Imagine asking your phone: …and it obeys instantly — without sending your voice to a server across the world. No internet. No cloud GPU. No lateImagine asking your phone: …and it obeys instantly — without sending your voice to a server across the world. No internet. No cloud GPU. No late

How I Built an Offline AI Assistant That Controls Android Phone.

2026/01/30 22:02

Imagine asking your phone:

…and it obeys instantly — without sending your voice to a server across the world.
No internet.
No cloud GPU.
No latency.

Just pure, on-device intelligence.

That’s exactly what I built using Google’s FunctionGemma and a modified version of the Mobile Edge Gallery app. In this article, I’ll show how a regular Android phone can become an autonomous, offline AI agent using Edge AI.

The Problem: AI Is Usually “Heavy”

Most AI assistants today live in the cloud.

When you ask them to do something:

  1. Your data leaves the device
  2. It’s processed on massive server farms
  3. The response comes back

This introduces three fundamental problems:

  1. Latency — Cloud round trips are slow
  2. Privacy — Your voice and intent leave your device
  3. Dependency — No internet = no intelligence

That’s not intelligence — that’s outsourcing thinking.

The Solution: Tiny, Mighty, and Fully Local

Instead of moving data to the brain, I moved the brain to the phone.

Here’s the exact recipe.

1. The Brain: FunctionGemma 270M (Fine-Tuned by Me)

I started with FunctionGemma, a specialized variant of Google’s Gemma models designed not just to talk, but to call functions.

Why FunctionGemma?

Because I didn’t want poetic responses — I wanted actions.

When a user says:

The model shouldn’t explain photography — it should output:

open_camera()

My Fine-Tuning Process

  • I fine-tuned the 270M parameter version (yes, tiny)
  • Training data focused entirely on Mobile Actions
  • Used Google’s official Colab notebook for function tuning
    👉 Fine-tuning notebook

The Result

A lightweight LLM that understands intent → action, not intent → text.

📦 Download the fine-tuned model
👉 FunctionGemma 270M Mobile Actions (LiteRT)

2. The Translator: LiteRT (TensorFlow Lite Runtime)

Raw models are too slow and too heavy for mobile devices.

So I converted the fine-tuned model into LiteRT (.litertlm) format.

Why LiteRT?

  • Optimized for mobile CPUs
  • No GPU or NPU required
  • Runs smoothly on most modern Android phones
  • No overheating, no battery drain panic

This makes true offline AI practical, not theoretical.

3. The Body: Modified Mobile Edge Gallery App

Intelligence without action is useless.

So I took Google’s Mobile Edge Gallery app and slightly modified it to support custom mobile actions.

Accessibility Service (The Secret Sauce)

I added a custom Android Accessibility Service — a privileged background service that can:

  • Observe UI state
  • Simulate gestures
  • Trigger system APIs

The Execution Loop

Here’s what happens in real time:

  1. User taps the mic and says
    “Turn on the flashlight”
  2. Edge AI processes the command locally
  3. Model outputs

turnOnFlashlight()

  1. App parses the function call
  2. Accessibility Service triggers the Torch API
  3. Flashlight turns ON

All of this happens in milliseconds — completely offline.

How to Try It Yourself

Want to experience real Edge AI?

Step 1: Download the Model

👉 FunctionGemma 270M LiteRT Model

Step 2: Install the Modified App

👉 Download Modified Mobile Edge Gallery APK

Step 3: Setup

  • Open the app and load the downloaded model
  • Go to Settings → Accessibility
  • Enable Mobile Actions Service
  • Grant required permissions:
  • Overlay
  • Read Contacts
  • Phone access

Step 4: Magic ✨

Tap the floating red mic and command your phone.

Why This Matters (Beyond a Demo)

This isn’t just a fun experiment — it’s a preview of the future.

Privacy-First Computing

Your voice, intent, and actions never leave your device.

Zero-Dependency Intelligence

Works:

  • In tunnels
  • On flights
  • In remote locations
  • Without SIM or Wi-Fi

♿Accessibility Superpowers

Voice-controlled, intent-aware UI can radically improve device access for users with motor impairments — far beyond rigid command systems.

Final Thoughts

Edge AI isn’t coming.

It’s already here.

It’s fast.
It’s private.
And it fits in your pocket.

The future won’t be cloud-only — it’ll be local, intelligent, and autonomous.

And this is just the beginning.


🚀 How I Built an Offline AI Assistant That Controls Android Phone. was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

SAND Bearish Analysis Feb 2

SAND Bearish Analysis Feb 2

The post SAND Bearish Analysis Feb 2 appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. SAND is stuck at the $0.10 level within a sharp downtrend on the daily chart, with RSI
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/02/02 10:12
CME Group to launch options on XRP and SOL futures

CME Group to launch options on XRP and SOL futures

The post CME Group to launch options on XRP and SOL futures appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. CME Group will offer options based on the derivative markets on Solana (SOL) and XRP. The new markets will open on October 13, after regulatory approval.  CME Group will expand its crypto products with options on the futures markets of Solana (SOL) and XRP. The futures market will start on October 13, after regulatory review and approval.  The options will allow the trading of MicroSol, XRP, and MicroXRP futures, with expiry dates available every business day, monthly, and quarterly. The new products will be added to the existing BTC and ETH options markets. ‘The launch of these options contracts builds on the significant growth and increasing liquidity we have seen across our suite of Solana and XRP futures,’ said Giovanni Vicioso, CME Group Global Head of Cryptocurrency Products. The options contracts will have two main sizes, tracking the futures contracts. The new market will be suitable for sophisticated institutional traders, as well as active individual traders. The addition of options markets singles out XRP and SOL as liquid enough to offer the potential to bet on a market direction.  The options on futures arrive a few months after the launch of SOL futures. Both SOL and XRP had peak volumes in August, though XRP activity has slowed down in September. XRP and SOL options to tap both institutions and active traders Crypto options are one of the indicators of market attitudes, with XRP and SOL receiving a new way to gauge sentiment. The contracts will be supported by the Cumberland team.  ‘As one of the biggest liquidity providers in the ecosystem, the Cumberland team is excited to support CME Group’s continued expansion of crypto offerings,’ said Roman Makarov, Head of Cumberland Options Trading at DRW. ‘The launch of options on Solana and XRP futures is the latest example of the…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 00:56
Why This Range-Bound Phase Differs From Past Bear Markets

Why This Range-Bound Phase Differs From Past Bear Markets

The post Why This Range-Bound Phase Differs From Past Bear Markets appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Bitcoin Correction Reveals Surprising Resilience: Why This
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/02/02 10:31