Skip to main content

Google Assistant will alert you if it thinks your flight will be delayed

Many of us will be taking flights in the coming days and weeks, whether across the country to visit family and friends, or to far-flung places for a complete change of scenery.

The trouble is, the extra pressure on the airlines’ busy schedules, coupled with the possibility of lousy weather, means some of those flights could face delays.

Recommended Videos

With that in mind, you might like to know that Google Assistant now welcomes your inquiries about any upcoming flight, making it easier than ever to get a quick update on its status.

Up until now, you had to hit Google Flights on the web or fire up an app to obtain the same information, but Google’s digital assistant is now happy to help.

“You can ask things like, ‘Hey Google, is my flight on time?’ or ‘Hey Google, what’s the status of the American Airlines flight from Philadelphia to Denver?'” Google’s Richard Holden wrote in a blog post outlining the new feature.

Even better, in the coming weeks, Google Assistant will soon have the smarts to alert you about a delay before you even ask. Using historical flight status data and machine learning, the service claims it can predict a flight delay before it’s been officially confirmed, giving you more time to restore some order to your disrupted day.

Holden said that Google Assistant will issue an alert when it’s at least “85 percent confident that the flight will eventually be delayed.” While you’d still want to wait for official confirmation, the forecast will at least serve as a warning of a potential problem regarding your trip schedule.

All in all, it should be a useful addition to Google Assistant, though at the same time it’s one feature that hopefully will never interrupt your day.

In other holiday-related updates, Google Maps recently added new information for folks looking for things to do during city breaks. You can find it by bringing up your location on Maps and then swiping up on the Explore tab at the bottom of the screen.

For further reading, check out Digital Trends’ handy tips on how to get the most out of Google Assistant and Google Maps.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Google is getting ready to kill your Fitbit account
A Fitbit Charge 5 displaying the home screen on a wearer opening a door.

If you're a proud and longtime Fitbit user, you'll notice something different about the Fitbit app later this year. Starting this summer, Google will now allow Fitbit users to migrate their existing Fitbit account to a Google account.

Google initially announced plans to do this last September, but it provided full details on the transition in a blog post on April 11. It'll work a little differently depending on who you are, but the gist is that Google is ready to start killing old Fitbit accounts and transition them to Google ones.
Your Fitbit account is going away in 2025

Read more
Tired of Google ruining your Fitbit? Look at these 5 alternatives
An Apple Watch, Galaxy Watch 5, and Garmin Forerunner 265 lying on a desk next to each other.

If you own a Fitbit tracker, the last few months have been ... rough, to say the very least. Following Google's acquisition of Fitbit in 2021, the platform has changed a lot. Unfortunately, many of those changes haven't been positive ones.

Earlier this year, mass reports of Fitbit app crashes occurred three times over the span of just a month. Fitbit also recently ended support for older iPhones with iOS 14 or older and — perhaps more damning — killed off Fitbit's most popular social features (including Challenges and Adventures). While Fitbit trackers still have a lot to offer, it's understandable why some people may be looking at what alternatives are available. With features being repeatedly stripped away and app stability at an all-time low, now may be the time to get off the Fitbit ship.

Read more
You can now try out Google’s Bard, the rival to ChatGPT
ChatGPT versus Google on smartphones.

Google has just announced the launch of its conversational AI, Bard. Bard is Google's response to the ever-popular ChatGPT, now in use by Microsoft in its own products.

The tech giant rushed to release Bard, and it is now ready for testing. Google is inviting users to test the AI, but as it notes, it might make mistakes.

Read more