Google has expanded its Search Live feature globally, making it available in all languages and locations where its AI Mode is available, the company said on Thursday in a statement distributed to media. The expansion enables users in more than 200 countries and territories to hold real-time conversations with Search in AI Mode using both voice and camera.
The rollout is linked to the launch of Gemini 3.1 Flash Live, which Google described as a new voice and audio model designed to support multilingual, real-time interactions. Google also said it is expanding Google Translate’s “live interpreter headphone experience” to iOS devices—where it was previously available on Android—and to more countries.
The changes matter for Kenya and other African markets where Google products are widely used for consumer search, mobile-first information access and business discovery. Real-time, voice-led search and camera-assisted queries could shape how consumers research products and services, while broader live translation support may affect cross-border travel, customer service and multilingual commerce in a region with diverse languages.
In its overview of the announcement, Google said: “Search Live has launched globally, for all languages and locations where AI Mode is available.” The company added that “people in more than 200 countries & territories can have real-time conversations with Search in AI Mode, using both voice and camera.”
Google also introduced the underlying model it says enables the rollout. “Introducing Gemini 3.1 Flash Live, Google’s latest voice and audio model,” the company said, adding that the model is “inherently multilingual” and supports the global expansion of Search Live.
According to the statement, Gemini 3.1 Flash Live will be available through multiple channels: developers can access it via the Gemini Live API in AI Studio in preview, enterprises can use it through Gemini Enterprise for Customer Experience, and consumers can use it through Search Live and Gemini Live globally.
For Kenyan developers and technology firms building voice-driven applications, Google’s decision to make a “Live API” available in preview could lower the barrier to prototyping conversational interfaces for sectors such as fintech support, retail, health and logistics. For enterprises, the inclusion of the model in customer experience tools indicates increased competition among cloud and AI providers targeting contact centres and customer engagement workflows across Africa.
The iOS expansion of Google Translate’s live interpreter headphone experience may also be relevant in markets with high iPhone usage in business settings and among international travellers. If rolled out locally, the feature could support meetings, hospitality and other service industries that rely on rapid, accurate interpretation.
Google did not provide rollout timelines for specific countries beyond stating the global availability parameters tied to AI Mode, nor did it disclose pricing for developer or enterprise access. The company directed readers to product blog posts and a press kit for additional details.
Next, the pace of adoption in Kenya is likely to depend on AI Mode availability, user awareness, data costs and enterprise readiness to integrate live voice and translation tools into customer-facing operations. Developers will also watch for changes as the Gemini Live API moves from preview to broader release.