Google launches its AI vibe-coding app Opal in 15 more countries

Google is Access to OpalHis AI-mood coding app, to 15 more countries. With the app, with which you can make mini -web apps using text prompts, is now available in Canada, India, Japan, South Korea, Vietnam, Indonesia, Brazil, Singapore, Colombia, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Panamá, Honduras, Argentan and Pakistan.
“When we opened Opal for users in the US, we expected them to be able to build simple, fun tools,” said Megan Li, a senior product manager at Google Labs, in one Blog post. “We did not expect the increase in refined, practical and very creative opal apps that we received instead. The ingenuity of these early adopters made one thing clear: we must get opal from more makers worldwide.”
Opal works by entering users a description of the app they want to make, after which the tool uses various Google models to do this. As soon as the app is ready, users can open the editor panel to adjust and adjust the visual workflow of inputs, outputs and generation steps. They can click on one step to view or edit the prompt, or add new steps manually with the Opal toolbar. Users can also publish their app on the internet and share a link so that others can test it with their own Google accounts.
In addition to the expansion, Google also announced improvements that came to Opal.
The tech giant says that it has improved the error detection program, but has kept the deliberate no-code. Users can now perform their workflow step by step in the visual editor or adjust specific steps in the console. Errors appear exactly where they happen to immediately offer context and eliminate guesswork.
Google also says that it has made significant improvements in the core performance of Opal. The company notes that it would take a maximum of five seconds or more to make a new opal. Now it has worked to speed up that to make it easier to get started. In addition, users can now perform parallel steps, so that complex workflows can be performed with multiple steps at the same time.
With the American launch of Opal in July, Google joined a growing list of competitors, including Canva, Figma and Replit who are tools not to help design us -technical users -app prototypes without writing code.




