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16 votes
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Thieves of experience: How Google and Facebook corrupted capitalism
6 votes -
The CNIL has imposed a penalty of fifty million euros against Google for breaches of the GDPR
12 votes -
Google drones can already deliver you coffee in Australia
4 votes -
Trying to de-Google my life bit by bit. What should I do to move away from gmail?
I'm considering self-hosting, but might prefer to use a paid email provider. Perhaps ProtonMail?
40 votes -
Hey Google! When did I ask you to access my Purchase details?
5 votes -
How the artificial intelligence program AlphaZero mastered its games
8 votes -
How Google tracks your personal information
7 votes -
Google takes down Artstation android app for explicit content
11 votes -
Google’s secret China project “effectively ended” after internal confrontation
12 votes -
We finally talked to an actual Waymo passenger—here’s what he told us
11 votes -
DuckDuckGo has acquired ownership of duck.com from Google
42 votes -
Google CEO Sundar Pichai testifies before the House Judiciary Committee on Data Collection
15 votes -
Google+ shutdown speeds up, new privacy bug affected 52.5 million users
16 votes -
Google Hangouts for consumers will shut down in 2020
42 votes -
Google tried to patent my work after a job interview
18 votes -
Google shut out privacy and security teams from secret China project
22 votes -
Tim Cook defends using Google as primary search engine on Apple devices
15 votes -
iPhone user to Pixel 3 - Let's talk phones
Hello, ~tech! I've been really interested in the Google Pixel 3 (non XL) for quite some time, mainly due to my boredom of the Apple ecosystem. I've been primarily an iPhone user since 2014...
Hello, ~tech!
I've been really interested in the Google Pixel 3 (non XL) for quite some time, mainly due to my boredom of the Apple ecosystem. I've been primarily an iPhone user since 2014 (currently stuck on the iPhone 6S) and I've recently been eager to make a switch to Android. The Pixel 3 seems to be exactly what I'm looking for. Stock Android experience, a beautiful camera, modern device, and I'm already pretty integrated into Google's ecosystem of services, and I feel the transition will be very smooth.
So, for any Google Pixel 3 users, non XL or otherwise, what do you love and/or hate about your device? Were you in my shoes as well?
10 votes -
Google Chrome’s users take a back seat to its bottom line
16 votes -
Google staff walk out over women's treatment
23 votes -
Introducing reCAPTCHA v3: the new way to stop bots
30 votes -
Google Home (in)security
11 votes -
Google reveals it has sacked forty-eight employees over sexual harassment over the past two years
10 votes -
How Google protected Andy Rubin, the ‘father of Android’
7 votes -
Surveillance capitalism has led us into a dystopia
23 votes -
A look at the Android Market (aka Google Play) on its 10th Anniversary
3 votes -
Google responds to EU by adding a fee to Play Services
18 votes -
Did Uber steal Google’s intellectual property?
7 votes -
Google's beefing up user data privacy (which includes shutting down Google+)
42 votes -
The Death of Google
14 votes -
Google announces "Made by Google" family 2018: Phones (Pixel 3, Pixel 3 XL), tablet (Pixel Slate), and virtual assistant (Google Home Hub)
6 votes -
Alphabet to shut Google+ social site after user data exposed
18 votes -
Why I’m Worried About Google - I used to trust some of its products, like Chrome. I increasingly don’t.
28 votes -
This blog has moved
25 votes -
Data Factories
6 votes -
Google announces "Project Stream", a test of streaming Assassin's Creed Odyssey through Chrome (signup available)
10 votes -
Trustworthy Chrome Extensions, by default
6 votes -
How companies can use fake websites and backdated news articles to censor Google’s search results
7 votes -
Siri, Alexa, Google - Who's using and having good experiences with voice commands?
Hi there, Big companies are spending big money on allowing consumers to control everything from their TV, smart speakers, lights, microwaves, etc with voice commands. But do people really want...
Hi there,
Big companies are spending big money on allowing consumers to control everything from their TV, smart speakers, lights, microwaves, etc with voice commands. But do people really want that?
I'm curious because I very much do NOT want to interact with computers vocally. I find it's slow and prone to error, not unlike writing out long passages on a smartphone. It functions, but it's not a great experience and remains a novelty for me.
Bought both kids Echo Dots which is a smart speaker with Amazon's Alexa assistant. It's cool, really innovative. But after a couple weeks both remain unplugged in my kids' rooms - totally lost interest. The only person who I've seen really use a voice speaker is an elderly gentlemen for whom it was the easiest way to interact with a computer (using it specifically to play music and get news).
My friend swears that teens commonly use Siri on their phones to look up information. I can only think of one person I've seen actively use the voice controls and that was an older woman who wanted show her friends how Siri could "rap."
So I was curious how many of you find yourself frequently interacting with computers via voice commands. I personally feel very awkward and self-aware and get easily frustrated because it reminds me so much of the terrible automated attendants on 800 numbers.
Edit: You all are confirming my suspicions. Anyone under age 25 use the voice commands often? I feel like this is all just the first step in designing AI interfacing
28 votes -
The real reason Google made Android
13 votes -
Chrome's new forced login policy is a violation of user privacy and trust
50 votes -
Planned updates for Chrome 70 to give more control of browser sign-in, show sync state, and clear all cookies
30 votes -
Google confirms it's letting third parties scan your Gmail
21 votes -
Secure, open-source alternative to Google Keep
I was looking to maybe cut down on my Googleness and replacing Keep seemed like a good start. I need something that has a simple interface and most (if not all) of the same features as Keep. Any...
I was looking to maybe cut down on my Googleness and replacing Keep seemed like a good start. I need something that has a simple interface and most (if not all) of the same features as Keep. Any suggestions? Also I'm on Android btw.
42 votes -
Battery saver had been turned on for a lot of Pixel users unintentionally, according to Google employee
21 votes -
Google China prototype links searches to phone numbers
10 votes -
Google employees are reportedly resigning over China search efforts
30 votes -
Leaving Apple & Google: /e/ first beta is here
14 votes -
Inbox is signing off. Find your favorite features in the new Gmail
36 votes