• Gemini is now built into Chrome to automate real clicks and form fills.
  • The feature can plan trips and navigate web apps while you focus on other work.
  • It performs real actions in the browser rather than only suggesting text or autofill.
  • Users should test automations and watch for privacy or accuracy issues before relying on them.

What the new Chrome automation does

Gemini inside Chrome moves beyond suggestions and autofill: it can carry out real clicks, complete forms and even plan trips or navigate web apps for you. The capability is designed to finish multi-step, repetitive web chores so you can focus on higher‑value work.

The short description from the announcement highlights three clear use cases: filling forms, handling actual click-through steps on web pages, and assisting with trip planning. That combination aims to remove the manual, time-consuming parts of many online tasks.

How it works — and why it feels different

Unlike a traditional autofill or a passive assistant that only offers text, this version of Gemini performs the actions itself inside Chrome. That means the assistant interacts with page elements — clicking buttons and typing into forms — to complete workflows.

Because these are “real” actions in the browser, the automation can handle multi-page tasks such as booking steps, multi-field forms, or app flows that previously required you to be present for every step. The result should be fewer interruptions and less context switching.

Why this matters for productivity

Everyday web chores can break concentration and eat into deep work. Automating repetitive tasks like signing up for services, inputting travel details, or navigating account pages could reclaim significant time for people who regularly perform those tasks.

There’s also a FOMO angle: teams or users who adopt reliable automations first can save hours each week and reduce human error in repetitive workflows. For people managing many bookings or forms, the feature could quickly become an essential timesaver.

Practical cautions and user controls

Automation that performs clicks and form fills raises obvious questions about accuracy, privacy, and control. Users should:

  • Test automations on low‑risk tasks before using them for purchases or sensitive transactions.
  • Review any data the assistant enters to avoid mistakes in addresses, dates, or payment fields.
  • Expect controls to enable or disable automations per site (best practice for safety).

Until you’ve confirmed a workflow behaves reliably, keep a manual check in the loop — especially for bookings or payments.

Bottom line

Gemini inside Chrome promises to turn time-consuming web chores into background work the browser completes for you. If it performs as described — executing real clicks and filling forms across pages — it could significantly reduce repetitive work. But as with any browser-level automation, users should test carefully and keep privacy and accuracy top of mind while adopting it.

Image Referance: https://www.geeky-gadgets.com/chrome-gemini-automation/