Google has seen an increase in usage of search,
video-conferencing and other tools in the past year, as
lockdowns and other pandemic restrictions forced people to shop
and communicate online.
With in-person activities resuming, Google is out to make a case
that it can remain just as relevant and compete with services
from Microsoft Corp, Apple Inc and others, including through
features that foster hybrid working set-ups.
Chief Executive Sundar Pichai will headline a two-hour
livestream starting at 10 a.m. PT Tuesday (1700 GMT) as part of
Google I/O, the company's annual three-day developer conference.
The forum was cancelled last year due to COVID-19 and will have
only a virtual audience this year.
Pichai also may highlight Google's progress on issues that have
become bigger priorities for corporate America over the past
year, including climate change and racial justice. He has called
for features, such as eco-friendly directions in Maps, that help
users live more sustainably, and he has sought to ensure Google
technology works well for people of all backgrounds.
Increasing data privacy and growing various subscription
businesses have been other areas of focus, as has been improving
the performance of products through artificial intelligence
(AI), custom computer chips and potentially quantum computing.
I/O is normally held outdoors near Google's Silicon Valley
headquarters, with thousands of software developers from major
companies to startups attending to learn about new programming
options to jazz up their apps. Unspecified updates to the
Android and Chrome operating systems, Google Assistant virtual
helper and Google Play app store are planned, according to the
conference agenda.
One unknown is whether Google will release new consumer gadgets,
something it has done at I/O in the past with smartphones and
smart speakers.
(Reporting by Paresh Dave; Editing by Peter Henderson and
Richard Pullin)
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