OnePlus’ AI Plus Mind is less chatty, more useful

Updated : Aug 29, 2025 11:27
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Editorji News Desk

Smartphone makers have been pitching “AI assistants” for years, but they’ve mostly boiled down to the same thing: a voice you can ask to set an alarm, check the weather, or tell a joke you didn’t want to hear. OnePlus is trying something different. Its new feature, called AI Plus Mind, is less about chatting with your phone and more about making your daily digital clutter easier to wrangle.

The tool first showed up on the OnePlus 13s, but now the company is rolling it out more broadly to the OnePlus 13, 13R, and the Nord 5 series. That’s notable because it means OnePlus isn’t treating this as an exclusive perk for its priciest hardware — it’s positioning AI Plus Mind as something closer to an ecosystem-wide upgrade.

A button just for your “mind”

At the centre of this experiment is a new physical button on certain models called the Plus Key. Instead of summoning Google Assistant or Copilot, pressing it drops whatever you’re looking at into a special space called — appropriately — Mind Space. Think of it as a smart filing cabinet for your digital life.

Say you get a text with a restaurant reservation. Tap the button and it’s saved — categorised, tagged, and ready to be pulled up later without scrolling through messages. Forwarded flight details, concert tickets, appointment reminders — all of it goes into Mind Space, where OnePlus’ AI sorts it.

It’s a different take on the “save everything” approach we’ve seen in note-taking apps like Notion or Evernote, except this one is hardwired into the phone.

Search that feels less robotic

Of course, storing information is the easy part. Finding it again is usually the pain. That’s where OnePlus says its AI search comes in. Instead of remembering where you tucked something away, you can just type (or say) a natural prompt. “Find my hotel booking from last week.” “Show me my meeting notes from yesterday.” The AI digs through your saved info, files, and settings to surface what you need.

This is one of those features that lives or dies on execution. If it works smoothly, it could feel like having a searchable memory baked into your phone. If not, it’s just another layer between you and your files.

The phone that nudges you back

The third pillar of Plus Mind is context. Save a screenshot of a concert ticket? It’ll nudge you to add the event to your calendar. Screenshot a doctor’s appointment? It suggests setting a reminder. OnePlus clearly wants this to be less of a “search and fetch” tool and more of a system that anticipates what you’ll need next.

Why this matters

What makes AI Plus Mind interesting isn’t that it’s a brand-new idea — plenty of apps have promised smarter digital organisation. It’s that OnePlus is building it into the OS, complete with a dedicated button, instead of leaving it buried in a menu or as a third-party download. That could make it feel less like an optional add-on and more like a natural extension of the phone.

It also raises a bigger question: are smartphones finally moving past the era of talking voice assistants into something more useful? OnePlus is betting that the future of AI on your phone isn’t about asking it trivia — it’s about offloading the small, messy tasks that eat up your attention every day.

Tech

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