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Google’s I/O conference showed how the company is being completely rebuilt for AI

by TheAdviserMagazine
3 weeks ago
in Business
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Google’s I/O conference showed how the company is being completely rebuilt for AI
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Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt’s AI talk at a university commencement speech this weekend drew a chorus of boos. But if the students’ reaction was a sign of anxiety, or ambivalence, about the rapid onslaught of AI in our daily lives, the message clearly did not reach Google headquarters. 

At the company’s annual developer conference in Mountain View, Calif. on Tuesday, AI was the overwhelming, and virtually sole focus, of the roughly two hours of keynote presentations delivered by executives. Google showcased a variety of new ways AI will be integrated even more deeply across its widely used family of products, from search and email to productivity software and smart glasses.

Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google parent company Alphabet, kicked off the Google I/O event praising AI’s role in helping students prep for exams and allowing artists and musicians to get into their “creative flow” as the world moves into the “agentic AI era.”

In a very visible sign of how important AI has become to the $4.7 trillion company, Google said it was redesigning the iconic search box that sits at the center of its sparse, all-white homepage. The company is enlarging the dimensions of the search box to expand and better accommodate the natural language queries that users can now make with AI. Users will also now be able to enlist AI agents for complex, ongoing research projects via the search box, ordering up custom reports for anything from apartment hunting to financial news.

Pichai touted the dizzying amounts of money the company is spending to build AI infrastructure and the massive consumption of AI “tokens”—the basic unit of AI data processing—being gobbled up by customers. Google now processes 3.2 quadrillion tokens per month, Pichai said, up from 480 trillion monthly tokens a year ago. 

The company’s capital expenditures—a cause of concern among some Wall Street investors—were projected behind Pichai on a giant screen as the the CEO described plans to spend between $180 billion and $190 billion this year, compared to $31 billion in 2022.

“We are taking a differentiated full stack approach to AI innovation, from our custom silicon and secure foundation to our world class research and models to our products and platforms that reach billions of people,” Pichai said. 

Google IO

A new line of AI-enabled, audio-equipped glasses will debut in the fall, Google said, introducing a new product line called “intelligent eyewear.” While Google did not provide a time frame for the general availability of smart glasses with built-in displays such as the ones it demonstrated at I/O last year, the company showed off the forthcoming audio glasses—built in partnership with Samsung, Warby Parker, and eyewear maker Gentle Monster—which will let users make appointments, get directions, and go through their emails by listening and speaking while wearing the glasses.

Shares of Google fell roughly 2% in regular trading on Tuesday, amid a broader sell-off in the market. 

New Gemini models and the ‘Spark’ persistent agent

Google is locked in a tight race to dominate the AI market against ChatGPT maker OpenAI, Anthropic, Meta, and Microsoft, with each company spending billions to get ahead. While Google was initially caught flat-footed when OpenAI kicked off the generative AI revolution in late 2022, it has since caught up and become a frontrunner thanks to the performance of its Gemini large language models. 

Google unveiled new Gemini 3.5 models at the event on Tuesday, as well as a multimodal “Gemini Omni” system capable of generating video from mixed inputs like text, images, audio and video. Google said its AI Overviews now reach more than 2.5 billion users, while the Gemini app has grown to 900 million monthly active users, highlighting how the company can leverage its massive existing ecosystem to distribute new AI capabilities at global scale.

Pichai said Google now has 13 products that each have more than 1 billion users, and five products with more than 3 billion users.

Google introduced “Gemini Spark,” a “persistent agent—meaning the AI agent keeps working and retaining context over time, rather than just one back and forth—designed to complete tasks across products like Gmail, Docs, and Chrome. There is also the new “Docs Live,” a voice-driven document creation feature, and “Ask YouTube,” a conversational tool that can answer questions using specific moments from YouTube videos.

Google also plans to launch a “Universal Cart,” an AI-powered shopping cart that works across merchants and services, as well as new protocols designed to allow AI agents to securely make purchases on behalf of users. The company also previewed updates to its Antigravity AI coding and agent-development platform, new AI-generated visual experiences in Search, and broader integration of conversational AI throughout products including Maps, Gmail, and YouTube.



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