You know how annoying it is to click multiple edits on a photo? What’s that? It’s actually pretty easy to do. Well, Google says otherwise and has a solution for you: conversational editing, a feature that lets you tell Google your requested edits, rather than have to make them yourself.
Google first introduced conversational editing to Pixel 10 phones, but the company is now rolling it out to Android users in the US. It should be available for any adults who have their Google account set to English, have Face Groups turned on and location estimates enabled.
To use conversational editing, first click “help me edit” in the editor. Then you can say exactly what edits you want either using your voice or text. The feature uses “advanced Gemini capabilities” to make the changes. You can do things like edit strangers out of the background, lighten the colors or get rid of a glare. It will show you the original and updated photos side-by-side to compare.
The post Google Photos’ conversational editing is rolling out to Android users first appeared on TechToday.
This post originally appeared on TechToday.