Samsung Bixby lift-to-talk appears closer to reality in One UI 9
Affiliate links on Android Authority may earn us a commission. Learn more. A few months ago, we revealed that Samsung was working on support for a raise-to-talk gesture for activating its virtual assistant, Bixby. That early hint now appears to be taking shape in a more refined
Affiliate links on Android Authority may earn us a commission. Learn more.
A few months ago, we revealed that Samsung was working on support for a raise-to-talk gesture for activating its virtual assistant, Bixby. That early hint now appears to be taking shape in a more refined form, as a SamMobile report suggests Samsung is developing a new Gesture Wake-up feature expected to arrive with One UI 9.
Instead of relying on the usual โHi Bixbyโ wake phrase or tapping a shortcut, you can simply pick up your phone, bring it closer to your face, and start speaking.
The convenience is pronounced โ you could be walking with your hands full, glancing at your phone, and instantly fire off a command like setting a reminder, checking your schedule, or sending a quick message. It removes a step, and in theory, thatโs exactly the kind of small friction AI assistants are meant to eliminate.
But the real-world experience is where things get tricky. Phones are constantly picked up, checked, rotated, and brought close to the face, often for reasons unrelated to voice input. That raises an immediate question: how does Bixby know when you actually want to talk versus when youโre just checking a notification or unlocking your device?
Imagine sitting in a conversation and casually lifting your phone to glance at something, only to have Bixby jump in and start listening. Itโs not hard to see how accidental triggers could become annoying fast unless Samsung has built in some serious guardrails. Still, all of that remains speculation for now, and weโre yet to see how the system will avoid false activations in everyday use.
At the moment, this Gesture Wake-up feature doesnโt appear in the second One UI 9 beta for the Galaxy S26 series. That suggests itโs either still being fine-tuned or not yet ready for broader testing. If development stays on track, it could arrive in a future beta update or debut with the stable One UI 9 rollout, which is expected to launch with the Galaxy Z Fold 8 and Galaxy Z Flip 8 next month.
Whether this becomes a helpful shortcut or just another over-ambitious gesture that works better in demos than in daily life will depend entirely on execution. For now, itโs another sign that Samsung is still trying to make Bixby feel much more natural to use.

