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Google Wants Students to Stop Staring and Start Poking. Gemini Gets Interactive Images for Learning.

The Curator profile image
by The Curator
Google Wants Students to Stop Staring and Start Poking. Gemini Gets Interactive Images for Learning.
Photo by Solen Feyissa / Unsplash

Google is trying to turn studying from a scroll-and-skim chore into something closer to hands-on exploration. The Gemini app has rolled out interactive images, a new feature that lets users tap their way through academic diagrams and unlock instant explanations as they go.

The idea is simple. Instead of passively looking at a chart of the digestive system or the structure of a cell, students can tap individual components to reveal definitions and deeper context in sliding panels. Each hotspot breaks down a concept in real time, turning a static illustration into a guided walkthrough.

Google says the update is meant to make learning more visual, dynamic, and accessible. The company frames it as a shift from passive consumption to active engagement, arguing that it nudges users to explore rather than memorise.

The tool is available directly within the Gemini app, and Google is positioning it as the foundation for richer, more interactive study material. If it works, the humble classroom diagram may finally catch up with the way people already learn online.

The Curator profile image
by The Curator

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