How to get the most out of Google’s free AI Studio

This article is republished with permission from Wonder Tools, a newsletter that helps you discover the most useful sites and apps. Subscribe here.

Google’s AI Studio and Labs let you experiment for free with new AI tools. I love the way these digital sandboxes—like the one from Hugging Face—let you try out creative new uses of AI. You can dabble around then download and share what you make, without having to master a complex new platform. Read on for a few Google AI experiments to try. All are free, fast, and easy to use.

1. Transform an image

Upload a photo and use Gemini’s AI Studio Image Generation to transform it with prompts. Iterate on your original image until you get a version you like. The model understands natural language, so you don’t have to master prompt lingo.

2. Generate an AI voice conversation

AI-generated voices are increasingly hard to distinguish from human ones. If you’re surprised, try Generate Speech in the AI Studio or Google’s NotebookLM.

How to use Generate Speech in Google’s AI Studio

  • Paste in text, either for a narration or a conversation between two people
  • Open the settings tab to pick from 30 AI voices. Each is labeled with a characteristic—e.g. upbeat, gravelly, or mature.
  • Click run to generate the conversation. Optionally adjust the playback speed.
  • Download the file if you want to keep it, or paste in different text to try again.
  • Example: a silly 90-sec chat between two violinists I scripted with Gemini and rendered quickly with this Generate Speech tool.
  • Use case: Make a narration track for an instructional video. ElevenLabs has a better professional model for this, but AI Studio’s is free, easy and quick.

Alternatives

Google’s Gemini AI app can also now generate audio overviews from files you upload, if you’re on a paid plan.

Google’s free NotebookLM has a new mobile app, and now lets you generate an audio conversation in any of 50 languages. Unlike Generate Speech in AI Studio, NotebookLM audio overviews summarize your material, they don’t perform words as written. Why NotebookLM is so useful.

Google’s Illuminate lets you generate, listen to, share, and download AI conversations about research papers and famous books. Here’s an audio chat about David Copperfield, for example. A bit dry to listen to, but still useful.

3. Make a gif

Try Magical Gif Maker, one of 20 showcase apps in the Build section of AI Studio. Try making a moving visual featuring the name of your publication, group, or event. I experimented with kinetic text and word art. Also worth trying in the Build AI Studio: Flashcard makerVideo to Learning App & Maps Planner.

Alternative: You can also make a static image with Google’s Imagen 3 or the new Imagen 4. Write a short prompt and select your preferred aspect ratio. So far I still prefer Ideogram (why I like it) and ChatGPT’s new image engine.

4. Generate a short video

Google’s Veo 2 and Flow let you generate free short video clips almost instantly with a prompt. Create a clip to add vibrancy or humor to a presentation, or a visual metaphor to help you explain something. Here are 25 other quick ideas for how you might use little AI-generated video scenes.

How to create a video clip with Veo 2

  • Pick a length (5 to 8 seconds) and select horizontal or vertical orientation
  • Write a prompt & optionally upload a photo to suggest a visual direction
  • Example: Take a look at a parakeet photo I started with and the 5-second video I generated from the photo with Veo 2.
  • Tip: Convert short video clips into gifs for free with Ezgif or Giphy. Unlike video files, gifs are easy to share and auto-play in an email or presentation.

What’s next:  ">Remarkably lifelike clips made with Google’s newer Veo 3 model went viral this week. These AI-generated visuals—with sound—are only available on the $250/month(!) plan for now, so try Veo 2 for free.

5. Explain things with lots of tiny cats

This playful mini app creates short, step-by-step visual guides using charming cat illustrations to explain any concept, from how a violin works to the concept behind the matrix.

This article is republished with permission from Wonder Tools, a newsletter that helps you discover the most useful sites and apps. Subscribe here.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91347933/how-to-get-the-most-out-of-googles-free-ai-studio?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Created 10h | Jun 9, 2025, 11:20:02 AM


Login to add comment

Other posts in this group

Whole Foods’ primary distributor goes offline amid rising corporate cyberattacks

Major food wholesaler United Natural Foods (UNFI) announced Monday that it experienced “unauthorized

Jun 9, 2025, 8:30:05 PM | Fast company - tech
Apple is stuck in neutral when it comes to personal AI

“At long last, Apple has finally entered the AI race.”

That was the first line i

Jun 9, 2025, 8:30:04 PM | Fast company - tech
How Waymo got caught in the crossfire of Los Angeles ICE protests

Waymo vehicles, the self-driving taxis from Google parent company Alphabet, have emerged as a literal flashpoint

Jun 9, 2025, 8:30:03 PM | Fast company - tech
Why your phone habits leave you feeling so bad

For those who’ve been in the situation where we unlock our phone and start futzing around on our home screen, only to find ourselves looking up at the clock an hour later with a sense of shame and

Jun 9, 2025, 6:10:08 PM | Fast company - tech
The missing key for defense innovation? A good coworking space 

As the director of commercial engagement for the Defense Innovation Unit (DIU), a Department of Defense (DOD) organization that funds startups developing cutting-edge weapons technology for the mi

Jun 9, 2025, 1:30:10 PM | Fast company - tech
MAHA v. Moderna: The COVID vaccine maker is under attack by RFK Jr.’s department of health

Moderna CEO and cofounder Stéphane Bancel probably never imagined he’d look back on March 2023 as the good old days. Then, he merely had to go before the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensi

Jun 9, 2025, 1:30:08 PM | Fast company - tech