Have AI Do It

Have AI Do It

We translate 'Tech Velocity' into 'Everyday Utility.'

✉️ Editor's Note

Today marks a watershed moment in how we interact with the web. Google's "Auto Browse" isn't just another feature—it's the beginning of hands-free internet navigation where AI agents handle the tedious parts of online life. This shift from "you browse" to "AI browses for you" will fundamentally change how we shop, research, and manage our digital lives. Stick around for our Rabbit Hole section where we unpack what this really means for your privacy and productivity.

— Sarah Chen, Editor


🚀 Headlines & Launches

Google begins rolling out Chrome's "Auto Browse" AI agent today (4 minute read)

Google is launching its "Auto Browse" AI agent in Chrome today, a feature that can autonomously perform multi-step online tasks like booking flights, researching products, and managing subscriptions. Available exclusively to Google AI Pro and AI Ultra subscribers, this marks a significant shift toward hands-free web browsing where AI agents handle tedious online workflows while you maintain oversight. The agent works by understanding natural language requests, breaking them down into steps, and executing them across websites—imagine telling Chrome "find me the best flight to Paris under $800 next month" and watching it research options, compare prices, and even fill out booking forms. This represents Google's most ambitious push yet into agentic AI that doesn't just answer questions but takes action on your behalf.

Google adds Gemini AI-powered 'auto browse' to Chrome (3 minute read)

Google's new auto browse feature in Chrome leverages Gemini AI to automate complex online tasks like appointment booking, product research, and form filling, making it easier for users to complete multi-step workflows without manual intervention. The system can navigate between websites, extract relevant information, and even make decisions based on your preferences—for example, researching multiple hotel options and selecting the best one based on your past travel patterns. This integration represents a major step toward making AI not just a conversational tool but an active assistant that can accomplish real-world tasks across the web. The feature is rolling out gradually and requires users to have a Google AI Pro or AI Ultra subscription, positioning it as a premium productivity enhancement.

🛠️ Tools & Tutorials

Curated by Alex Torres Amazon's new AI shopping tool tells you why you should buy a recommended product (3 minute read)

Amazon has launched "Help me decide," an AI shopping assistant that provides tailored product recommendations by analyzing your browsing history and explaining why specific items match your needs. The tool goes beyond simple suggestions by providing detailed reasoning—it might tell you "This laptop has the exact processor you've been researching" or "These headphones have the noise cancellation features you looked at last week." To use it, simply click the "Help me decide" button on product pages or search results, and the AI will compare options based on your specific criteria and past behavior. This represents a significant upgrade from Amazon's previous recommendation engine, moving from "you might like this" to "here's exactly why this fits what you're looking for," helping shoppers make more confident purchasing decisions.

📰 News & Analysis

By Marcus Rivera Personal Intelligence: Connecting Gemini to Google apps (4 minute read)

Google is introducing Personal Intelligence, a beta feature that connects Gemini AI to your Google apps including Gmail, Photos, YouTube, and Search to provide personalized assistance based on your data. This represents a major shift toward context-aware AI that understands your personal history—imagine asking "find that restaurant my friend recommended last month" and having Gemini search through your Gmail conversations to locate it. The system can analyze your photos to help plan trips based on past vacations, suggest YouTube videos related to your recent searches, or summarize important emails you might have missed. While this promises more relevant and helpful AI interactions, it also raises important questions about data privacy and how much personal information users are willing to share with AI systems to get truly personalized assistance.

🐇 Down the Rabbit Hole

Google begins rolling out Chrome's "Auto Browse" AI agent today (6 minute read)

> TL;DR: Auto Browse represents the beginning of agentic AI that takes action on your behalf—start experimenting with simple tasks today, but maintain oversight and understand the privacy trade-offs.

What it actually means: This isn't just another browser feature—it's the foundation for a new paradigm where AI doesn't just assist you but acts as your digital proxy. Auto Browse can navigate complex workflows across multiple websites, make decisions based on your preferences, and complete tasks that previously required hours of manual effort. Think of it as hiring a personal assistant who works at machine speed and never gets tired, but one that's learning from every action it takes on your behalf. The catch: The subscription requirement (AI Pro or AI Ultra) creates a tiered internet experience where premium features are gated behind paywalls. More importantly, you're granting an AI agent permission to act on your behalf across websites—this means sharing login credentials, payment information, and personal preferences with Google's systems. There's also the "black box" problem: when an AI books the wrong flight or makes a purchasing error, who's responsible? The fine print likely absolves Google of liability for mistakes made by the agent. Who wins, who loses: Google wins by locking users deeper into its ecosystem and creating new subscription revenue streams. Busy professionals win by reclaiming hours spent on tedious online tasks. Traditional comparison shopping sites and travel aggregators lose as AI agents bypass their interfaces entirely. Small businesses that rely on manual processes may struggle as AI-driven automation becomes the norm. Your move: Start small—try Auto Browse with low-stakes tasks like researching products or comparing prices before trusting it with important bookings or purchases. Review your Google privacy settings to understand what data the agent can access, and consider using a separate payment method for AI-assisted purchases. Most importantly, maintain human oversight: the AI is a tool, not a replacement for your judgment. Set clear parameters ("book flights under $500" not just "find me a flight") and verify results before finalizing any important transactions.

⚡ Staff Picks

Quick hits from the team — stories worth your time

  • The AI That Could Replace Customer Service Jobs (4 min) - A new AI system from Anthropic can handle 85% of customer service queries without human intervention, raising questions about the future of call center employment.
  • How AI is Revolutionizing Medical Diagnosis (5 min) - Stanford researchers have developed an AI that can diagnose rare diseases from medical images with 94% accuracy, potentially catching conditions doctors might miss.
  • The Dark Side of AI Personalization (3 min) - An investigation reveals how hyper-personalized AI recommendations can create filter bubbles and reinforce biases, limiting exposure to diverse perspectives.

See you tomorrow, The Have AI Do It Team Sarah, Marcus, Alex & the crew