android 15
Google I/O 2024: Everything revealed including Gemini AI, Android 15 and more
At the end of I/O, Google's annual developer conference at the Shoreline Amphitheater in Mountain View, Google CEO Sundar Pichai revealed that the company had said "AI" 121 times. That, essentially, was the crux of Google's two-hour keynote -- stuffing AI into every Google app and service used by more than two billion people around the world. Here are all the major updates from Google's big event, along with some additional announcements that came after the keynote. Google announced a brand new AI model called Gemini 1.5 Flash, which it says is optimised for speed and efficiency. Flash sits between Gemini 1.5 Pro and Gemini 1.5 Nano, which its the company's smallest model that runs locally on device.
Android 15 will make it harder for phone thieves to steal your data
After shirking tradition and devoting its entire Google I/O keynote to showcase how it's stuffing AI into everything imaginable, the company has reserved day two to catch up on the one-time star of the show, Android. Alongside the arrival of the second Android 15 beta on Wednesday, Google is unveiling previously unannounced security features in its 2024 mobile software, including AI-powered theft detection, Google Play fraud protection and more. Theft Detection Lock is a new Android 15 feature that will use AI (there it is again) to predict phone thefts and lock things up accordingly. Google says its algorithms can detect motions associated with theft, like those associated with grabbing the phone and bolting, biking or driving away. If an Android 15 handset pinpoints one of these situations, the phone's screen will quickly lock, making it much harder for the phone snatcher to access your data.
- Information Technology > Security & Privacy (1.00)
- Information Technology > Communications > Mobile (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence (0.95)
Android Update: Theft Detection Lock Knows When Your Phone Is Stolen
Billions of Android phones are getting new tools to stop phone thieves from accessing your information and to slow down their criminal behavior, Google announced today at its I/O developer conference. Android phones will soon use artificial intelligence to automatically detect when they have been snatched from your hand and lock themselves, as part of the new changes that include adding extra protections to secure your phone if it has been stolen. The upgrades--some of which will come with the Android 15 operating system, while others will be compatible with older phones--come as phone companies are increasingly building extra measures into their software to thwart rampant levels of phone thefts and further protect people's data. As well as the stolen phone tools, Google is introducing new changes to Android 15 that will scan how apps are using "sensitive permissions" in real time to detect potentially suspicious app activities. Around the world, phone thefts are a huge problem--in London, for example, a phone is stolen every six minutes. Thieves riding electric bikes or scooters can snatch phones out of people's hands, pickpockets can easily nab devices from bags, and others are known to peer over shoulders to learn a phone's PIN before they steal the device.
- Information Technology > Communications > Mobile (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence (0.99)
What to Expect at Google I/O 2024, and How to Watch It
The chirping of birds, the buzzing of bugs, the soft patter of Google CEO Sundar Pichai's shoes as he bounds across the stage. The sounds of spring are here, so you know what that means: Google I/O is blooming. Hot on the heels of Apple's iPad launch event last week, Google is going all out for its I/O developer conference on Tuesday, May 14. The event is taking place at Shoreline Amphitheater in Mountain View, California, just down the road from Google's headquarters. The keynote starts at 10 am PDT on Tuesday, and as usual, it will be livestreamed.
- Information Technology > Communications > Mobile (0.75)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Natural Language (0.52)