
Google is experimenting with a new way for users to start they day.
The company has introduced an experimental AI agent called 'CC' through Google Labs, designed to deliver a personalized daily briefing that helps users stay organized, informed, and ready to act. The tool works by connecting to users' Gmail, Google Calendar, and Google Drive, alongside relevant information from the web, to build an understanding of what they day looks like.
Each morning, it sends a "Your Day Ahead" email that condenses users' schedule, upcoming tasks, and important updates into a single, easy-to-scan summary.
CC is a new, experimental AI agent from @GoogleLabs that understands your day and helps you get things done. Built with Gemini, it connects your Gmail, Google Calendar, Google Drive and the wider web to deliver a “Your Day Ahead” briefing to your inbox every morning.
— Google (@Google) December 16, 2025
Instead of juggling calendar invites, email threads, and documents, the idea is to get one clear snapshot of what needs attention.
Whether that's preparing for a meeting, paying a bill, or following up on a conversation, CC wants to ensure that users don't miss a single information.
In other words, Google wants to put an AI assistant quietly in the background, keeping tabs on what matters to users, before they even open their inbox.
What sets CC apart from a simple summary tool is its ability to take action.
If a follow-up is needed, CC can draft emails on users behalf or generate calendar links so they can move quickly without starting from scratch. Users can also reply directly to CC’s daily email or message it separately to share preferences, add reminders, correct details, or ask it to remember ideas and to-dos. Over time, this back-and-forth allows CC to become more tailored, functioning less like a static assistant and more like a personal organizer that adapts to your habits.
While the concept isn’t entirely new, the feature is powered by Google's Gemini, which means that CC should feel more friendly and approachable.
Rather than jumping between tools or prompts, CC presents itself as a single point of entry for daily planning, designed to reduce friction and mental overhead at the start of the day.

For now, CC is launching as an early Google Labs experiment.
Access is limited to users aged 18 and over in the U.S. and Canada, with priority given to Google AI Ultra and other paid subscribers. Interested users can join a waitlist, though Google hasn’t shared when broader access might roll out.
Importantly, CC is positioned as a standalone experimental service, separate from Google Workspace and the Gemini app, and users can disconnect it at any time.
At a broader level, CC reflects Google’s growing push toward agent-style AI: tools that don’t just answer questions, but proactively organize information and help users move from awareness to action.
As more people juggle overflowing inboxes and packed calendars, Google is betting that an AI-powered daily briefing could become a natural part of how people plan their day, much like checking email once was.