Google Debuts Android ‘Googlebook’ Laptop Platform, Reentering Hot Market

Alphabet Inc.’s Google introduced a new high-end laptop segment called "Googlebook" that will run Android and prominently showcase Gemini artificial intelligence. Hardware partners Dell Technologies Inc., Lenovo Group Ltd. and HP Inc. will debut models built on the platform in the coming months.

The effort, announced on Tuesday in addition to a series of upcoming Android 17 updates, marks a fresh push by Google into the laptop segment and lets the company integrate key Gemini features into the core operating system, potentially offering more consumer-facing AI features than Windows and Mac notebooks.

Google is framing the new laptops as a convergence of Android and ChromeOS, the software that underpins affordable Chromebook devices. Since their introduction 15 years ago, Chromebooks have found success in education and with consumers whose basic computing needs can be satisfied on a web browser.

But the new systems will offer significantly better performance and quality hardware than Chromebooks. While individual machine designs will vary based on manufacturer, all Googlebooks will include a signature “Glowbar” that illuminates when the laptops are powered on.

Google and its partners are not alone in targeting an in-between laptop segment that aims to offer more than Chromebooks or the cheapest Windows PCs. Apple Inc. earlier this year debuted the $599 MacBook Neo, which helped fuel a roughly 6% quarterly pickup in Mac sales.

The search giant said it plans to share more details about the effort later this year, when partners will begin unveiling their respective products. Asustek Computer Inc., better known as ASUS, and Acer have also signed on to release Googlebook hardware.