Google's AI Mode Now Lets You Visualise Data with Gemini

Tableu and Datawrapper users must try this out once.

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Google's AI Mode Now Lets You Visualise Data with Gemini

Google’s experimental AI Mode no longer stops at text answers. Starting today, anyone enrolled in Search Labs in the United States will see live graphs when they ask finance questions such as “Compare the stock performance of blue-chip CPG companies in 2024.” The feature, powered by a tuned version of Gemini 2.5, parses the request, pulls real-time and historical market data, then draws an adjustable chart above the regular results.

Gemini does more than plot a line. Tap points on the graph to surface price details, dividend history, or a timeline filter. Type a follow-up like “Did any of these firms pay dividends?” and AI Mode keeps the conversation going without spinning up a new query. Google says the model “understands the intent” and decides when a visual answer beats an endless list of links.

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The capability is limited to stocks and mutual funds for now, but Google previewed the same tech for sports scores during I/O last month. Early testers must enable AI Mode in Labs, tucked behind the beaker icon on desktop and mobile. Google has not set a timetable for a full rollout or for expanding the charts to other data-heavy subjects.

This small addition hints at Google’s larger goal – to turn Search from a list of blue links into a direct answer engine. Visual finance snapshots could keep users inside Google longer, squeezing traffic at sites that publish basic stock comparisons. Publishers that dig deeper than raw numbers may still earn clicks, yet the bar just moved higher.

For now, the experiment lives behind the Labs switch. Wall Street watchers who flip it on get a faster path to context, and an early look at how AI Mode plans to rethink search results one chart at a time.

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