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						 Google 
						CEO touts India as key testing ground for new products 
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		[December 16, 2015]  
		By Tommy Wilkes 
		NEW DELHI (Reuters) - New Google leader 
		Sundar Pichai pledged on Wednesday to use India as a testing ground for 
		its products as the U.S. tech giant targets hundreds of millions of 
		consumers in the developing world set to move online in the next few 
		years. | 
			
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			 "We think that what we build in India will apply to many global 
			places," Indian-born Pichai, appointed chief executive officer in 
			August, told reporters at an event in New Delhi. 
 With internet penetration already topping more than 90 percent in 
			many developed markets, Google is increasingly betting on large 
			developing countries like India as a future source of growth. The 
			company does not disclose how much it has invested in India.
 
 Google expects more than 500 million Indians to be online by 2018, 
			up from around 300 million today. But Pichai said that with most new 
			users accessing the internet via cheap smartphones instead of 
			desktops, poor mobile connectivity is forcing the company to adapt 
			how it structures and sells its software.
 
			
			 
			Google's CEO said the company would train two million Indian 
			developers for its Android operating system by 2019, promote 
			internet use among rural women in thousands of villages, and expand 
			its campus in the southern city of Hyderabad to get more people 
			online.
 "It's about making sure that as the next one billion come online, 
			they have access," he said during a visit to the Indian capital, 
			where he is also scheduled to meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi. 
			There are likely to be more users of Google's Android software in 
			India than in the United States next year, Google said in a 
			statement.
 
			
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			Pichai cited user-generated maps, as well as a version of YouTube 
			that allows consumers with limited internet access to store videos 
			offline, as two recent examples of products developed in India that 
			have since been rolled out to other countries.
 Google is also working with Indian Railways to bring wireless 
			internet service to 100 train stations, with Mumbai Central the 
			first to go online in January. It's also working on increasing the 
			number of local languages available on its virtual keyboard to 
			target non-English speakers.
 
 (Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)
 
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