Google Is Playing Defense Instead of Setting the Agenda
Thousands of people gathered near Google's headquarters on Wednesday to hear the company's vision for the future.In past years, Google has used its developers' conference to unveil all sorts of shiny new toys and services.Not all of them have been smash hits, however. Google Glass had its big coming-out party at I/O in 2012, after all. Google TV was the star of 2010. And remember the Nexus Q, the orb-shaped music player that never even reached the market?But even those products were examples of Google planting a stake in the ground, letting the world know that its engineers and researchers had cooked up something new and original that the company was willing to make a bet on.This year's crop of products, on the other hand, have a decidedly déjà vu feeling to them. Google is reacting to threats, and defending its turf, rather than leading the charge into new territory.ConsiderThe star of the show this year was Google Home[1], a sleek, me-too version of the Amazon Echo product. Google CEO Sundar Pichai admitted as much on stage and in an interview with CNET[2], in which he credited Amazon for being the first to "point the way."Google Assistant[3]: First came Apple's Siri, then Amazon's Alexa. Now Google has released its version of a virtual assistant to help you get things done.That's not to downplay Google's pioneering work in artificial intelligence and speech recognition, the technological underpinnings that make its Assistant service possible. That behind-the-scenes technology could turn out to be the secret sauce that allows Google's virtual assistant to succeed where Apple's Siri has struggled.But again, the consumer-facing implementation is clearly inspired by Apple and Amazon. And there's no denying that Google needs its new Assistant service to help its business adapt to a world where consumers don't necessarily visit a…
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