Khaleej Times

Google wants you to become smarter

- Michael Liedtke

san francisco — Google’s upgrades to its Pixel smartphone­s and other gadgets are its latest steps toward turning its digital services into your backup brain.

The products the company unveiled on Wednesday are packed with artificial intelligen­ce that Google has accumulate­d from those very same services. The company’s widely used search engine, Gmail, maps, Chrome web browser and other services have yielded a fountain of data the company has used to smarten up its software and gadgets.

Over the past year, Google has been transplant­ing that knowledge into its Pixel line of phones, internet-connected speakers and, as of Wednesday, a new type of laptop and a small, hands-free camera that automatica­lly learns when to snap pictures or record video of candid moments.

“All that hardware is just housing, and that isn’t as interestin­g as what’s inside the house,” said Gartner analyst Tuong Nguyen. “The hardware is just a way for Google to show people the best way to experience its services.”

Google recently signaled a longterm commitment to its own phones by spending $1.1 billion to bring on board 2,000 HTC engineers specialisi­ng in mobile devices — and to acquire some related technology, too.

Although sleekly designed, Google’s Pixel phones and Home speakers aren’t breakthrou­ghs in themselves. In many respects, Google is simply copying or offering slight variations on devices made by Apple and Amazon that have been bigger hits so far. But Google be- lieves its services, particular­ly those driven by AI, can give it an edge over its rivals. If its devices catch on, they’ll then generate additional data that Google can use to further refine its AI systems.

Already part of Google’s smartphone­s and speakers, the assistant will soon also be featured in the new Pixelbook laptop and in new wireless headphones called Pixel Buds. It will be easier to summon in the next generation of Pixel phones; a new feature lets you squeeze the side of the device to ask a question. Google’s emphasis on its assistant is part of a battle with Apple’s Siri

The hardware is just a way for Google to show people the best way to experience its services Tuong Nguyen, Analyst, Gartner

and Amazon’s Alexa to prove which is the most intelligen­t and efficient aide — one that might, one day, become a trusted companion.

The second generation of Google’s Pixel phones unveiled Wednesday feature larger, brighter screens that take up more of the device’s front, changes that Apple is also making with its iPhone X scheduled to be released next month. Both the 6-inch Pixel XL and the 5-inch Pixel will also do away with the headphone jack, something Apple did with the iPhone 7 last year.

Google also souped up the already highly rated camera on the Pixel, boasting that it will take even better photos than the iPhone.

The Pixel 2 and Pixel XL 2 are adding a new mode for taking portraits, another popular feature on the iPhone 7 and recently released iPhone 8. But instead of relying on two cameras to take better portraits, Google is using AI software that adjusts photos automatica­lly to enhance close-ups and blur background­s.

The smaller Pixel will sell for almost $650, $50 less than the iPhone 8. The Pixel XL will sell for almost $850, or $50 more than the iPhone 8 Plus. Prices for the iPhone X, by comparison, start at $1,000.

Google also announced wireless headphones, called Pixel Buds. In addition to relaying audio from the phone, the headphones can also translate spoken language in real time, working with translatio­n software built into the new Pixels. The feature also will be coming to last year’s Pixel models in an update.

Another new photo feature, called Lens, will automatica­lly display informatio­n about a landmark or piece of art in a picture. This will also be added to last year’s Pixel models as Google tries to build brand loyalty.

The company, a subsidiary of Alphabet Inc., still has a long way to go before making a significan­t dent in the market. In the past year, Google sold just 2.8 million Pixel phones, accounting for less than 1 percent of the worldwide market, according to the research firm Internatio­nal Data Corp.

Most of the Pixel buyers so far have been “fanboys and fangirls who understand and appreciate what Google brings to the table with Android, and voraciousl­y take advantage of every new feature,” said IDC analyst Ramon Llamas.

The Google Home Mini unveiled Wednesday is a button-sized speaker covered in fabric. It includes the same features featured in a cylindrica­l speaker that Google rolled out last year in response to Amazon’s Echo. — AP

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 ?? — AFP ?? A Google employee holds up the new Pixel 2 smartphone and Google Clips wireless camera at a product launch event on Wednesday at the SFJAZZ Center in San Francisco, California.
— AFP A Google employee holds up the new Pixel 2 smartphone and Google Clips wireless camera at a product launch event on Wednesday at the SFJAZZ Center in San Francisco, California.

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