Google launches Pics, a new AI image generation app for Workspace that allows users to click on elements and leave notes to modify images, powered by Gemini and Nano Banana 2 models. It aims to simplify iterative AI image editing.
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<p class="has-text-align-none">Google <a href="https://blog.google/products-and-platforms/products/workspace/workspace-updates/">is launching</a> a new AI image generation app to Workspace that it's calling Pics, and it has a new feature to try and reduce the hassle of iterating on AI images: Instead of having to write an entire prompt just to change one small aspect of an image, you'll be able to click on what you want to change and leave a note about what you want to see, almost like leaving a comment in a Google Doc.</p>
<p class="has-text-align-none">Pics is powered by a mix of Gemini and Google's Nano Banana 2<strong> </strong>image model. In a demo shown to reporters, a Google employee working on an invite for a child's birthday party wanted to tweak individual parts of the invite. She clicked on an image of …</p>
<p><a href="https://www.theverge.com/tech/933026/google-pics-app-workspace-ai-images-io-2026">Read the full story at The Verge.</a></p>
# Google Pics is a new app that tries to fix AI image editing
Source: [https://www.theverge.com/tech/933026/google-pics-app-workspace-ai-images-io-2026](https://www.theverge.com/tech/933026/google-pics-app-workspace-ai-images-io-2026)
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Jay Peters
is a senior reporter covering technology, gaming, and more\. He joined The Verge in 2019 after nearly two years at Techmeme\.
Google[is launching](https://blog.google/products-and-platforms/products/workspace/workspace-updates/)a new AI image generation app to Workspace that it’s calling Pics, and it has a new feature to try and reduce the hassle of iterating on AI images: Instead of having to write an entire prompt just to change one small aspect of an image, you’ll be able to click on what you want to change and leave a note about what you want to see, almost like leaving a comment in a Google Doc\.
Pics is powered by a mix of Gemini and Google’s Nano Banana 2 image model\. In a demo shown to reporters, a Google employee working on an invite for a child’s birthday party wanted to tweak individual parts of the invite\. She clicked on an image of a cat, and then a little pop\-up showed up where she left a note to change the cat image to one of a dog\. She also clicked on the address shown on the card to make a direct tweak to what that text should say, and then asked Pics to make the changes\. After a beat, the image was indeed updated — though in the specific demo example, the new “dog” still heavily resembled a cat\.
Pics is rolling out initially as its own app on the web, first for what Google calls “trusted testers” and then later this summer for subscribers to Google’s AI Ultra plan\. The plan, down the line, is to eventually incorporate Pics right into other Workspace apps so that users can make and edit images without leaving the app that they’re working from\.
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- Jay Peters
Google announced Pics, a new AI-powered design and image-generation app for Google Workspace, directly competing with Canva and Anthropic's Claude Design. The app, powered by Nano Banana 2 and Gemini, allows users to generate and easily edit visuals through text prompts or direct manipulation.
Google DeepMind has released an upgraded image editing model for the Gemini app that maintains consistent likeness when editing photos of people and pets. The new model, called Nano Banana, is top-rated and enables features like outfit changes, photo blending, and style transfer while preserving character consistency.
Google has updated the Gemini app to use Personal Intelligence and Nano Banana 2, allowing users to generate personalized images using their Google Photos library without needing long prompts.
Google announces new AI-powered features for Workspace including voice capabilities in Gmail, Docs, and Keep, an image creation and editing tool called Google Pics, updates to AI Inbox, and a personal AI agent Gemini Spark. These features are rolling out to Google AI subscribers and Workspace business customers.
Google is integrating AI image verification into the Gemini app, allowing users to check if images were generated or edited by Google AI using the SynthID digital watermark.