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Gemini is taking over Google

Image: Alex Parkin / The Verge

At Google’s gadget launch this week, it took almost half an hour before Google actually talked about its new gadgets. There’s a lot to be excited about inside the new Pixel 9 lineup and the Pixel Watch 3, but Google’s event made its true priorities clear. AI matters more to Google than Pixel, more than Android, more than just about anything.
On this episode of The Vergecast, we talk about all of Google’s AI announcements, and what they might mean for how you use your devices going forward. Is this a paradigm shift? Since so much of Google’s focus is on the Pixel’s camera, we also talk about the ongoing “what is a photo” apocalypse, and whether what we’re capturing is even photos anymore.

After that, Nilay tells us about his adventures judging the TV Shootout, which included two days of squinting at incredibly impressive displays trying to figure out which one is truly the best. He learned a lot about how to look at a screen, and about the state of the art in TV tech, and he has lots to share.
Next we run down a bunch of the week’s regulatory news, as Apple continues to pick odd fights with developers and the Epic / Google judge continues to threaten to tear the company apart. It’s remarkable how much the winds have shifted in the Big Tech regulation fight, and it seems change is only going to come faster now.
Finally, we do a lightning round of stories, on everything from Flipboard’s fediverse moves to Eric Schmidt’s very telling comments on AI to the fastest phone charger you’ve ever seen in your entire life. Watts for days.

If you want to know more about everything we discuss in this episode, here are some links to get you started, beginning with Google:

Google Pixel 9 launch event: all the announcements and products
AI overshadowed Pixel at the Pixel event

All the AI features coming to Google’s Pixel 9 series
Google debuts Pixel Studio AI image-making app
Google makes your Pixel screenshots searchable with Recall-like AI feature
Every time Google dinged Apple during its Pixel 9 launch event
Google Gemini’s voice chat mode is here
Using Gemini Live was faster than Google, but also more awkward
From Wired: For Google’s Pixel Camera Team, It’s All About the Memories

And on the TV Shootout:

Inside the competition that named the Sony A95L the best TV of 2024
And on app store regulation:

Patreon adds Apple tax to avoid getting kicked out of the App Store
Apple is finally going to open up iPhone tap-to-pay
Apple relents and approves Spotify app with EU pricing
Epic judge says he’ll ‘tear the barriers down’ on Google’s app store monopoly

And in the lightning round:

Alex Cranz’s pick: Realme’s 320W fast charging can fully charge a smartphone in four and a half minutes

David Pierce’s pick: Halide’s Process Zero feature captures photos with no AI processing

David’s other pick: Flipboard is going to let you follow fediverse accounts right inside the app

Nilay Patel’s pick: Ex-Google CEO: AI startups can steal IP, hire lawyers to “clean up the mess”

Image: Alex Parkin / The Verge

At Google’s gadget launch this week, it took almost half an hour before Google actually talked about its new gadgets. There’s a lot to be excited about inside the new Pixel 9 lineup and the Pixel Watch 3, but Google’s event made its true priorities clear. AI matters more to Google than Pixel, more than Android, more than just about anything.

On this episode of The Vergecast, we talk about all of Google’s AI announcements, and what they might mean for how you use your devices going forward. Is this a paradigm shift? Since so much of Google’s focus is on the Pixel’s camera, we also talk about the ongoing “what is a photo” apocalypse, and whether what we’re capturing is even photos anymore.

After that, Nilay tells us about his adventures judging the TV Shootout, which included two days of squinting at incredibly impressive displays trying to figure out which one is truly the best. He learned a lot about how to look at a screen, and about the state of the art in TV tech, and he has lots to share.

Next we run down a bunch of the week’s regulatory news, as Apple continues to pick odd fights with developers and the Epic / Google judge continues to threaten to tear the company apart. It’s remarkable how much the winds have shifted in the Big Tech regulation fight, and it seems change is only going to come faster now.

Finally, we do a lightning round of stories, on everything from Flipboard’s fediverse moves to Eric Schmidt’s very telling comments on AI to the fastest phone charger you’ve ever seen in your entire life. Watts for days.

If you want to know more about everything we discuss in this episode, here are some links to get you started, beginning with Google:

Google Pixel 9 launch event: all the announcements and products
AI overshadowed Pixel at the Pixel event

All the AI features coming to Google’s Pixel 9 series
Google debuts Pixel Studio AI image-making app
Google makes your Pixel screenshots searchable with Recall-like AI feature
Every time Google dinged Apple during its Pixel 9 launch event
Google Gemini’s voice chat mode is here
Using Gemini Live was faster than Google, but also more awkward
From Wired: For Google’s Pixel Camera Team, It’s All About the Memories

And on the TV Shootout:

Inside the competition that named the Sony A95L the best TV of 2024

And on app store regulation:

Patreon adds Apple tax to avoid getting kicked out of the App Store
Apple is finally going to open up iPhone tap-to-pay
Apple relents and approves Spotify app with EU pricing
Epic judge says he’ll ‘tear the barriers down’ on Google’s app store monopoly

And in the lightning round:

Alex Cranz’s pick: Realme’s 320W fast charging can fully charge a smartphone in four and a half minutes

David Pierce’s pick: Halide’s Process Zero feature captures photos with no AI processing

David’s other pick: Flipboard is going to let you follow fediverse accounts right inside the app

Nilay Patel’s pick: Ex-Google CEO: AI startups can steal IP, hire lawyers to “clean up the mess”

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