Wednesday, May 31, 2017

The Transport Guy: The creator of Android missed out on a $100 million investment because of Apple (AAPL)

Steve Kovach May 31, 2017 at 09:18AM

Andy Rubin

Andy Rubin, the creator of Android who just launched his new gadget company Essential this week, would've had a lot more money to get things moving if it hadn't been for Apple.

As the Wall Street Journal reported in March, Essential was on the verge of landing $100 million in funding from SoftBank's Vision Fund, a $100 billion pool of money aimed at investing in technology companies. But the deal fell through due to a conflict of interest.

In an on-stage interview at the Recode Code conference on Tuesday night, Rubin essentially confirmed the WSJ story, saying that a conflict of interest with one of the Vision Fund's contributors caused the deal to fall through. He said the conflict would've put Essential in a position where a competitor owned part of his startup, and neither party wanted that.

The likely competitor Rubin was referring to? Apple. This year, Apple announced it would contribute $1 billion to the Vision Fund. (The WSJ report said the deal fell through over SoftBank's "close" relationship with Apple.) And since Rubin is pitching his company as the next major gadget company since Apple, thanks to his new smartphone and suite of gizmos he plans to build around it, that just didn't fly.

But it sounds like Essential has plenty of cash. Rubin's own investment firm Playground Global contributed to a $30 million round of funding. And Rubin implied during Thursday's interview that Essential has tens of millions more from other investors, although he didn't disclose how much he has raised.

SEE ALSO: Your first look at the Essential phone

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NOW WATCH: Google just revealed 4 new things the Google Home can do

The creator of Android missed out on a $100 million investment because of Apple (AAPL) from Business Insider: Steve Kovach

The Transport Guy: Here's Nest first new product in a year — a 4k wireless camera (GOOG, GOOGL)

Steve Kovach May 31, 2017 at 12:01AM

nest cam IQ

Nest is emerging from hibernation.

The company unveiled a new wireless video camera on Wednesday, its first new product in roughly a year.

The Nest Cam IQ is a new, pricier model of the company's existing WiFi camera rather than the brand new product many people have been waiting for.

Still, it's an important proof of life from the smart home appliance pioneer, which has struggled to find its footing as a subsidiary of Google-parent company Alphabet. 

The new Nest home security camera packs improved hardware (including a 4K image sensor and better mic and speaker) and is armed with facial recognition software to tell you who enters your home.

You  can preorder it now for $299 or get a two-pack for $498. It'll ship later in June. 

Here are some other things the new Nest Cam can do:

  • The 4K sensor takes a clearer image so you can use the 12x digital zoom to view faces of people in your home. However, it does not stream video at 4K quality.
  • There's a brand-new design. Nest says this is the first camera it designed from the ground up since acquiring Dropcam in 2014.
  • The camera can track people as they walk around the room.
  • The microphone can tell the difference between people talking or pets making noise (like a dog barking), so you can customize alerts.
  • Night vision.
  • 130-degree field of view.
  • Signing up for the Nest Aware subscription service gives you 10-day or 30-day video archives. Plans start at $10 per month. (This is available for other Nest Cam owners too.)

Why it matters

While the Nest Cam IQ is technically a new product, it's not the new category some have been hoping for from the company. Since Google bought Nest for $3.2 billion in 2014, the company has stuck with its small portfolio of smart smoke alarms, thermostats, and connected cameras. 

Over the past year, there has been talk that Nest wanted to break into other categories like a "hub" for controlling your smart appliances and other security products, but many of those projects have either been stalled or killed, sources previously told Business Insider.

Still, the buzz at the Google I/O conference two weeks ago was that after a bumpy 2016 when Nest lost its cofounder and CEO Tony Fadell, sales are growing as products launch in new countries and other channels in the US.

SEE ALSO: Alphabet could be sitting on a new $70 billion business

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NOW WATCH: Google just revealed 4 new things the Google Home can do

Here's Nest first new product in a year — a 4k wireless camera (GOOG, GOOGL) from Business Insider: Steve Kovach

Monday, May 29, 2017

The Transport Guy: There's no such thing as a tablet that can replace your laptop

Steve Kovach May 29, 2017 at 06:00AM

samsung galaxy book

You were promised better than this.

When the modern tablet era kicked off seven years ago with the first iPad, Steve Jobs famously pitched it as an in-between device, something to use when you didn't want to squint at your phone's tiny screen or do serious work on your laptop. It was a decent value proposition, and the iPad sold like hotcakes.

Eventually, the narrative shifted. Tablets wouldn't just be good for lean-back content consumption, we were told, they'd eventually replace the laptop for good.

Microsoft has toyed with the concept since the Surface's debut in 2012, calling it "the tablet that can replace your laptop." Apple followed suit a few years later with the iPad Pro, and has recently run a series of ads pitching it as a better solution than a laptop. And over the last two years we've seen several tablet/laptops from a variety of manufacturers, all of them chasing the promise of a laptop killer.

The problem? It doesn't work.

Despite all the pitches and promises that each company has cracked the code for that dreamy device that can be all things to everyone, the result is always a niche product that's one part mediocre laptop and one part mediocre tablet.

Don't believe the hype. While these tablet/laptops might be fine for frequent travelers and some other minor use cases, they're not good for the average person.

The latest in the category is the Samsung Galaxy Book, a $1,200 tablet that runs the full version of Windows 10. I've been testing one for the last several days. It comes with a 10 or 12-inch screen, keyboard cover, stylus, and some of Intel's best processors. On paper, it's impressive that you can now cram a full Windows computer into this form factor. In reality, it's a clunky solution, and it falls into the same traps as every other device in the category.

Even though I'm going to talk about the Galaxy Book specifically, a lot of this applies to its competitors, ranging from the Surface Pro to the iPad Pro. No matter what a gadget maker tries to tell you, there's no such thing as a tablet that can replace your laptop.

Using it as a laptop

Unlike the soon-to-be-released Surface Pro, the Galaxy Book comes with a keyboard cover. And that's a good thing. Apple and Microsoft make you spend an extra $130, which is borderline insulting to sell the device as a laptop replacement, but make you pay more for that luxury.

When it comes to typing and using the trackpad, the Galaxy Book's folio keyboard works just fine. The trackpad is surprisingly accurate for a Windows machine, and the keys are comfortable to type on, even though they feel a bit plasticky.

Beyond that, the Galaxy Book runs smoothly. I wish it had a bit more RAM and storage options, but I didn't experience any major performance issues. By that measure, it should serve most people just fine. There really is something appealing about having a full PC in such a tight package.

Unfortunately, there are far too many tradeoffs.

The form factor simply doesn't work as a laptop replacement. The keyboard folio that attaches to the tablet provides limited viewing angles, forcing you to strain your neck. And it's a disaster to use on your lap thanks to the floppy plastic construction. The Galaxy Book constantly fell over because the folio was unable to support the weight of the tablet on my legs. It only worked on a flat, hard surface. It's just not as good as the metal or sturdy plastic builds you get with laptop keyboards.

samsung galaxy book

Using it as a tablet

Of course, the benefit with the Galaxy Book is supposed to be that you can use it as a tablet when you want. But Windows has never been a good tablet operating system, and it doesn't have a vibrant touch-friendly app ecosystem like iOS or Android. Windows is still about getting things done, and a lot of the apps you'd want to use are available, but the Windows app store is still shockingly barren after all these years compared to iOS and Android.

And again, the form factor is a problem. Tablets make great reading devices and mini TVs, but the Galaxy Book weighs in at a hefty 1.7 pounds. It's uncomfortable to hold for extended periods of time. Good luck getting through a full-length movie.

Stick with what works

While there are plenty of Surface fans out there, I have a feeling the category will remain niche. The portability is great, but the form factor isn't. The touchscreen is great, but the apps just aren't there. The problems keep adding up.

From the Surface to the iPad Pro to the Galaxy Book, I have yet to use a tablet/laptop hybrid that convinces me this category has any real legs. There are too many tradeoffs, too many caveats. There's no better combination than a really great laptop and a big-screen smartphone for everything else when you're on the go.

SEE ALSO: If the latest iPhone 8 rumors are true, Samsung should be worried

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NOW WATCH: 6 things the iPhone can’t do that Android phones can

There's no such thing as a tablet that can replace your laptop from Business Insider: Steve Kovach

Friday, May 26, 2017

The Transport Guy: Apple is working on a chip to power artificial intelligence in future iPhones and iPads

Steve Kovach May 26, 2017 at 12:47PM

apple

Apple is working on chips to power artificial intelligence capabilities in its gadgets, Bloomberg's Mark Gurman reports.

The chips would handle more advanced AI tasks such as facial recognition and help manage battery life and power better, the report says. The chips could also be used in future products like self-driving cars or digital glasses, in addition to iPhones and iPads.

The news comes as Apple's competitors like Google, Amazon, and Microsoft have all made significant advancements in AI. At its developers conference last week, Google showed how it's adding AI to a variety of products from phones, to connected speakers, to cars. Apple is largely seen as behind the competition when it comes to AI, which can power the next wave of connected gadgets.

Last year, Apple made some improvements to its Siri AI assistant, giving access to third-party developers in limited categories like messaging and payments. Apple's developers conference starts June 5, and many will be paying attention to more advancements in Apple's AI.

SEE ALSO: Everything Google announced at its developers conference

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NOW WATCH: Microsoft just unveiled a $1,000 laptop — and it’s taking on Apple's MacBook Air

Apple is working on a chip to power artificial intelligence in future iPhones and iPads from Business Insider: Steve Kovach

Thursday, May 25, 2017

The Transport Guy: The creator of Android just teased a weird new accessory for his top-secret phone

Steve Kovach May 25, 2017 at 02:04PM

Essential, the new startup from Android creator Andy Rubin, has teased its upcoming smartphone for the second time.

The shadowy photo, which the company tweeted Thursday, appears to show some sort of attachment at the top of the device.

Take a look:

If we had to guess, that bulb on the top of the phone looks like a 360-degree camera. That would go along with another recent tease from Rubin. He tweeted a photo of what appeared to be some sort of 360-degree camera software about a month ago:

Rubin is expected to show off the new Essential phone in detail at the Code Conference on May 30.

This isn't the first time we've seen the Essential phone teased. Rubin tweeted this photo that shows a practically bezel-free phone a few months ago:

Andy Rubin essential smartphone teaser

SEE ALSO: Google is getting ahead of itself with its bet on AI

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NOW WATCH: Google just revealed 4 new things the Google Home can do

The creator of Android just teased a weird new accessory for his top-secret phone from Business Insider: Steve Kovach

Tuesday, May 23, 2017

The Transport Guy: Morgan Stanley: Alphabet could be sitting on a new $70 billion business (GOOG)

Steve Kovach May 23, 2017 at 07:05AM

waymo google self-driving car

Google's parent company Alphabet is sitting on a potentially huge self-driving car business, Morgan Stanley analysts Brian Nowak and Adam Jonas wrote in a research note Tuesday.

Nowak and Jonas peg Waymo, Alphabet's self-driving car division, as a potential spin-out company worth at least $70 billion.

They say the recent self-driving partnership with Lyft will help the company reach more miles driven. There's also a regulatory risk with self-driving cars that Alphabet may not want to deal with as driverless cars become mainstream, they say. That could be one reason Alphabet would spin the company out.

The note also raises an overall question about Alphabet's "Other Bets," the group of companies outside of the core Google business such as Nest, Verily, and Fiber. What happens when one of those Other Bets grows large enough that its able to sustain itself? Does Alphabet spin it out? Will the financials be reported separately? The two Morgan Stanley analysts see Waymo as the first Alphabet company for which this is a viable option.

It's only been about two years since Google reorganized into Alphabet, so these are all still open questions.

SEE ALSO: Google is getting ahead of itself in its quest to make the future happen now

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NOW WATCH: Waymo is now letting ordinary people sign up to test its self-driving cars in Phoenix

Morgan Stanley: Alphabet could be sitting on a new $70 billion business (GOOG) from Business Insider: Steve Kovach

Monday, May 22, 2017

The Transport Guy: Google is getting ahead of itself in its quest to make the future happen now (GOOG)

Steve Kovach May 22, 2017 at 02:26PM

google ceo sundar pichai at google i/o 2017

One of the the most unusual demos at Google's annual I/O conference last week was of a custom-built automatic cocktail maker powered by the company's artificial intelligence system, Google Assistant.

Event attendees could order up a mango mixer, say, by just talking to the drink dispenser. The machine, which some developers hacked together to show how Google's AI can be added to just about any gadget, would quickly serve up a cocktail with just the right ingredients drawn from tubes on its top.

You're already familiar with using Google's services on your phone or computer. Google wants to be in many more places than those, and it's planning on using AI to get there.

As Google officials laid out at last week's conference, the company envisions a future where its AI is inside everything from dish washers to cars. It helps manage your digital photos. And yes, it even could help mix drinks.

The search giant argued this development will be great for consumers. By injecting a little of its smarts into the stuff you use every day, the company will be improving lives.

But the company has other reasons for pursuing its vision. Google and other companies see AI as the next major computing breakthrough after smartphones. The payoff for the company that dominates AI could be huge. (Google doesn't know how to make money off AI yet, but that's a problem for another day.)

But the aggressive AI push by Google and its rivals begs the question: Do we really need Google (or Alexa or Siri or whatever else) inside of everything?

I don't think so.

Nothing we've seen from Google or its competitors to date has shown that voice commands and AI are easier or faster to use than smartphone apps, computer programs or web apps. AI may help extend Google and others' reach beyond phones, but it'll be a very, very long time before anything comes along that's capable enough to replace an app-empowered smartphone as your primary computing device.

Unfortunately, a lot of what we're seeing today with AI and voice control is trying to do just that.

During Google's keynote, one of the demos showed how Panera Bread built an app on top of Google Assistant that allows a customer to order by just talking to it. The demonstrator claimed it was just like ordering at the counter with another human at the store.

It was an impressive feat for a digital assistant. But you could place an order much easier by just tapping on Panera's smartphone app or visiting its web site. You shouldn't have to go through a lengthy verbal back-and-forth with a faceless virtual assistant just to get the Panera sandwich you want.

As tech analyst Ben Thompson put it:

I've experienced similar frustrations using voice assistants like Alexa to order an Uber or control smart lights. While they technically work, they're not easier or faster than just using a smartphone app.

The dubiousness of Google's vision seems even more clear when it comes to AI being embedded into everyday devices like thermostats, as we saw a few weeks ago when Ecobee announced thermostat with Alexa inside. I can't think of a single scenario where I'd rather talk to a virtual assistant in my thermostat than just use an app on my smartphone. 

Voice-powered AI can be useful for simple web searches; straightforward queries, like "What's the weather?"; and basic commands, like "Play the new Katy Perry song. But they're not well-suited for just about anything else you'd want to do. Apple's marketing boss Phil Schiller put it pretty well a few weeks ago in an interview with NDTV when he was asked about the rise of digital assistants in devices like the Amazon Echo.

"Voice assistants are incredibly powerful, their intelligence is going to grow, they’re gonna do more for us, but the role of the screen is gonna remain very important to all of this," he said.

In other words, if your goal is to kill the screen, you've blown it.google i/o 2017 sundar pichai AI first

All of the major tech companies are investing in AI in the belief that it will replace the smartphone as the dominant platform in tech. What none of them seem to realize is that AI won't replace the smartphone but improve it. It won't kill the category; it'll just make it more essential.

Google is the company perhaps least in touch with this reality. At its event last week, it went so far as to claim it's shifting from a "mobile first" company to an "AI first" one. As exciting as Google's (and Amazon's and Microsoft's and Apple's) advancements in AI have been, they still don't come close to its ambition.  

The truth is we're going to be stuck with smartphones for a very long time — think decades, not years. And while a Google Assistant-powered cocktail mixer makes for a cool demonstration, it goes to show that voice-powered AI is more entertaining these days than practical.

SEE ALSO: How Google's band of hardware pirates has re-invented itself after its legendary leader jumped ship

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NOW WATCH: Google just showed off an incredible camera app that identifies real-world objects

Google is getting ahead of itself in its quest to make the future happen now (GOOG) from Business Insider: Steve Kovach

The Transport Guy: An internal Google email reveals more evidence of the company's tip line for reporting whistle-blowers (GOOG)

Steve Kovach May 22, 2017 at 07:12AM

whistle whistleblower

A new filing in a lawsuit against Google shows evidence that the company's rumored team that tracks down employees who leak information does indeed exist.

The email comes from a lawsuit filed by an anonymous Google employee who claims the company runs a "spying program" that encourages employees to report each other for leaking information to the press or public, as The Information first reported in December. The lawsuit says the program violates California labor law.

According to the latest filing, the email was written by Brian Katz, who identifies himself as the leader of Google's "Investigations team," which includes the "stopleaks@" tip line that allegedly encourages Google employees to report leakers.

The email refers to an incident last year when a transcript from an internal all-hands "TGIF" meeting leaked to Recode. The email says the employees who leaked the transcript and memes were identified and fired and warns employees against leaking internal information to the press.

We've reached out to Google for comment on its investigations team.

Here's the email:

Google investigations team email

SEE ALSO: How Google's band of hardware pirates has re-invented itself after its legendary leader jumped ship

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NOW WATCH: Google just showed off an incredible camera app that identifies real-world objects

An internal Google email reveals more evidence of the company's tip line for reporting whistle-blowers (GOOG) from Business Insider: Steve Kovach

Friday, May 19, 2017

The Transport Guy: Google's augmented reality project is the coolest thing it showed off this week (GOOG)

Steve Kovach May 19, 2017 at 05:40AM

google daydream and tango demo tent google i/o 2017

MOUNTAIN VIEW, CA — Google wants to turn your phone into an augmented reality machine.

Augmented reality, or AR, is the concept of layering digital images on top of the real world. If you've played Pokémon Go or used a Snapchat Lens, then you've already experienced AR to one degree.

Google has one of the most powerful mobile AR tools with Tango, a project that has been years in the making and sprung out of its secretive product division called ATAP.

Today, Tango is getting closer to running on a wide variety of powerful Android phones and the company showed off the platform's latest capabilities at its annual I/O conference this week.

Here's a quick look at what Tango can do today, and some hints at what it'll be able to do in the future as it comes to more devices.

SEE ALSO: Everything Google announced at I/O

Tango won't work on just any phone. It requires a lot of processing power and an array of special cameras and sensors.

This Asus phone is equipped with everything you need to run Tango. Eventually, this will shrink down and work with a wider variety of devices.



In this demo, Tango is used in a classroom to show a bunch of students a virtual globe floating in the middle of the room.

Students are given Tango phones on selfie sticks.



You can only see the globe through the Tango phone's camera lens. Here's what happens when you put the phone down.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Google's augmented reality project is the coolest thing it showed off this week (GOOG) from Business Insider: Steve Kovach

Wednesday, May 17, 2017

The Transport Guy: Google is putting Android and its voice assistant inside of cars — here's your first look (GOOG, GOOGL)

Steve Kovach May 17, 2017 at 04:12PM

volvo car running android os

MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIF. — Android already runs on phones, tablets, and TVs.

Soon, it will be in your car too.

Google gave demos of two new Android-equipped automobiles at its I/O developer conference on Wednesday.

This is different than Android Auto, the software that allows you to plug your phone into a car and basically control your phone through the car's built-in display. 

In this case, Google has actually integrated Android directly into the car, so that you can do everything from accessing car-friendly apps like Spotify and Google Maps to controlling car settings like air conditioning. 

It's also an extension of Google Assistant, the voice-powered digital helper that's Google's answer to Apple Siri. With Assistant in your car, you can use your voice to do things like adjust your seat, pick music tracks, or make a phone call. 

In some cases, this feels like overkill — Is it really easier to tell your car to lower the air conditioning than to just turn a knob? But for things like navigation, phone calls, and the like, having a virtual assistant as your copilot could be helpful. 

We sat inside a new Volvo V90 running Android on its infotainment system. Here's a quick look at how it all works:

SEE ALSO: Here's everything Google announced at its big I/O conference

This is the Volvo V90. It'll be one of the first cars to come with Android. The car has built-in LTE wireless connectivity to power the Android system.



This is the infotainment system's main screen running Android. It's been modified to match Volvo's design. Here, you see a list of contacts you can call on the touchscreen.



You can also run third-party apps like Spotify, Pandora, and podcast apps.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Google is putting Android and its voice assistant inside of cars — here's your first look (GOOG, GOOGL) from Business Insider: Steve Kovach

The Transport Guy: Here's everything Google announced at its big I/O conference (GOOG, GOOGL)

Julie Bort and Steve Kovach May 17, 2017 at 03:03PM

Sundar Pichai

On Wednesday, Google kicked off it annual conference for developers.

Google CEO Sundar Pichai and a succession of company execs took the stage to talk up the latest milestones and to unveil new and upcoming products.

Among the new goodies: updates to Android, Google Home, Google Assistant and YouTube. As well as nifty new services like Google Lens, which uses your smarpthone's camera to identify objects in the real world. 

And Google highlighted the expansive reach of its platform, with its Android operating system now installed on 2 billion devices

Here's all the new stuff Google unveiled at I/O 2017:

 

SEE ALSO: Netflix is turning one of the world’s most popular games into a TV show — here’s what you should know about ‘The Witcher’

Google is rolling out "Smart Reply" to over 1 billion users of Gmail on Android and iOS. The feature uses Google's machine learning capabilities to respond to emails for you.



Google Lens is an impressive technology that allows your phone to recognize objects in the real world and take helpful actions. Point your phone at a WiFi router, for example, and Lens will show you the right password. Point your phone at a restaurant on the street and Lens finds online info about the restaurant. Lens isn't a standalone app, but rather a technology that will be baked into other Google apps, starting with Google Photos this summer.

Read more about Google Lens here.



By the way, Pinterest trolled Google I/O on Twitter over the announcement of Google Lens. Pinterest has already released its own app, called Pinterest Lens, which does a similar thing.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Here's everything Google announced at its big I/O conference (GOOG, GOOGL) from Business Insider: Steve Kovach

The Transport Guy: LIVE: Google's biggest event of the year (GOOG)

Steve Kovach May 17, 2017 at 09:52AM

Google IO 2017 Google Lens

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. — Google CEO Sundar Pichai announced that there are now 2 billion active devices based on the company’s Android software and touted the company’s new AI efforts as he took the stage at Google’s annual developer conference on Wednesday.

He also announced a new product called Google Lens, which will be part of the Google Assistant for Android phones. Lens can identify objects in the real world for a variety of uses. For example, it can automatically edit your photos or help you connect to a wifi router by snapping a photo of the password.

"It's been a very busy year since last year. We've been focused on our core mission of organizing the world's information," he said. He also mentioned that Google's efforts in AI are solving the world's problems at scale.

For example, Pichai spoke about how machine learning and AI are being used in the medical and scientific industries to accurately analyze molecules and other big data problems.

Overall, we're expecting Google to focus a lot on artificial intelligence and how it informs a variety of products from the Google Assistant on Android phones and messaging apps like Allo during the keynote. Google's AI is also extending to other devices like GE appliances and the iPhone.

We should also get an update on the latest version of Android, called Android O, which is expected to launch this fall.

We'll have all the news here as it happens, so refresh this post for the latest updates.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: I won't trade in my iPhone for a Samsung Galaxy S8 — here's why

LIVE: Google's biggest event of the year (GOOG) from Business Insider: Steve Kovach

Tuesday, May 16, 2017

The Transport Guy: Google is going to announce a new VR headset at its big event (GOOG, GOOGL)

Steve Kovach May 16, 2017 at 03:04PM

Google Daydream

Google plans to announce a new virtual reality headset at its annual I/O developers conference Wednesday, Janko Roettgers of Variety reports.

Unlike Google's current Daydream View headset that requires a phone to work, this will be a standalone device similar to what we've seen with Facebook's Oculus Rift and HTC's Vive. 

The headset is also said to have inside-out tracking, which means users won't have to install sensors around the room to track their movements.

Microsoft has touted inside-out tracking in its HoloLens and other third-party Windows VR headsets as a key differentiator from the competition. Oculus is also working an inside-out tracking headset.

Read the Variety story for more details >>

SEE ALSO: What to expect from Google's I/O keynote

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Google is going to announce a new VR headset at its big event (GOOG, GOOGL) from Business Insider: Steve Kovach

The Transport Guy: How Google's band of hardware pirates has re-invented itself after its legendary leader jumped ship (GOOG, GOOGL)

Steve Kovach May 16, 2017 at 01:08PM

Google ATAP

Almost three years ago, one of Google’s most celebrated executives took the stage at the company’s big developer conference and declared that the future was being built in a secretive hardware group she led.

“You’re going to get a glimpse of a small band of pirates trying to do epic shit,” she said, referencing nearly a dozen ambitious technology products under development and touting the team’s quick pace of execution.

Today Regina Dugan, the Google executive, is gone, and the remaining members of the crew she had assembled have made limited progress turning the bold vision into reality.

Google’s Advanced Technologies and Products group, or ATAP, still works in its own secure building on the outskirts of the Google campus, but the mission, culture, and spirit are much different than they once were, current and former members of the group told Business Insider.

“We’re not being pirates anymore,” said one person involved with ATAP. “We’re lowering the flag.”

Instead of dreaming up far-fetched research and development projects, the ATAP group now functions more like a product division tasked with shipping market-ready goods. The team of engineers and software developers now works more closely with sales and marketing employees in Google's consumer hardware division. And the autonomy to pick projects and obtain budget — once taken for granted by the group during Dugan's reign — is now a rigid process based as much on proving business potential as on doing something “epic.”

Dan Kaufman, a former deputy of Dugan’s who now oversees the group’s day-to-day operations, has brought a more subdued leadership style to ATAP, taking pains to stay out of the spotlight, sources said.

The changing nature of ATAP reflects Google’s ongoing efforts to adapt to a competitive, fast-moving tech market while delivering the balance of innovation and financial discipline expected by investors. With many of Google’s other moonshot projects now spun out into separate companies that are tucked under the overarching Alphabet corporation umbrella, Google is focused on efforts that directly tie into its core businesses more than ever.

Rick OsterlohFor ATAP, that’s meant getting folded into Google’s broader hardware group, which makes everything from smartphones to streaming video TV dongles, and which is overseen by Rick Osterloh, a former Motorola executive. While the pirates once reported directly to Google CEO Sundar Pichai, the ATAP group now answers to Osterloh. Indeed, many of the changes at ATAP are due to Osterloh’s stewardship. A lot of it also comes from Ruth Porat, the CFO of Google's parent company Alphabet, who has spent the last two years instilling a new financial accountability across the company, sources said.

Google declined to comment on this story or make Kaufman or Osterloh available for an interview.

Smartphone without a screen

Several of the people Business Insider spoke to said the morale within the ATAP ranks remains healthy. The group’s mission may have changed, causing some to follow Dugan to her new job at Facebook, but those who remain view the change as part of the broader evolution that has shaped the company in recent years. And work continues quietly on a variety of exciting projects, even if getting the greenlight to start a project is no longer as easy as in the past.

Among the stealth projects underway is a handheld device based on the concept of "affective computing," a discipline focused on creating gadgets that can interpret and respond to human emotions. One source referred to the project as similar to a smartphone, but without a screen. Another seemed less enthusiastic about the project, likening it to something you'd see on Kickstarter.

An MIT Media Lab project based on similar affective computing concepts, but not affiliated with the ATAP effort, describes a "touch phone" that includes a "touch-sensitive surface which conveys the user's physical response over a computer network. The recipient sees a small colored icon on his computer screen which changes in real time according to the way his conversational partner is interacting with the phone object."

ATAPAnd in the fall ATAP plans to launch Jacquard, a "smart" jacket that lets you control your smartphone by swiping on the fabric. The $350 jacket, which was designed in collaboration with Levi's and which will be the ATAP division's first real standalone project, was originally supposed to launch this spring. People working on the project are optimistic that it’ll launch in time for the new fall target and said that Osterloh appears to be personally excited about it.

More secrecy

When Google holds its 3-day annual developers' conference in Mountain View, Calif this week, the ATAP group will not have its own session, according to the official schedule, unlike during the previous two years. 

The stark difference in personalities at the top has changed the face of ATAP. Many saw Dugan, who left to create a similar group at arch-rival Facebook, as the heart of ATAP’s culture. And with her gone, there has been a notable change in style. 

Dugan relished in publicly unveiling jaw-dropping new projects, as she did during a keynote for Facebook a few weeks ago when she showcased projects to let people type with their brains or "hear" with their skin.

Dan KaufmanOsterloh, by contrast, has taken the opposite approach, eschewing flashy public demonstrations of prototypes. The new ATAP leadership has decided to keep projects under wraps until they’re almost fully baked, if they reveal them at all.

“Rick has set himself up as the guy who releases information,” one person familiar with the matter said. “When Rick came in, he changed the whole schedule.”

The person said that there was at least one new ATAP project scheduled to go public last year, but with Dugan gone and Kaufman and Osterloh in charge, everything was put back in stealth. According to another person close to Osterloh, the executive didn’t want the public getting distracted by something new and exciting from ATAP that may never launch. His vision was to keep the world focused on the mainstream products coming out the consumer hardware division.

Kaufman, who also worked with Dugan at DARPA and ATAP and is affectionately known as “DARPA Dan,” is another key to the quieter role ATAP has had over the last year.

“He’s much mellower than Regina,” one source said of Kaufman. “He’s the kind of guy who isn’t seeking the spotlight.”

One person close to Kaufman said that he didn't seek the same kind of publicity and fanfare that Dugan would when she'd unveil new projects. Instead, he has tasked the division with putting their heads down on their work, while greenlighting or ramping up some new projects.

“We definitely continue to work on things,” another source said. “We’re just not going to be announcing stuff way ahead anymore.”

Graduates and dead projects

Today, ATAP projects have to fit into Google’s broader hardware ambitions, which revolves around shipping mainstream consumer products like Pixel phones and the Google Home speaker. Last year, for example, Osterloh killed ATAP’s most high-profile product, Project Ara, shortly before it was scheduled to launch. Google even had marketing plans and other promotional material ready to go. 

Ara was a modular phone that would let users swap in parts like new cameras, processors, and health sensors and keep the device up to date over time. Whereas most people probably keep their phones for one or two years, an Ara phone was designed to last five years and to improve over time.Project Ara

But Ara was a wildly expensive project that conflicted directly with Google's upcoming Pixel phone. Even as recently as a month before Ara’s demise, employees were told the project was going well and on track to launch. It was dead by September of last year, about a month and a half before the Pixel’s debut. Google has also said it could use what it learned with Ara and bring the technology to other devices.

Even though Ara hardly looked like a mainstream product with its funky building block-like modules, it wasn’t the only product on the roadmap. The Ara group was also working on a high-end phone with a premium design and all the other bells and whistles you’d expect from an iPhone or Samsung Galaxy phone. The first version of Ara may have seemed experimental, but the ambition was to make Ara a mainstream consumer product. And some ATAP employees said they felt like it was killed because that would conflict too much with the Pixel. Google has said it can still use Ara technology for other projects, but nothing has come of that yet.

ATAP has had its share of successes over the years too. Project Tango, which allows phones and tablets to sense 3D space, is now being baked into Android. A Spotlight Stories animated short, Pearl, was nominated for an Oscar. Another project that made sensors that can detect congestive heart failure was acquired by Verily, Alphabet's life sciences company.

There are other hints that ATAP continues to explore new projects. One job listing last year implied that ATAP was working on a social smartphone game following the success of "Pokémon GO." There's also that affective computing device. And work continues on Project Soli, which uses miniature radar to control gadgets based on hand movements.

ATAPIn the meantime, current and former ATAP employees note the distinct change within the division since Dugan's departure and how it feels more and more like a mainstream product house than the product-focused R&D lab it was originally designed to be. The two-year limit on new projects isn't strictly enforced anymore, and there's a chance it could go away altogether. Some even speculated that ATAP's distinction could be eliminated and its staff and projects completely assimilated into Google's hardware division, ending any remaining autonomy from Google its employees have enjoyed.

But in the near term, the impression within ATAP appears to be that projects will be allowed to continue as long as there's a good chance they'll result in real products or "graduate" to another division within Google. And some even said the moves were necessary to justify ATAP's existence and keep its ambition alive.

Do you know anything about Google ATAP or Google’s hardware division? Email skovach@businessinsider.com and you'll be kept anonymous.

SEE ALSO: Meet Facebook's secretive and ambitious consumer hardware group

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How Google's band of hardware pirates has re-invented itself after its legendary leader jumped ship (GOOG, GOOGL) from Business Insider: Steve Kovach

The Transport Guy: What to expect from Google's biggest event of the year (GOOG)

Steve Kovach May 16, 2017 at 07:07AM

Sundar Pichai

Get ready for Google's AI show.

Google I/O, the company's annual developers conference and biggest event of the year, is usually an Android event where we get a look at the latest features for the smartphone operating system. But when I/O kicks off this Wednesday, expect Google's latest artificial intelligence efforts to be what everyone ends up talking about.

If you've been paying attention over the last year or so, you've noticed that Google seems especially passionate about AI, injecting it into everything from search results to chat apps to the new Google Assistant for Android phones and the Google Home speaker. CEO Sundar Pichai has sounded especially bullish on the prospects for AI on recent company earnings calls and public interviews.

That was just the beginning. Internally, Google sees AI as its next major platform after search and Android — and it wants to give developers a way to get in early.

Here's a quick preview of what to expect from Google during the opening keynote at I/O. The event kicks off Wednesday at 10 a.m. Pacific.

Building for AI

Google Home

At last year's I/O, we got our first look at Google Assistant in the Allo messaging app and Google Home speaker. Now that Assistant has had time to mature and grow into other devices like the new Galaxy S8, expect Google to talk about how developers can build for the platform.

This is very similar to the third-party "skills" that are part of Amazon Alexa that let you do everything from play games to order a pizza from Domino's. Google's ambition is to build an entire platform based on AI and voice control, and Wednesday's speech will be all about getting developers excited about the prospect.

Google is also expected to announce that its Assistant will be coming to the iPhone and other third-party appliances like GE home appliances, Bloomberg reported Tuesday.

The stakes are pretty big. Amazon already has a big head start with Alexa, and the digital assistant is already showing up in a bunch of third-party devices like thermostats and even cars. It also has thousands of third-party skills. Microsoft is also working on expanding its Cortana assistant, and announced connected speakers from Harman Kardon and HP coming later this year.

But to borrow Pichai's favorite phrase, it's still "early days" for the category, and everyone is still trying to figure out the best way to grow their respective AI platforms and eventually turn them into real businesses. For Amazon, it's a bit easier since Alexa encourages you to buy more stuff from the company's massive online store. Google and the others will have to figure out how to stuff ads into screenless devices in a non-intrusive way. Expect to see a clearer look at that vision during the keynote.

Android

android nougat text reply shade

Don't think Google forgot about Android though. Although the company gave an early look at the next version (called Android O for now), it mostly focused on developer-friendly features. We'll probably get a better looking at the user-facing features Wednesday. Android O will likely debut this fall with the sequel to Google's Pixel phone.

We might also see an update on Google's mission to let Chromebooks run Android apps, turning them into full PCs. But the early models of these Chromebooks are littered with bugs, and develops haven't modified their apps for a laptop-sized screen yet. There's still a lot of work to be done.

Cars

No, we're not talking self-driving cars, but cars running Android for their infotainment systems and other controls.

On Monday, Google announced that Audi and Volvo will make cars that run on Android so you can run apps like Maps and Google Play Music without plugging your phone into car like you have to do with Android Auto or Apple's CarPlay. It also features Google Assistant so you can ask the car for directions or give commands while driving. Finally, it can control basic functions like the air conditioning and seat positioning. Expect to see some demos at I/O this week.

Virtual reality and augmented reality

google daydream view vr

Google's VR platform Daydream debuted at last year's I/O, and has since launched on the Google Pixel and a few other devices. The company also bought VR gaming studio Owlchemy Labs, a sign that it wants to start building more VR content in house. Expect an update on how Daydream is going.

Other stuff

Since Google I/O is a developers conference, there will be a lot of wonky developer talk on top of all the flashy consumer stuff. We won't bore you with that.

You can also expect some updates on Google's chat apps Allo and Duo, Instant Apps (which let you "stream" a snippet of an app when you click a related link in search), and maybe a demo from one of Google's sister companies like Nest or Verily.

Flops

Google has a long history of announcing stuff at I/O that either fail or the company never follows through on. Google TV. Google Glass. The Nexus Q. The list goes on and on. If you see something from Google on Wednesday that looks too good to be true, it just might be.

SEE ALSO: Google's CEO isn't worried about making money on AI yet

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What to expect from Google's biggest event of the year (GOOG) from Business Insider: Steve Kovach

Sunday, May 14, 2017

The Transport Guy: Lyft and Waymo are teaming up to work on self-driving cars (GOOG)

Steve Kovach May 14, 2017 at 06:04PM

waymo

Waymo and Lyft are forging a new partnership to work on self-driving cars, spokespeople for both companies confirmed Sunday night.

The New York Times was the first to report the news.

The companies declined to describe the nature of the partnership. But Waymo, which spun out of Google's self-driving car division, has nearly a decade of experience of working in the space.

The collaboration is also a shot at Uber, which is working on its own self-driving car technology and is already Lyft's key rival in the ride-hailing space.

Things are also icy between Waymo and Uber. Waymo is suing Uber, claiming the executive who used to be in charge of Uber's autonomous car program stole proprietary self-driving technology from Waymo and used it to develop parts of Uber's self-driving systems. Uber has denied those accusations. The Waymo and Lyft partnership is a signal that the two companies are willing to team up to take on a mutual rival.

Lyft isn't working on its own proprietary self-driving cars, but it has said in the past that it was willing to partner with companies that are. In theory, Lyft could help Waymo connect to a large user base of customers already using the ride-hailing service so Waymo doesn't have to build its own network from scratch.

"We’re looking forward to working with Lyft to explore new self-driving products that will make our roads safer and transportation more accessible," a Waymo spokesperson told Business Insider in an email statement. "Lyft’s vision and commitment to improving the way cities move will help Waymo’s self-driving technology reach more people, in more places."

SEE ALSO: Google bought one of the top VR game studios

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NOW WATCH: We got a ride in a self-driving Uber — here's what it was like

Lyft and Waymo are teaming up to work on self-driving cars (GOOG) from Business Insider: Steve Kovach

The Transport Guy: Despite Samsung's best efforts, the smartphone can't replace your computer yet

Steve Kovach May 14, 2017 at 06:00AM

samsung dex

Samsung has a deep history of testing wild ideas with new products and features. There were the "touchless" controls in the Galaxy S4. Curved TVs that are more expensive without adding much of a benefit. Even refrigerators with tablet computers built into the door.

Samsung's latest trick: turning your smartphone into a full-on desktop computer. That trick is also tied to the very obvious question: "Why would I need that?"

The theory is that smartphones are so powerful that they're the only computer you need in many cases. So why not create a way to make it that one-gadget-to-rule-them-all?

This isn't a new concept. Microsoft gave it a shot with the Continuum feature built into Windows 10 Phones. But since no one really has a Windows Phone these days, the feature went nowhere. And Motorola even tried it way back in 2011 with the Atrix, an Android phone that could power a laptop.

Samsung is giving the idea another go with DeX, a $150 dock for the Galaxy S8 that lets you attach a monitor, keyboard, and mouse and run a lightweight, custom desktop operating system.

samsung dex

At first glance, it looks very familiar. There's a desktop with wallpaper, app icons, and a mouse pointer for navigating. If you weren't paying attention you'd think you were looking at a Mac desktop screen.

But this is an entirely different kind of operating system that's loosely based on Android. You can run all your Android apps in DeX's desktop mode, and do other smartphone-like stuff such as making calls or checking notifications.

For the most part, it works pretty well, as long as you stick with Samsung's own apps (web browser, email, etc.) and the small handful of third-party Android apps that have been optimized for DeX, like Microsoft Office.

Everything else feels janky though. DeX lets you run any other Android app, but they're squeezed into a smartphone-shaped window without the option to make them full screen. For some Android apps that have been configured to work in tablet mode, like Slack, this is OK. But it gets really awkward with just about every other app.

samsung dex

Google has tried over and over to turn its Chrome and Android operating systems into desktop replacements with mixed results. Samsung appears to be jumping the gun a bit with DeX, and it feels like the company is putting the cart before the horse. Maybe one day we'll just have one gadget that we carry with us everywhere and have it adapt to what we want to do. But today, there simply isn't the app support and raw computing power for that to happen.

DeX is a fine solution if you just need something for emailing, writing, and browsing the web, but I don't see this gaining enough third-party support to become a broad enough platform for a large number of people to use. 

At best, DeX is an extremely niche product. It works fine, but it's not something I'd recommend for most people. The Galaxy S8 is a great phone, something you should definitely consider buying. But when it comes to add-ons like DeX, it's still clear that no one has a product that can beat the tired and true laptop/smartphone combination.

SEE ALSO: Why hasn't anyone made the perfect laptop?

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NOW WATCH: Here's the best smartphone camera you can buy

Despite Samsung's best efforts, the smartphone can't replace your computer yet from Business Insider: Steve Kovach

Wednesday, May 10, 2017

The Transport Guy: Google just bought one of the top virtual reality studios (GOOG)

Steve Kovach May 10, 2017 at 01:36PM

Rick and Morty: Virtual Rick-Ality

Google announced Wednesday that it bought Owlchemy Labs, one of the top virtual reality video game companies.

Owlchemy will join Google's Daydream division, which makes the Daydream VR headset and is also working on augmented reality.

The move signals that Google wants to build more VR content in house, even as rival Facebook closes its own VR studio, Oculus Story Studio. 

Owlchemy is best known for its VR game "Job Simulator," where you play a human doing menial jobs for robots. Yes, it's as weird as it sounds.

The company also recently released a new VR game based on the popular cartoon "Rick and Morty."

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: 15 things you didn't know your iPhone headphones could do

Google just bought one of the top virtual reality studios (GOOG) from Business Insider: Steve Kovach

Tuesday, May 9, 2017

The Transport Guy: The startup trying to beat Apple's AirPods just hired two execs from Amazon and Nest

Steve Kovach May 09, 2017 at 08:00AM

Doppler Labs executives Brian Hall, Noah Kraft, Velastegui, Richard Heye

If you're going to take on Apple, you'd better bring out the big guns.

That's what Doppler Labs, maker of the Here One wireless earbuds, did this month with two key hires with impressive pedigrees. Rich Heye, a former VP at Amazon's hardware lab, will be the startup's new CTO. Sofia Velastegui, a top engineer at Alphabet's connected appliance company Nest, will be chief product officer.

The two join COO Brian Hall, who came to Doppler late last year after a more than 20-year run at Microsoft, where he most recently worked on Surface and HoloLens. The new hires round out an exec team with impressive and diverse resumés.

Doppler's first major product, the Here One, launched in February. The $300 earbuds can stream audio from your smartphone, but the real standout feature is their ability to filter out extraneous noise or boost the volume when someone is talking to you. In theory, you should be able to wear Here One even when you're not listening to music and have the earbuds augment your overall listening experience. The company hasn't disclosed sales, but did say it had more than 10,000 pre-orders for the Here One.

Doppler Labs Here One 3

As CTO, Heye will bring his expertise in chip technology to Doppler labs as the company works on new products with more computing power and better battery life. Heye's last job was at Amazon's Lab 126, the California-based office where the company makes everything from Kindles to the Echo. Heye was in charge of vision chips for the ill-fated Fire Phone, which could track a user's head movements to create a 3D effect on the screen.

After the Fire Phone flop, Heye left Amazon in 2015 and took some time off. A tech veteran who has worked at Apple, AMD, and SanDisk over the years, Heye said in an interview that he was intrigued by Doppler's vision and how the company was able to ship its first product with a team of just a few dozen people.

Richard Heye Chief Technology Officer doppler labs

Velastegui comes to Doppler from Nest, where she was a rising star inside the company working on the technology to support current products and future products in the company's roadmap. In fact, Business Insider recently named Velastegui one of the most powerful female engineers in tech and we've heard that there was a lot of disappointment internally at Nest after losing her.

"I have to be very excited about a product and it has to be disruptive," Velastegui said of her decision to leave Nest and join Doppler Labs. "I was blown away how they were able to do AirPods features and so much more."

As CPO, Velastegui will have to figure out how to provide customers with more updates and features to the Here One as the holiday shopping season approaches and how to launch future versions of the Here One earbuds.

Sophia Velastegui Chief Product Officer doppler labs

'Hearable' computers

Doppler Labs has a larger ambition than just letting you stream music to wireless earbuds and filtering out extra noise. The company wants to build an entire computing platform based on audio, and is in talks with other companies to potentially figure out how to get a digital assistant inside one of its ear-computers.

CEO Noah Kraft and Heye wouldn't say which companies Doppler was talking to about digital assistants, but there are only a handful with the expertise — Google, Apple, Amazon, and Microsoft. Microsoft recently partnered with Harman Kardon to put its Cortana assistant inside a WiFi speaker. Amazon's Alexa has made its way into third-party speakers, smart thermostats, and even cars. Apple has already built Siri into the AirPods, and it's highly unlikely it would license the technology to a third party like Doppler.

The ultimate vision is to create a platform for "hearable" computing where you don't have to take your smartphone out as often to check for notifications or get information from a digital assistant. It's a lot like the the future we saw in the movie "Her."

SEE ALSO: Our review of the Here One earbuds

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NOW WATCH: People try on Apple's new wireless 'AirPods' for the first time

The startup trying to beat Apple's AirPods just hired two execs from Amazon and Nest from Business Insider: Steve Kovach

Sunday, May 7, 2017

The Transport Guy: Why hasn't anyone made the perfect laptop? (AAPL, MSFT)

Steve Kovach May 07, 2017 at 05:30AM

edel lynch microsoft surface laptop launch event

While it's great to see Mark Zuckerberg and company try and kill the smartphone with futuristic face-computers, I still live in the present. And in the present, I need a great laptop when I'm not staring at my iPhone.

There have been a lot of attempts to reimagine laptops over the last few years. In 2015, Microsoft had the Surface Book, a powerful portable with a clever hinge and detachable touchscreen. Last year, Apple unveiled its new MacBook Pro, which along with a new design featured the new Touch Bar that replaced the standard function keys with digital keys. Google announced last year that it'd let you run Android apps on Chromebooks, effectively turning them into fully-functional PCs.

But none of those solutions turned out to be ideal. The Surface Book launched with loads of bugs and didn't really get it right until version two launched last year. The MacBook Pro was plagued with battery life issues and complaints from users because it didn't have the ports and power they needed. And Chromebooks with Android apps are still very much a work in progress.

I'm still typing away on a three-year-0ld MacBook Air. It has a terrible screen with mile-wide bezels and an overall design that's really starting to show its age after nearly seven years. The sad truth: It's still the best laptop.

Despite numerous recent attempts, no one else has nailed it.

But I was intrigued this week.

microsoft surface laptop

The latest attempt to shake up the laptop category is Microsoft's Surface Laptop, a new $999 computer designed to compete with Apple's MacBook. It hasn't launched yet, but we got a good look during Microsoft's debut in New York on Tuesday.

There's a lot to like here, but there's also plenty of reasons to remain skeptical, given Microsoft's track record and recent flubs from its rivals.

This time the gimmick is Windows 10 S, a sort of diet version of Windows 10 that can only run apps from Microsoft's own app store. That means you're going to miss out on a lot of the programs you probably use, including popular web browsers like Chrome or Firefox. Windows 10 S is designed to be Microsoft's answer to Google Chrome, which has been eating up significant chunks of the education market. Microsoft desperately wants that market back.

However, you can still upgrade the Surface Laptop to the full version of Windows 10 for free for the first year. It'll be $49 after that. That's what intrigues me the most — a full Windows 10 laptop with a big touchscreen for $999. And on paper, the specs seem to line up nicely with my beloved MacBook Air.

Here's where the skepticism comes in.

Everyone from Microsoft to Apple to Google have promised to shake up the laptop market in recent years, and so far, they've all failed. Apple lost the high ground by effectively stripping the "pro" out of its pro lineup. Google can't get Android to work properly on a laptop. And now, the Surface Laptop just feels like a vessel to get other computer makers excited about pumping out cheap Windows 10 S devices and selling them to schools. It's not a category-defining product.

And until someone comes up with one of those, I'm keeping my old MacBook Air. 

SEE ALSO: Why the iPhone 7 is still better than the Galaxy S8

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NOW WATCH: Hands-on with Microsoft's newest laptop that's taking on Google and Apple

Why hasn't anyone made the perfect laptop? (AAPL, MSFT) from Business Insider: Steve Kovach

Tuesday, May 2, 2017

The Transport Guy: Early Uber investor Chris Sacca: CEO Kalanick is in 'a very vulnerable and introspective state right now'

Steve Kovach May 02, 2017 at 05:31PM

Chris Sacca

NEW ORLEANS — Chris Sacca, an early Uber investor and former "Shark Tank" judge, said he has ended a years-long grudge with Uber CEO Travis Kalanick and is advising the embattled executive on how to handle the series of controversies currently plaguing the company.

Speaking at the Collision conference in New Orleans on Tuesday, Sacca said his rekindled relationship with Kalanick leads him to believe Kalanick is "materially changing" for the good.

"I think Travis is in a very vulnerable and introspective state right now," Sacca said. "For the first time he's acknowledging the places he could use help and starting to take responsibility for his broader role."

Sacca was an early investor in Uber and a Kalanick confidante, but the relationship soured. Kalanick became upset that Sacca was trying to buy out other investors' equity in Uber in order to increase his own stake, according to a 2015 Forbes profile. 

Sacca acknowledged at the time that he barely spoke to Kalanick, the brash Uber founder who has a reputation for a win-at-all-costs mentality that some critics say has led to some of Uber's recent internal problems.

While Uber has grown to become the most valuable private tech company, its reputation has been tarnished by a slew of controversies, ranging from sexism within its ranks to allegations from rival Google that it stole key self-driving technology. Several senior executives have also left Uber.

The culture is fixable

"I think that the company is redeemable and that the culture is fixable," Sacca said at the conference on Tuesday. "And Travis is waking up to why."

However, Sacca declined to say what specific advice he has given Kalanick beyond the fact that he suggested a few names for the new COO role Uber is trying to fill. (Sacca said Uber's new COO should be a woman.)

It's not the first time Sacca has spoken out about Uber's troubles this year. In March, Sacca spoke at SXSW and said he wasn't surprised by what former Uber engineer Susan Fowler wrote in her blog post highlighting issues of alleged sexism at the company. He also said he still wasn't on speaking terms with Kalanick at the time, due to something "wholly unrelated" to the company's recent sexual harassment scandals, so the two appear to have made up since then.

Uber is expected to release a report later this month from an independent investigation of its workplace practices led by former US Attorney General Eric Holder.

An Uber spokesperson did not have a comment on Sacca's remarks.

Biz Carson contributed to this report.

SEE ALSO: Google's CEO got a massive raise last year

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NOW WATCH: Uber wants to carry you around in a flying car — here’s what it could look like

Early Uber investor Chris Sacca: CEO Kalanick is in 'a very vulnerable and introspective state right now' from Business Insider: Steve Kovach

The Transport Guy: YouTube is getting a big redesign (GOOG, GOOGL)

Steve Kovach May 02, 2017 at 09:00AM

Susan Wojcicki

YouTube's website is getting a big makeover.

Starting Tuesday, you'll be able to preview the video site's new design by signing up here. It'll eventually roll out to everyone. Neal Mohan, YouTube's product boss, announced the change at the Collision tech conference in New Orleans.

The update is based on Material Design, Google's home-grown design language in Android, Chrome, and some other products. Google also says the revamp will allow the company to add new features faster in the future.

Keep scrolling to see what the new YouTube website will look like.

SEE ALSO: Google's stock is reaching new highs

Here's the new home screen.



There's also a new dark theme.



This is what channel pages will look like.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

YouTube is getting a big redesign (GOOG, GOOGL) from Business Insider: Steve Kovach