Google Meet’s new dynamic layouts make your video calls feel less robotic

is getting a smarter, sharper facelift designed to make your next video call feel a lot more personal, and less like a screen full of disjointed tiles. Google has a sweeping update to its video conferencing platform called Dynamic Layouts, a feature set aimed at reimagining how participants appear and interact during virtual meetings. It’s [...]

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Google Meet is getting a smarter, sharper facelift designed to make your next video call feel a lot more personal, and less like a screen full of disjointed tiles. Google announced a sweeping update to its video calling platform called Dynamic Layouts that attempts to reimagine how caller appear and interact during virtual meetings. It’s all part of a push to make hybrid meetings feel more human, with AI-powered visuals and intelligent room detection leading the charge.

And hopefully a little less awkward small talk, too. The most noticeable change comes in the form of Portrait Tiles, a new layout that uses AI to crop out unnecessary background and focus tightly on participants’ faces. It’s meant to distractions and give each person a clearer presence on-screen.



Coupled with a revamped tile placement system, calls will use screen real estate more efficiently to get rid of empty space and highlight who’s talking. If someone’s camera is off, Meet will now apply color-sampled backgrounds to their name tiles. Other updates include an increase in the maximum number of pinned tiles—from three to six—giving users more control over who or what stays in focus during a call.

Large room tiles will also display more prominently when Dynamic Tiles are off, improving visibility for in-room attendees. Self-view options now persist across calls, and users can choose to show their full video to others, an important setting for those using sign language or other full-body communication. One of the more advanced features, Dynamic Tiles, gives individual tiles to up to three in-room participants using Google Meet hardware.

An AI-powered speaker detection system then shifts focus automatically to whoever’s talking. Paired with the Face Match feature, which labels participants joining via Companion Mode, these updates bring a much-needed sense of identity and clarity to hybrid meetings. The rollout is available to all Workspace customers and personal accounts now.

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