Google
took the internet by storm years ago with a super-fast search scheme
and has continued to be a leader in creating innovative tools
allowing non-programmers to create sophisticated solutions to get
results.
Dick
and I have been attending the DC simulcast of Google's
I/O three-day event underway in San Francisco – and they are
unveiling some truly advanced Android devices and applications.
Here's
some highlights of new software, applications, and hardware:
Google
Plus Hangouts (video conferencing of up to 10 people), has been
enhanced with a business meeting app – Symphonical
– and
two social apps Event
– to schedule meetings and social events complete with invitations
- and Party
Mode
– which permits sharing of pictures/video before, after and
real-time during the event by any of the attendees. Video easily
accessed is a powerful tool for business – for meetings, for demos
or other show & tell sessions, and to 'live stream' events to a
public audience.
The
next generation of the Android operating system – Android
v4.1,
nicknamed Jellybean, and a new Android phone – the Galaxy
Nexus
– combine for a new level of productivity and simplicity. In Google
Search learns from your keyboard strokes and accessibility for users
is upgraded. Voice
Search
is included in the function and will return result in audio as well
as screen text and video. The phone has a simple new gesture – the
flick – just like you'd flick a bug off your shirt, you can use
this to delete what's on the screen.
You
can also use Voice to dictate text, chat, and emails when in that
function. Keeping track of appointments and other interests is done
automatically through Google
Alerts ,
by popping up note cards with all the relevant details – it can be
an appointment, airline flights, or current score for your team.
The
Nexus
7 Tablet
using the new Android 4.1 OS (built by ASUS with delivery expected in
mid-July) was introduced with a 7-inch HD screen, 9-hour battery
life, and a $199 price tag – what a treat! The Nexus 7 has a fast
3-core processor and 13 other background processors – for a total
of 16 CPUs speeding through the material for quick display and smooth
transition.
For
entertainment, you can read ebooks and documents; read magazines –
uniquely formatted to have the look and feel of the paper
publication, with thumbnails of articles for the reader to 'leaf
through' to find articles of interest; view pictures and albums; and
videos, movies, TV shows, and YouTube; listen to music from personal
collections and internet sources. For business and other tasks, you
can read and write email, browse the web, read your blogs, access
your Google Plus and hangouts (forward facing camera for the video),
do detailed search by text and voice, and get pop-up notification
cards automatically for upcoming appointments and other items of
interest.
Carrying
forward the social aspects of the phone and tablet, Google has
developed the Nexus
Q
which is an in-home collaborative media streamer device connected to
your speakers and large-screes TV. You can pull pictures, videos,
music, art, and other entertainment items from anywhere in your
extended network – by just swiping your Android phone or other
NFC-function
device across the Nexus Q. In addition guests can share their
entertainment libraries with a simple swipe across the Q.
The
Chrome
browser now can sync the browser settings, bookmarks, and recent
search results across multiple platforms – computer, tablet, phone
– and automatically optimize the format for the device. So, you can
access a search result done on your home computer from your Android
phone while you are mobile instead of making a paper copy of the
screen as you go out.
A
key to all these advances is direct access to the Google Cloud –
material is stored or held in the cloud for access by any of the
Google-based devices. This aids to flexibility of access to your
content and documents, as well as facilitating collaboration among
team members or others by giving focused access to specific files.
A
preview of what's in the works shown at the conference is Google
Glass – wearable computers. This is a device, which looks like a
pair of eyeglasses that has a camera, audio receiver, and heads up
display, so you can access the internet, a hangout, or snap pictures
or videos of what you are seeing. To introduce this prototype device,
Sergey
Brin
(co-founder of Google) staged a parachute jump to the roof of the
convention center with an elaborate 'pony express' style delivery to
the stage for a pair of these glasses. All the while, the screens
showed live video of what the participants were actually seeing
(using Hangout technology). Quite exciting staged event.
There
were three quotes that nicely summed up the philosophy of these
developments in computer tools:
Larry
Page
(co-founder of Google): “Have a healthy disrespect for the
impossible.”
Vic
Guntodtra
(Google SR VP Engineering): “The best thing is for the computer to
have your back – then you don't have to worry about it!”
Clay
Bauer (Google Director Chrome Development): “What we want is that
it works without even noticing.”
As
these advances roll out, we will find business applications for them
– to get better results, or to do something that was not practical
(or possible) before.
Guy
Kawasaki's
recommendation for getting visibility on the internet certainly sums
up the development that Google has highlighted at this conference:
“Write
Good Stuff!”
What
do you find most relevant for your operations from the new features
offered by Google?
2 comments:
Increasing computing power and improving software to make computing easier and faster is a fifty year meme. I love it when a plan comes together.
We are getting closer to the Star Trek meme - just tap the shirt medallion and tell the computer what you want - and it happens...
now if we can just avoid fighting with the Klingons and the Borg we'll be in fine shape.
Thanks for the comment.
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