Smart cameras can confuse motion with importance. A swaying tree branch? Alert. A stray cat walking across the driveway? Alert. Someone’s shadow moving at the wrong angle? Alert.
Fortunately, that’s starting to change. In May 2026, Google added a feature that makes security cameras more useful in real-world situations.
With Gemini’s scene understanding plugged into automations, Google Home can now trigger routines based on what the camera sees, which changes a lot in what a smart home can do.
Google smart home products
Trivia challenge
From Nest thermostats to Google TV — find out how much you really know about Google’s connected home ecosystem.
NestGoogle HomeChromecastSmart DisplaysHistory
In what year did Google acquire Nest Labs, the smart home company founded by former Apple engineers?
Correct! Google acquired Nest Labs in January 2014 for approximately $3.2 billion. The deal was one of Google’s largest acquisitions at the time and signaled its serious ambitions in the smart home space.
Not quite. Google acquired Nest Labs in January 2014 for around $3.2 billion. Nest had been founded in 2010 by Tony Fadell and Matt Rogers, both veterans of Apple’s iPod team.
What was the first product ever released by Nest before Google acquired the company?
Correct! The Nest Learning Thermostat was Nest’s debut product, launched in October 2011. It was praised for its sleek design and ability to learn a household’s temperature preferences over time, reducing energy bills automatically.
Not quite. Nest’s very first product was the Nest Learning Thermostat, released in October 2011. The Nest Protect smoke detector came later in 2013, and cameras and doorbells followed even further down the line.
Which of the following Google smart speakers was discontinued in 2023, leaving only the Nest Audio and Nest Mini in Google’s lineup?
Correct! The Google Home Max, a premium large-format smart speaker, was discontinued in 2023. It had launched in 2017 and was positioned as a high-fidelity audio competitor to the Apple HomePod and Sonos speakers.
Not quite. It was the Google Home Max that was discontinued in 2023. This premium speaker launched in 2017 never quite found the mainstream audience Google had hoped for, and the company quietly pulled it from sale.
What was the original retail price of the first Chromecast dongle when it launched in 2013?
Correct! The original Chromecast launched in July 2013 at just $35, undercutting rivals like Roku and Apple TV significantly. Its low price point made it a massive hit, selling out almost immediately after Google announced it.
Not quite. The original Chromecast launched in 2013 at $35, which was considered a disruptively low price at the time. It helped Google quickly gain a foothold in the living room streaming device market.
The Google Nest Hub (2nd gen) introduced a unique sleep-tracking feature. What technology does it use to monitor sleep without any wearable device?
Correct! The Nest Hub 2nd gen uses Google’s Soli radar chip to track sleep without requiring users to wear anything. Soli was originally developed for the Pixel 4 phone for Motion Sense gestures, and Google repurposed it brilliantly for contactless sleep sensing.
Not quite. The Nest Hub 2nd gen uses Google’s Soli radar technology to detect breathing and movement during sleep without any wearable. Soli was first seen in the Pixel 4 smartphone as a gesture-sensing tool before being adapted for sleep tracking.
What color does a Nest Protect smoke and CO alarm display when it detects a potential hazard but it is not yet an emergency, giving you time to react?
Correct! Nest Protect uses a yellow light for its Heads-Up warning, alerting you that smoke or CO levels are rising but haven’t reached emergency thresholds yet. This gives you precious time to ventilate the room or investigate before a full alarm triggers.
Not quite. Nest Protect uses yellow for its early-warning Heads-Up alerts. Red is reserved for full emergency alarms, green indicates everything is fine after a safety checkup, and blue appears during setup and Wi-Fi pairing.
Which smart home standard, backed by Google, Apple, Amazon, and the Connectivity Standards Alliance, was officially launched in 2022 to unify smart home devices?
Correct! Matter launched in late 2022 and represents a landmark collaboration between rival tech giants to create a universal smart home standard. Google has been a founding member and has added Matter support across its Nest devices and the Google Home app.
Not quite. The answer is Matter, a universal smart home connectivity standard that launched in 2022. While Thread is a networking protocol that Matter can run over, Matter itself is the application-level standard that Google, Apple, and Amazon all co-developed together.
Google rebranded its Chromecast lineup in 2020 with a new remote and interface. What is the name of the software platform that powers that new smart TV experience?
Correct! Google TV is the name of the smart TV platform that debuted with the Chromecast with Google TV in 2020. While it is built on top of Android TV, Google TV adds a personalized content discovery layer that aggregates recommendations from multiple streaming services into one unified home screen.
Not quite. The platform is called Google TV, which launched alongside the redesigned Chromecast with Google TV dongle in 2020. It sits on top of Android TV but adds a curated, personalized interface that pulls in content recommendations across your streaming subscriptions.
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Cameras are learning what they are looking at
Before this update, smart homes mostly followed basic IF THIS, THEN THAT logic. Useful, but not exactly smart.
The May update brings Gemini’s advanced scene understanding into the mix. Now, Google Home can interpret what’s happening in a camera feed and use that context as a trigger.
It is an upgrade from “something happened” to “here’s what happened.”
Your camera can tell the difference between a dog wandering around and a raccoon digging through the trash. That’s a long way from “motion detected.”
Google Home automations now understand plain language
In the Google Home app version 4.17, custom camera starters work through the automation editor. You type a phrase, then choose the camera and action.
Google’s recommendation is to avoid broad judgments and describe visible scenes the camera can identify, for example, a package on the porch or a cat in the backyard.
For people, Google recommends neutral, general terms such as person, people, someone, or child, unless you are using Familiar Faces.
With Familiar Faces active, you can make the trigger more specific by using a saved name and having the routine start when that person is seen.
Google shows what context-aware smart homes can really do
At first, this sounds like a party trick you show off once and forget about. Then you see Google’s examples, and it starts to sink in.
In Google’s Instant Zen example, an indoor camera seeing you on a yoga mat could dim the lights and start a meditation playlist.
You don’t have to say anything or tap a button. The house sees the moment and reacts. This should give you a good idea of how much room there is to experiment.
Google’s examples are worth a look, and we’ll be sharing more automations soon.
You will need the right camera and subscription
It’s also worth being upfront about the paywall. Updating your phone or Google Home app won’t magically give your old setup visual automations.
Gemini scene understanding requires compatible cameras and a Google Home Premium Advanced subscription, which is $20 per month.
On top of that, you need to join the Public Preview program, available in US English for now.
|
Feature |
Premium Standard |
Premium Advanced |
|---|---|---|
|
Monthly |
$10 |
$20 |
|
Annual |
$100 |
$200 |
|
Event-based video history |
30 days |
60 days |
|
24/7 continuous video |
None |
10 days |
|
Gemini visual automations |
No |
Yes |
Gemini scene understanding works with existing Nest Cams, but Google is also bringing third-party devices into the fold through the Gemini Built-in program.
The camera itself does not have to be expensive. Walmart’s $35 Onn Outdoor Camera is a good example. It is the subscription that still stings.
Google’s new AI trick raises some serious questions
Handing this much control to an AI model comes with privacy and reliability questions.
AI models hallucinate. In a smart home, a hallucination means your house might do something weird while you’re asleep or out. That’s funny in a viral screenshot, but scary if a routine is tied to it.
Latency is the other hurdle. Pushing live video through an LLM takes serious computing and time.
Google specifically warns users not to rely on camera automation for time-sensitive situations or life safety purposes because the system needs a beat to process what it sees.
AI could become the brain of the smart home
For all the costs and risks, this is still a big leap. The original promise of the smart home was ambient computing.
Your house should react to what you need without making you open an app or shout across the room. Turning security cameras into context sensors gets Google much closer to that idea.
If AI becomes the brain of the home, it’s easy to imagine households paying for monthly tokens the same way they already pay for electricity and other utilities.



