Google’s Most Interesting I/O Announcements, Ranked

Google’s Most Interesting I/O Announcements, Ranked

5 years ago
Anonymous $9jpehmcKty

https://onezero.medium.com/googles-most-interesting-i-o-announcements-ranked-cabd3ff4fc8c

Will OremusBlockedUnblockFollowFollowingMay 7Photo: Justin Sullivan/GettyAs major tech events go, Google I/O lacks the glamour of an iPhone launch, the tension and drama of a Facebook keynote, or the cringe-inducing, over-the-top spectacle of a Samsung unveiling. The company’s announcements tend to be wonky, incremental, and heavily focused on artificial intelligence, especially its confusing inner workings.

Yet I find Google’s annual developer conference the most consistently intriguing of the four, because the company isn’t just releasing nifty gadgets: It’s pushing the boundaries of what can be automated, down to the most quotidian tasks in our everyday lives. In the process, it’s giving us glimpses of a future that often looks more like sci-fi than we’re really prepared to grapple with — even as it tries to reassure us with privacy and security measures that often feel like attempts to paper over the can of worms it just opened.

Google’s Most Interesting I/O Announcements, Ranked

May 8, 2019, 12:30am UTC
https://onezero.medium.com/googles-most-interesting-i-o-announcements-ranked-cabd3ff4fc8c > Will OremusBlockedUnblockFollowFollowingMay 7Photo: Justin Sullivan/GettyAs major tech events go, Google I/O lacks the glamour of an iPhone launch, the tension and drama of a Facebook keynote, or the cringe-inducing, over-the-top spectacle of a Samsung unveiling. The company’s announcements tend to be wonky, incremental, and heavily focused on artificial intelligence, especially its confusing inner workings. > Yet I find Google’s annual developer conference the most consistently intriguing of the four, because the company isn’t just releasing nifty gadgets: It’s pushing the boundaries of what can be automated, down to the most quotidian tasks in our everyday lives. In the process, it’s giving us glimpses of a future that often looks more like sci-fi than we’re really prepared to grapple with — even as it tries to reassure us with privacy and security measures that often feel like attempts to paper over the can of worms it just opened.