Google Magic Pointer Uses 3 Gemini Chips, Activates With Meta+g or Cursor Wiggle
Updated
Updated · Chrome Unboxed · Jul 15
Google Magic Pointer Uses 3 Gemini Chips, Activates With Meta+g or Cursor Wiggle
2 articles · Updated · Chrome Unboxed · Jul 15
Summary
Android Authority’s teardown shows Magic Pointer runs on Gemini system prompts rather than low-level custom logic, powering Google’s upcoming AI cursor for Googlebook.
Meta+g launches the tool, while a cursor-wiggle gesture offers a trackpad alternative; code strings also point to sensitivity controls and an option to disable wiggle activation.
Three suggestion chips appear when users highlight part of the screen, with Gemini mapping requests into four intent buckets: understand, transform, ideate and execute.
45 characters is the cap for each chip, and the prompts bar generic filler, unsupported third-party actions and simple app-routing suggestions, while adding safety rules such as gender-neutral pronouns for photo analysis.
The teardown offers one of the clearest looks yet at how Google is using prompt engineering to differentiate its Googlebook desktop experience ahead of a fall launch.