If you mostly use AI as a chatbot, this launch is easy to overread. The headline is 11 demos, but the useful takeaway is 3 moves: conversational editing, sub-agents that act like helper bots, and on-the-fly UI. That matters more than a bigger feature list. [C001][C002]
You saw "11 demos of Gemini Omni and Gemini 3.5 in action" and probably had the same reaction: do I need to track all of this, or is it just launch noise? If you judge by the demo count, you can waste time, budget, and attention on the surface. [C001]
My read is smaller: these demos cash out as 3 moves, conversational editing, sub-agents, and on-the-fly UI. [C002] In plain English: revise by talking instead of restarting, hand long tasks to a helper, and get a lightweight tool made on the spot.
The Gemini Omni examples keep returning to one pattern: keep editing the same video by talking to it. The important shift is not "AI can make video." It is "you do not have to start over every time you want a change." That is a workflow change, not just a flashy demo.
Gemini 3.5 Flash is framed like a helper bot that splits a long job into smaller jobs, then checks the work. Search is framed like a tool maker that can generate dashboards, trackers, and mini apps. That matters more than a slightly smarter chat reply.
A product update is worth reading only if it changes your next move, not if it pads the feature count. My move: do not memorize all 11 demos. Watch for those 3 behaviors instead. Boundary: this is based only on Google's May 29, 2026 demo pages and Search update pages, with no hands-on run. Share if useful.