Google is Expanding access to Opalits AI Vibe coding app to fifteen additional countries. The app, which permits you to create mini web apps using text prompts, is now available in Canada, India, Japan, South Korea, Vietnam, Indonesia, Brazil, Singapore, Colombia, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Panama, Honduras, Argentina and Pakistan.
“When we opened Opal to users within the U.S., we expected that they’d have the ability to construct easy, fun tools,” Megan Li, a senior product manager at Google Labs, said in a Blog post. “We didn't expect the surge in sophisticated, practical and highly creative Opal apps that we received as a substitute. The ingenuity of those early adopters made one thing clear: We have to get Opal into the hands of more creators worldwide.”
Opal works by getting users to enter an outline of the app they wish to create. The tool then uses different Google models. Once the app is prepared, users can open the Editor panel to customize and customize the visual workflow of inputs, outputs and generation steps. You can click on any step to review or edit the prompt or manually add latest steps using the Opal toolbar. Users may publish their app on the net and share a link so others can test it using their very own Google accounts.
In addition to the expansion, Google also announced improvements to Opal.
The tech giant says it has improved the debugging program but intentionally kept it no-code. Users can now run their workflows step-by-step within the visual editor or optimize specific steps within the console. Errors appear exactly where they occur to supply immediate context and eliminate guesswork.
Google also says it has significantly improved Opal's core performance. The company notes that it will take as much as five seconds or more to create a brand new opal. Now it's suitable to hurry this as much as make it easier to start. Additionally, users can now perform steps in parallel, allowing complex workflows with multiple steps to run concurrently.
With the launch of Opal within the US in July, Google joined a growing list of competitors, including Canva, Figma and Replit, which might be constructing tools to assist non-technical users design app prototypes without writing code.

