Even after all these years, it is difficult to migrate all your data from Android to iOS or vice versa. Unfortunately, it is the same case with AI chatbots like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini. There’s no way to easily import your existing chats and memories from one AI platform to another. But Google could soon offer a tool to solve this problem.
AI chatbots are the future of how we browse, search, and interact with information. Over time, ChatGPT, Gemini, or Claude build context around how we work through conversations and how we use them. That accumulated chat history and memory effectively act as an ecosystem lock-in, making it difficult to switch from one AI chatbot to another.
Google is working on a new “Import AI chats” feature to tackle this problem (via TestingCatalog). As the name indicates, it will allow you to migrate your conversations from another AI platform to Gemini. For this, you will have to download your chat history and then import the file to Gemini.
It does not appear that this option will allow you to migrate your saved memories across platforms. Still, if you ever plan to move away from ChatGPT, Claude, or another AI platform to Gemini, the tool will ensure that you can carry over your conversational history.
There’s no clear timeline for when Google will roll out the AI chat import tool to Gemini. But given that it appeared in Gemini’s attachments menu with a beta label, the official rollout should not be far away.
Nano Banana Pro to get a resolution upgrade
Google is also working on an improvement for Nano Banana Pro in Gemini that adds an option to download images in 2K or 4K resolution. The feature will offer two choices: Recommended size, which is best for sharing, and Maximum size, which is ideal for printing.
By default, the Gemini app generates images in 2K resolution using Nano Banana Pro, so the 4K option would be a nice upgrade, especially for professional work.
Additionally, Google appears to be developing a “Likeness” tool for Gemini, which could help you verify the authenticity of AI-generated video content. This tool still seems to be in early stages of development, with its public release probably a few months away.


