Daily Hub was meant to be the Pixel 10’s new brain — one glanceable space that knows what to expect from your day, and stitches Google’s services into a whole that’s greater than the sum of its parts. Instead, it was rolled out half-baked, without knowing what’s important, and is now stalled while Google “improves performance and polishes the personalised experience.” That pause is the right move. It’s not a matter of the product needing further polish — it’s a matter of the product needing to be reimagined.
- What Daily Hub promised — and why it failed
- Begin with weather you can use
- Fix media picks: prioritize what I really follow
- Delve into context: Calendar, Wallet, Tasks, Gmail
- Rethink “topics of interest”
- More access, less to tap to value
- Performance, battery life and privacy
- Ship it like a product, not a prototype
What Daily Hub promised — and why it failed
Proactive aid only succeeds when the signal-to-noise ratio is high. The Daily Hub’s cards are also frequently generic, redundant, and just plain wrong. It also relies too much on shallow summaries and random topic cards, yet too little on deep, high-trust data Google already has in Calendar, Wallet, Maps, Gmail, Weather and YouTube.
Google has been doing this for ages. Then there were all of the “magical moments” within the original Google Now and today’s At a Glance — flight status when glancing at your lock screen, weather warnings before you leave the house, commute ETAs when you needed them? Daily Hub should continue that lineage, not devolve into a clogged feed.
Begin with weather you can use
One temperature and a line of text ain’t going to cut it. The backend of Pixel Weather also already drives hourly forecasts, minute‑by‑minute precipitation, air quality, and alerts. Daily Hub should show you that: a concise six-hour chart, precipitation timing, and some quick taps for tomorrow’s highs, AQI, and pollen. Apple’s Weather, which built on Dark Sky, set a new bar for nowcasts in usability, and Google has the data to match it, if not exceed it.
Fix media picks: prioritize what I really follow
At Daily Hub, the video and podcast recommendations feel scattershot, surfacing reuploads and low-quality channels instead of trusted subscriptions. That’s backwards. Begin with channels and shows the user already follows, and open the aperture only if the high‑confidence list is empty. Include clear controls: hiding sources, blocking topics, and a “from my subscriptions only” toggle.
Recommendations account for more than 70% of watch time, YouTube has said — a high-stakes incentive to deliver them with accuracy and integrity. Use existing YouTube quality signals (originality, channel trust, continued interest) and weed out AI‑generated slop and recycled content. The aim isn’t more content but the right content at the right time.
Delve into context: Calendar, Wallet, Tasks, Gmail
Stephen Bennett : “Daily Hub is the concierge for your Google life.” The card should show the ticket QR from Gmail and prompt you to tap through to Wallet. DITTO. When traveling, display boarding passes, the terminal, a live gate update and a Maps link for airport security wait. For meetings, automatically surface the meet link, attendees, and the doc shared in the invite.
Tasks and Reminders fit here as well. Google Tasks due‑today entries should be listed (snooze to evening, mark done, or open the list) Pinned notes to events, package tracking from Gmail, and calendar‑aware commute ETAs should all be first‑class cards. This is the high >trust, high >utility layer only Google is capable of.
Rethink “topics of interest”
AI‑written slurry of generic blurbs about vague interests represents noise. Instead swap in user driven “pinboards” and high-confidence signals. Let people pin a team, ticker, game or neighborhood, then serve up timely structured updates: final scores, earnings calls, or local advisories. If you can’t ensure relevance, don’t let it surface.
More access, less to tap to value
Burying Daily Hub behind Discover was an error. Throw in an app icon, a resizable widget, a Quick Settings tile, and an Assistant voice shortcut. Send At a Glance to a full Daily Hub view when you tap. The best assistant to use is the one you can get to.
Performance, battery life and privacy
Active surfaces stand or fall on speed. Target sub‑200ms card loads with on‑device ranking, prefetch during charge/idle windows and strict background limits to safeguard battery. The Hub should flow well with cached essentials such as passes, itinerary and relay maps snippets when the connectivity is weak.
Trust is table stakes. Offer per‑source toggles (Gmail, YouTube, Location, Wallet, and Tasks), a “why am I seeing this?” explainer on each card, and on‑device personalization by default with explicit opt‑ins for cloud features. Include rudimentary feedback controls (thumbs up/down, “less like this,” “mute this source”) so the system learns faster!
Ship it like a product, not a prototype
Daily Hub does not require more cards; it needs judgment. Let’s start with weather, travel, your schedule and your to-do list — the most high‑utility use cases — and then let’s go out from there. Base success on assists performed and active users, not raw impressions. It’s all in the working with the Pixel 10’s on‑device AI and Google’s service graph. It’s now about discipline, and restraint, and making every card earn its slot.