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What is Google Spark and how can you use it?
Google's 24/7 personal AI agent. The mainstream, no-terminal version of the "agent that works while you sleep" that operators here build with Claude Code and OpenCLAW.
For a year I have been telling CEOs that the highest-ROI move in AI is not a better chatbot. It is an agent that wakes up before you do, reads the overnight mess, and lands a brief on your phone while you are still in bed. I run that on OpenCLAW. It took me weeks to build. Google just shipped a managed, no-code version of the same idea, one toggle away for every Workspace user. That is Gemini Spark, and whether or not you ever turn it on, you should understand what it is.
What it is (in plain English)
Gemini Spark is Google's 24/7 personal AI agent, announced at Google I/O 2026. The normal Gemini chatbot is reactive: you ask, it answers, it forgets. Spark is the opposite. It is proactive and autonomous. It runs on dedicated cloud machines on Google's infrastructure and keeps working even when your laptop is closed and your phone is locked. You give it a goal; it does the multi-step work in the background and checks in when it needs you.
Three pieces make it run:
- Tasks are one-time goals. "Find and track the interior-design internships in New Orleans for this summer." It works the problem and reports back.
- Schedules are recurring or event-triggered runs. "Every Monday at 9am, scan my inbox from the past week and tell me what is open." This is a cron job with a friendly face.
- Skills are reusable instructions you teach it once and invoke with
@or/. Google's example: a "ghostwriter" skill that studies your sent mail, learns your writing voice, and drafts in it from then on. If you have met skills in Claude Code, this is the same concept, Google's version.
It connects natively to Gmail, Calendar, Drive, Docs, Sheets, Slides, YouTube, and Maps, and reaches third-party tools like Canva, OpenTable, and Instacart through MCP, the open standard for plugging agents into outside services. Every connection is off by default; you choose what it is allowed to touch.
Under the hood, Spark is Gemini 3.5 Flash (the model) running on Google Antigravity (the harness). Model plus harness equals agent. It is the exact pattern this site teaches, packaged so you never see a terminal.
Why this is a big deal
The morning-brief agent used to be a power-user move. You needed the terminal, an open harness, and a free weekend. Spark is the first time a trillion-dollar company has put that capability behind a single toggle for everyone who already lives in Gmail. Google's own startup team pitched it for exactly the work this audience cares about: automating reporting and investor updates. That is not a coincidence. It is the use case.
The reactions tell the real story. The Verge called Spark "the most impressive and terrifying AI experience I've had yet." Both halves are true, and the tension between them is the whole thing. Impressive, because an agent that quietly stitches together your inbox, your calendar, and the open web is genuinely useful. Terrifying, because to do that it needs standing access to your digital life, all the time, not a one-off permission. Hold both thoughts.
How you can use it
Map your work onto the three pieces. A few starting points sized for an operator:
- A Schedule for your Monday brief. "Every Monday at 6am, read my inbox from the last week, summarize what is still open, and flag the one thing that needs me today." This is the single highest-leverage thing to set up first.
- A Task for meeting follow-through. "Pull every action item from yesterday's call notes in Drive, build a tracker with owners and due dates, and draft the follow-up emails for me to review." Spark is strong at chaining steps across apps like this.
- A Skill for your voice. Teach it the ghostwriter skill once, and your first drafts come back sounding like you instead of like a press release.
- A Schedule for the boring-but-expensive. "Once a month, scan my card statements and flag any subscription I am paying for and not using." Hands-on reviewers found this kind of monitoring genuinely useful.
Two rules of the road. First, keep approvals on. Spark is designed to ask before high-stakes actions like spending money or sending email; leave that on and watch it work for the first while before you trust it to act unattended. Second, the power is entirely in the setup. The honest critique making the rounds is that this is "the 24/7 agent most people will never set up." An agent you do not configure is just a more expensive chatbot. The leverage lives in the schedules and skills you take twenty minutes to build.
How to get it
Spark requires Google AI Ultra, which Google cut to $99.99/month at I/O 2026 (down from $249.99) specifically to widen Spark's audience. The lower Plus and Pro tiers do not include it. It is rolling out US-first, to adults 18 and over, starting with trusted testers and then Ultra subscribers, with the EU and UK expected over the coming months. Desktop file control on macOS is slated for later in the summer.
Setup is deliberately simple: open Spark, switch on only the apps you want it to reach (everything is off by default), set your autonomy preference for when it should ask versus proceed, then build one Schedule and one Skill. Start small, expand as you trust it. That is the same advice this site gives for any harness: skills are the unit of work, routines are what wake it up.
Spark vs. the harness you would build yourself
For this audience the useful question is not "is Spark good." It is "Spark or the open harness I could run myself." The honest comparison:
- Lock-in. Spark is welded to Google's model, Google's cloud, and Google's apps. An open harness like OpenCLAW or Hermes is model-agnostic and portable, because skills follow the open agentskills.io standard and tools connect over MCP. You can switch models next quarter without rebuilding.
- Standing access. "Impressive and terrifying" is the privacy tradeoff in three words. Spark needs continuous access to your inbox, calendar, and payment methods. With your own harness you decide exactly what it touches and where the data goes, including a zero-data-retention agreement with your model provider.
- Control. You do not own a Spark skill; you cannot read its code or move it. With Claude Code and OpenCLAW you own every file, which is why the leverage compounds and travels with you.
So who should run which? If you live inside Google Workspace and want the lowest-friction on-ramp to an agent that actually takes action, Spark is the easiest yes in AI right now. Start there this week. If you want leverage that compounds, stays portable, and answers only to you, build your own harness. These are not mutually exclusive: plenty of operators will let Spark tidy their personal Workspace while Claude Code and OpenCLAW run the business.
Where you'll see it
- In your own Gmail and Calendar, the moment you turn it on inside the Gemini app on an Ultra plan.
- In your team's habits · the assistant who suddenly has a tidy Monday digest, or the colleague whose follow-ups now arrive pre-drafted.
- In the agent conversation generally, as the consumer face of the model-plus-harness shift, sitting next to Claude's agents and ChatGPT's.
- In I/O 2026 coverage, paired with Gemini 3.5 and Google Antigravity, the platform it runs on.
What to do next
If Spark sounds like the agent you want but you would rather own it outright, start where every workflow here begins: Granola to markdown, the pipeline your other agents read from. Then read why CEOs should use Claude Code in the terminal for the strategic case, and what is OpenCLAW for the open harness most operators graduate to. Spark is the easy on-ramp. The harness you control is the destination.
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