Would You Let Your Bae See Your Entire Photo Library?

What about your texts and email?

Google just announced a new Photos feature called “Shared libraries” that lets users share *all* of their photos with an entrusted person.

Google just announced a new Photos feature called "Shared libraries" that lets users share *all* of their photos with an entrusted person.

You can narrow down what you share by only including photos from a specific date, or photos only of a specific person (the app has face recognition) – but the core purpose of the feature raises the question: how many of you would dare to automatically share ALL of your photos, past and future, with your partner/spouse? Google Photos does, after all, have an auto-upload feature, which means you'd be sharing every. photo. you. take.

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Quelle: <a href="Would You Let Your Bae See Your Entire Photo Library?“>BuzzFeed

Google Wants To Help You Get A Job

Via Google

Google is going to help you find a job, staring right from the search bar.

CEO Sundar Pichai announced “Google for Jobs” — a new product that's supposed to make it easier to find a job, regardless of your skill and experience level — at the company's annual developer conference in Silicon Valley Wednesday.

“Whether you're in community college looking for a barista job, a teacher who's relocating across the country and wants a teaching a job, or someone who's looking for work in construction, the product should do a great job of finding that for you,” Pichai said.

The new job search tool will roll out in the US over the next few weeks, with a global launch to follow. After that, job seekers will be served job openings natively within their Google search results, according to USA Today.

Here’s a peek at what Google for Jobs will look like:

Here's a peek at what Google for Jobs will look like:

Google for Jobs will generate leads using data from job and career sites including LinkedIn, Monster.com, Glassdoor, and CareerBuilder. Facebook is also a partner.

But Pichai said Google's tool will return more accurate and useful openings to job seekers than other sites. “It turns out, employees and employers use many different terminologies. For example, retail could mean a store clerk, a sales representative, or a store manager,” he said on stage Wednesday. “We use machine learning to cluster automatically, so we can bring all the relevant jobs for you.”

Via Google

People looking for work can filter their Google for Jobs results by location, job title, or how recently the position was posted.

Google launched its Cloud Jobs API in November, a tool currently in “private alpha” aimed at making company job boards more efficient. On stage, Pichai said more 4.5 million people have used the API, and that in tests, the number of applications increased by 18%, “suggesting the matching is working more efficiently.”

Unemployment has been hovering around a record low in recent years, but Pichai said the Google for Jobs announcement is part of Google’s broader “commitment to use our proudcts to help people find work.”

Lots of tech companies have been making promises around US job creation and investment lately, including Apple, which pledged to invest $1 billion in advanced manufacturing, and Amazon, which pledged to create 100,000 new jobs in the United States. At a White House press conference earlier this week, press secretary Sean Spicer cited commitment’s like Apple’s among the early successes of the Trump administration.

Quelle: <a href="Google Wants To Help You Get A Job“>BuzzFeed

Here Are All The New Things You Can Do With Google Photos

Today, at Google's I/O developer conference, the company announced a number of updates for Google Photos — with shared libraries, suggested sharing, photo books, and an integration with Google Lens being the biggest announcements.

The app — which currently boasts 500 million users just two years after its launch — offers photo storage and management for iOS, Android, and the web, and allows users to upload unlimited images (though the size of the individual photos is capped if you don't have a Pixel) for free. The app also leverages Google's AI technology to recognize faces, images, and places, so that users can search their libraries things like “Mom,” “lakes,” or, as demonstrated by Google VP of photos Anil Sabharwal during the I/O keynote, “Anil pineapple Hawaii.”

Suggested sharing

Suggested Sharing will use Google's artificial intelligence to pick your best photos, determine who's in them, and then suggest you share them with those people. After you've shared the photos, the app will identify related photos, whether that's by the location where they were taken or the people in them, for you to continue sharing.

Shared libraries

With shared libraries, you can now share a library with another Google user, and have photos with certain people in them automatically uploaded to the new library. Onstage, Sabharwal created a new album with his wife and set it up so that photos from each of their libraries of her and their kids to would upload to the shared collection.

He took a selfie with a cardboard cutout of his kids, which Google Photos recognized to add an image to the library. The feature resembles the Shared Albums feature within Apple's iOS Photos app, but Apple's version does not identify people within the photos and doesn't enable automatic sharing.

Photo books

Google announced a shopping update to Google Photos that resembles the service Shutterfly: you can now buy physical books — hardcover for $19.99 or soft for $9.99 — within Google Photos. The app can select photos for a possible book in the same way that the Suggested Sharing feature identifies the best photos from your collection and offers them to you.

Google debuted a hardcover book onstage and offered a free one to all attendees at I/O

Integration with Google Lens

Finally, Google's AI-powered touchup feature Google Lens will now integrate with Google Photos, allowing you to enhance the photos in your library remove obstructing objects from them.

Quelle: <a href="Here Are All The New Things You Can Do With Google Photos“>BuzzFeed

Here's Everything You Need To Know About Android O

Google

Google's latest software update, Android 8.0, also called Android O, is packed with small – but meaningful – updates, and is slated to roll out to devices starting this fall.

Google’s own Pixel and Nexus phones will be the first to get the new system and, after that, it’ll be up to phone makers, like Samsung, Motorola, and LG, to support Android O.

There are two main themes to the update: “fluid experiences,” or optimizing small screen experiences, and “vitals,” or increasing the device’s battery and performance.

Google

Android O is opening picture-in-picture support to all third-party video apps, not just YouTube. You’ll be able to see Maps navigation, Netflix, and other app windows on top of another app. So, for example, you can watch a DIY video on YouTube and take notes in the Notes app.

Developers can now implement auto-fill into their own apps. If users have their password and username saved in Google, then, after opting in and opening an app, their credentials will be filled automatically.

New “notification badges” are designed to draw attention apps with new activity. In the on-stage demo, Instagram's app showed a little dot on the homescreen when the user received a comment on their photo.

The new system also cuts down with annoying text-selection fiddling. If you double tap text to select an address, it’ll automatically select the entire address, without you having to adjust the text. It also works with phone numbers, email address, and places. Google calls it “smart text selection.”

Google

“Vitals,” meanwhile, refers to the optimization battery, performance, and security. Google is using machine learning to scan 50 billion apps for harmful or malicious software in the Play store. “Google Play Protect” is a similar software available for consumers.

Google also announced twice-as-fast boot time for apps and “wise limits,” which will put limits on how much apps can run in the background (but allow overrides for those who want to do so) to protect battery life and free up memory.

One of the biggest changes you’ll see is in the Settings page. It’s much shorter, with less categories than before. The battery and storage pages have been redesigned to be more readable. You can customize the lock screen even more, by changing the bottom corners from camera and voice assist to instead open whatever app you want with a quick swipe.

There are more features hidden in the notification shade, too. Long pressing a notification will prompt an option to disable all future notifications from that app, and sliding it to the right will let you snooze notifications from the app for a period of time.

In the “Quick Settings” window, an underline denotes that you’ll be able to manage that item’s settings right from the window. If not, tapping that icon will take you to the Settings app.

In addition to the Android O update, Google announced Android Go, that's essentially a version of the OS, core apps, and Play Store optimized for entry level device with 1 gigabyte or less of memory. The system is designed to run smoothly on phones primarily in developing countries coming online for the first time.

Earlier this month, Google also announced Project Treble, a program designed to make it easier for carriers and phone to update to the latest system of Android, which is usually a time consuming and expensive endeavor. The program should also make non-Google Android phones, which many experts have deemed unsecure, much safer by distributing patches for critical security bugs to more devices, faster.

There’s a preview available today at android.com/beta.

Quelle: <a href="Here's Everything You Need To Know About Android O“>BuzzFeed

The Former FDA Chief Is Heading To Silicon Valley To Join Alphabet's Life Sciences Division

Win Mcnamee / Getty Images

Robert Califf, a former Food and Drug Administration Commissioner under President Obama, has revealed his next job — or, rather, jobs: He's becoming a top scientist at Verily, Alphabet's life sciences subsidiary, and an executive specializing in health data science at Duke University.

“Although we are in the midst of an explosion of capability in the worlds of computing and information, we are still learning how to translate this capacity into better health and healthcare,” Califf wrote in a blog post on Verily's website on Wednesday. “Bridging this gap has been a recurring theme of my career, and it’s at the heart of what I hope to accomplish at both institutions.”

Califf served as FDA Commissioner from early 2016 until January of this year. CNBC first reported news of his move to Verily, which comes a week after it saw a high-profile departure: Thomas Insel, former director of the National Institutes of Health's mental health division.

Prior to joining Verily, Califf had helped design the Baseline Study, the company's attempt to identify biomarkers for healthy people, which launched this spring. At the time, Califf told Bloomberg that he harbored skepticism about tech companies' approach to reinventing medicine. “At times, Silicon Valley people are very naive about the complexity of health care,” he said. “It’s going to be a lot harder than they think.”

At Verily, Califf wrote in his blog post, “I’m hoping to offer insights that will allow the company to better tailor its technologies to meet the needs of doctors, other providers, health systems and the patients they serve, and to drive evidence-based approaches that will enable continuous learning and improvement.”

Califf plans to split his time between Verily and Duke, where he will be vice chancellor for health data science of Duke University Health System and director of a new center focused on the same subject. A. Eugene Washington, CEO of Duke's hospitals system, said Califf's “lifelong pursuit of effectively applying clinical data to improving healthcare and population health uniquely qualifies him to lead these vitally important health data science endeavors at Duke.”

Quelle: <a href="The Former FDA Chief Is Heading To Silicon Valley To Join Alphabet's Life Sciences Division“>BuzzFeed

Gmail Can Now Write Replies For You

Google

Google is introducing a feature called Smart Replies to the Gmail app on Android and iOS that will suggest answers to some of your incoming emails.

The feature will display possible responses to some of your emails, and when you've selected one, you can send it immediately or edit it before sending. Smart Replies won't be available on the desktop version of Gmail.

The feature makes use of Google's artificial intelligence software, something the company has emphasized more and more in recent years. According to a press release, Smart Replies scans the text of an email and attempts to understand its various units in terms of their importance, as in the chart below:

Google

Google said in a statement that Smart Replies will learn to understand your writing style — for example, if you prefer exclamation points to periods, your suggested replies will reflect that.

Smart Replies rolls out globally today in English, with Spanish to follow in the next few weeks, according to Google. Here it is in action on Android:

Google

Smart Replies won't work on all your emails, though.

A Google spokesperson wrote, “Smart Reply works on emails that it can suggest optimal responses to,” based on its analysis of a large, anonymized body of other emails. The company declined to specify how the artificial intelligence makes the decision of whether its own suggestions are relevant enough to appear.

Inbox, another email app made by Google, already has a feature that works a lot like Smart Replies, as does one of Google's AI assistants, Allo.

Google said the similar feature on Inbox drives 12% of the replies made within the app, which motivated the team to introduce the feature to Gmail, which boasts over a billion users. The company said in a press release that the new Gmail feature was “more algorithmically efficient” than Inbox's and would “increase the percentage of usable suggestions.”

The company doesn't plan to discontinue Inbox, according to a Google spokesperson, who wrote in an email to BuzzFeed News that the two apps offer very different experiences.

Here is a comparison of how Smart Replies might respond to two different emails from the same person:

Google

As with any sort of artificial intelligence, it remains to be seen whether Smart Replies is ~intelligent~ enough to be useful.

So does this mean Google is reading every single one of your emails?

A Google spokesperson told BuzzFeed News, “No one is reading your email. Smart Reply is similar to how email is processed automatically for spam/malware detection, spell checking, etc. Our natural language processing algorithms analyze a very large, anonymized corpus of emails to automatically generate possible responses to each email. Our machine learning algorithms then rank these to pick the three best responses to the email at hand.”

If you give Smart Reply a try and decide it isn't for you, you can always turn off the feature in Gmail through Settings.

Quelle: <a href="Gmail Can Now Write Replies For You“>BuzzFeed

Google's Voice-Enabled Assistant Comes To The iPhone

Google

Google Assistant, the voice-controlled software powered by Google's AI and machine learning technology, is making its way to iPhone. The software was originally exclusive to the Google Pixel smartphone and Google Home smart speaker. Today, at the company's big developer conference in Mountain View, CA, VP of engineering Scott Huffman announced that Google Assistant will be available on iOS as a free app for download, rivaling the iPhone's native Siri assistant.

The iPhone app is only available to US users for now (Home launched for UK in March, and Pixel is now available in Australia, Canada, and Germany). Google Assistant will support French, German, Brazilian Portuguese and Japanese soon, with Italian, Spanish and Korean later this year. While the iOS version won't have the deep integration that it does on Android, it will be able to send iMessages, for example, but not set alarms.

Google Assistant is also coming to many more products. The company is making an SDK available to hardware developers who want to integrate the voice assistant in their products.

Quelle: <a href="Google's Voice-Enabled Assistant Comes To The iPhone“>BuzzFeed

Amazon Is Updating Its Fire Tablets

Amazon just updated its Kindle Fire tablets, but it didn't raise their prices. They're still cheap AF.

The Kindle Fire 7 is the cheapest option in Amazon's tablet line. It's getting thinner and lighter, with a better screen and longer battery life. Amazon also says it will have more consistent Wi-Fi connectivity. The new-and-improved version of the Fire 7 will stay the same price: $49.99. It'll be available in three new colors: “Punch Red, Marine Blue, and Canary Yellow,” as Amazon describes them. The tablet is currently available in black, blue, magenta, and tangerine.

Here’s the new Fire 7:

Here's the new Fire 7:

The Fire 8 HD, a higher-end tablet, didn't get hardware updates, but its price is dropping from $89.99 to $79.99, and it's also available in the new colors.

The Fire 8 HD offers a larger and higher-resolution screen, more memory, and longer battery life than the Fire 7.

Here’s the new Fire 8:

Here's the new Fire 8:

The tablets have had Alexa enabled on them since last year.

Users can press the home button to tell Alexa, Amazon's AI-powered voice assistant, to play videos or music or audiobooks, buy things, read the news, or display and read weather reports.

And the kids version of the Fire 7 is getting the same updates.

The Fire 7 Kids Edition and the 8 HD Kids Edition are essentially the same tablets as the adult versions, but they come with a two-year free replacement guarantee for when kids destroy them. Included with the tablets is a year’s worth of Amazon FreeTime, Amazon's vetted library of kids' content that includes parental controls.

The new Fire 7 Kids bundle retails for $99.99, the same price as its previous iteration. Amazon is cutting prices here, too: The cost of the Kids Fire 8 HD bundle will decrease from $139.99 to $129.99.

Here’s the new Fire 7 Kids edition:

Here's the new Fire 7 Kids edition:

Quelle: <a href="Amazon Is Updating Its Fire Tablets“>BuzzFeed

Apple Patented Its Very Own Pizza Box Design

Apple Patented Its Very Own Pizza Box Design

Apple is making a big deal about its new $5 billion, 2.8 million square-foot office spaceship that's opening in Cupertino, California this summer.

The building looks fine.

The new campus will be the headquarters for the world's most valuable company, but so what?

youtube.com

Here's the groundbreaking Apple innovation that's actually worth get exciting about.

The mysterious object resurfaced along with the news about the new office. No, it's not a new self-driving iPhone.

It's a ~patented~ pizza box!!

According to the patent filing, Francesco Longoni, the maestro of the Apple Park café, developed the box alongside Mark Doutt, who was a senior packaging engineer at Apple for 10 years, according to his LinkedIn profile.

Apple filed the patent for the box in 2010.

The company used them in its Caffe Mac cafeterias for people to take pizzas to their desks, and the boxes became such an identifiable aspect of working there that people signed them for memorials to Steve Jobs.

It's designed to allow moisture to escape and keep the crust from becoming soggy.

From the patent: “For example, in order to prevent moisture from being trapped beneath the pizza rendering the pizza soggy, selected portions of an interior surface of a base of the container can be elevated to provide a support platform.”

Apple will use the pizza boxes at its new campus, according to Wired.

It's also environmentally friendly. The patent filing says the thing “can be fabricated from various types of re-used material along the lines of molded fiber.”

Another handy feature: It has a latch.

Which is useful for keeping the pizza inside the box during earthquakes, which there's always a risk of in Silicon Valley.

Was pizza Steve Jobs' inspiration for the iPod's original scroll wheel?

We may never know.

Quelle: <a href="Apple Patented Its Very Own Pizza Box Design“>BuzzFeed