Google has launched an experimental AI-powered browser project called Disco, offering a first look at how the company may integrate advanced artificial intelligence tools into future web browsing experiences.
The project, released through Google Labs, is not positioned as a full consumer browser and is currently limited to users in the United States via a waitlist. Google describes Disco as a “discovery vehicle designed to test ideas for the future of the web,” as competition intensifies among companies developing AI-driven browsing tools.
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Disco’s first major feature, GenTabs, uses Google’s Gemini 3 model to analyze open tabs and user context, then generate interactive tools or custom web apps based on natural language prompts. Google says users can build and refine these tools without writing code, relying instead on conversational instructions.
The use cases highlighted by Google include familiar AI demonstrations such as travel planning, meal preparation and home projects. While the company has promoted Disco as a reimagining of how people navigate online information, it has not committed to developing the project into a standalone browser.
Google said ideas tested in Disco could eventually be incorporated into Chrome if they prove useful. The company added that the experiment will launch first on macOS, with Windows and Linux versions expected at a later date.
Source: Google
