The Slickest Things Google Debuted Today at Its Big Event

The coolest announcements from Google I/O, from a new chip processor to Google Assistant on iOS.
Sundar Pichai
Google CEO Sundar Pichai delivers the keynote address of the Google I/O conference Wednesday, May 17, 2017, in Mountain View, Calif. Google provided the latest peek at the digital services and gadgets that it has assembled in the high-tech tussle to become an even more influential force in people's lives.(AP Photo/Eric Risberg)AP
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Google CEO Sundar Pichai Opens IO Developer Conference

Google Lens

One of the flashiest announcements from today was Google Lens, a new product that lets you search the world with your phone's camera. Let's say you're on a hike and want to know if that plant by your ankle is poison oak. Or maybe you're browsing through your vacation photos from Athens and can't remember the name of that crumbling ancient structure. Google Lens can offer information on exactly what you're seeing, in real time or in photos, plus help you interact with it. Point the camera at a restaurant and Lens will not only tell you the name, but pull up the menu and help you book a table. It promises a whole new way of scanning the real world the way you would with Google Search. [Read David Pierce's story on Lens](https://more-deals.info/2017/05/google-lens-turns-camera-search-box/%29.%3C/div%3E%3C/p%3E%3Cdiv class="ProductSummaryGridOfferWrapper-diOCjt dnirRH">Read more
Google CEO Sundar Pichai Opens IO Developer Conference

A New Chip for AI in the Cloud

Google’s rethinking its computing architecture for an AI-first world, starting with its homegrown Tensor Processing Unit. The new processor, called Cloud TPU, can be used both to run neural networks and train them, and will be open to anyone through Google's cloud computing platform. Confused? [Cade Metz explains all the details here](https://more-deals.info/2017/05/google-rattles-tech-world-new-ai-chip/%29.%3C/div%3E%3C/p%3E%3Cdiv class="ProductSummaryGridOfferWrapper-diOCjt dnirRH">Read more
Scott Huffman

Google Assistant Comes to iOS

You can already find Google Assistant on more than 100 million devices. Where's it going next? Everywhere else, of course! Google announced today that its Assistant will join Siri on iOS devices, and it's getting some fancy new features, too: You can interact with it through both speech and text, and use it to pay for things or make accounts. Google's also expanding the number of languages supported by Google Assistant: French, German, Brazilian Portuguese, and Japanese will roll out this summer; by the end of year, assistant will also be fluent in Spanish, Italian, and Korean. [Read David Pierce's story](https://more-deals.info/2017/05/google-assistant-comes-iphone-take-siri/%29.%3C/div%3E%3C/p%3E%3Cdiv class="ProductSummaryGridOfferWrapper-diOCjt dnirRH">Read more
Rishi Chandra

Google Home Learns New Skills

Google Home launched just six months ago, and already the little smart speaker can play music, order delivery, or add that upcoming concert to your calendar. Now, it can also offer proactive assistance, like pointing out that you'll need to leave in the next 10 minutes if you want to make it to the concert on time, or prompting you to grab an umbrella because it's raining outside. Google also introduced new entertainment partners, like Spotify Free, Soundcloud, and HBO Now, so you can cue up more music and movies using Home. You can also use it to make hands-free phone calls, and since [Google Home can recognize up to six individual users](https://more-deals.info/2017/04/google-home-multiple-accounts/), it won't accidentally dial your mother-in-law when you say "call my mom."