Google widens access to Opal, its AI Vibe coding application, in 15 other countries. The application, which allows you to create mini web applications using text prompts, is now available in Canada, India, Japan, South Korea, Vietnam, Indonesia, Brazil, Singapore, Colombia, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Panamá, Honduras, Argentina and Pakistan.
“When we opened Opal to users in the United States, we plan that they could create simple and fun tools,” said Megan Li, senior product manager at Google Labs, in a blog article. “We did not expect the rise of sophisticated, practical and very creative opal applications that we have in place. The ingenuity of these first adopters clearly indicated one thing: we must put Opal in the hands of more creators on a global scale.”
Opal works by forcing users to enter a description of the application they want to create, after which the tool uses different Google models to do so. Once the application is ready, users can open the publisher’s panel to display and personalize the visual workflow of the entries, outputs and generation steps. They can click on any step to examine or modify the prompt, or add new steps manually using the Opal toolbar. Users can also publish their application on the web and share a link so that others can test it with their own Google accounts.
In addition to expansion, Google has also announced improvements to the opal.
The technology giant says that it has improved the debugging program but has intentionally kept it without code. Users can now execute their step -by -step work flow in the visual editor or modify specific stages of the console. Errors appear where they provide an immediate context and eliminate assumptions.
Google also says that this has made significant improvements to the basic OPAL performance. The company notes that before, it would take up to five seconds or more to create a new opal. Now it worked to speed up this to facilitate start -up. In addition, users can now run stages in parallel, allowing complex work flows with several stages to be executed simultaneously.
With the American launch of Opal in July, Google joined a growing list of competitors, in particular Canva, Figma and Relit which build tools to help non -technical users to design application prototypes without writing code.