what ingredients do I need for lasagna?” Gemini will handle it gracefully, combining smart-home control with deep AI reasoning.
A key part of the upgrade is Gemini Live, enabling more conversational, uninterrupted interaction—so you don’t have to re-invoke the assistant repeatedly while cooking, brainstorming ideas, or troubleshooting. Google is also promising broader integration with Nest devices, meaning Gemini can draw on video doorbells and thermostats to answer more complex prompts.
That said, these improvements come amid growing user frustration. Several Assistant features—like photo sharing, remote access via Bluetooth/AUX, and some automation routines—have already disappeared during the transition. Plus, many users report that Google Home devices have been acting less reliably lately. Google has issued a public apology and pledged “major improvements” this fall. Adding to the urgency, the Nest hardware lineup shows its age—without notable updates since 2021—and will likely need refreshing to fully showcase Gemini’s capabilities. Still, if it delivers on its promises, Gemini for Home could reset expectations for intelligent, hands-free living without losing your patience in the process.

