Google Allo Google Allo is another keen informing application for Android and iOS that causes you say increasingly and accomplish more. Communicate better with stickers, doodles, and colossal emoticons and content. Allo likewise presents to you the Google Assistant, review release. React rapidly with Smart Reply Google Allo makes it less demanding for you to react rapidly and keep the discussion going, notwithstanding when you're in a hurry. With Smart Reply, you can react to messages with only a tap, so you can send a speedy "yes" because of a companion asking "Are you on your way?" Smart Reply will likewise recommend reactions for photographs. On the off chance that your companion sends you a photograph of their pet, you may see Smart Reply proposals like "aww adorable!" And whether you're a "haha" or "😂" sort of individual, Smart Reply will enhance after some time and acclimate to your style. Meet your Google A...
Strengthening our commitment to racial justice
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
I started working with Dr. Carl Mack when I took an engineering internship in my hometown of Seattle. But it wasn�t long before my internship took me in a completely different direction. The city was on high alert in the wake of racial discrimination and violence, and Dr. Mack was the VP of the city�s NAACP chapter. At his side, I was soon participating in protests and closed door meetings with city leaders�opening my eyes to non-technical solutions, and setting me off on a path that would eventually lead me to Google.org, where today I lead giving projects focused on the Bay Area and on racial justice.
More recently, incidences of racial violence have again dominated our headlines, with the killing of young men like Tamir Rice and Jordan Davis, the deaths of Michael Brown and Sandra Bland, and countless other acts of injustice. And it isn�t just heartbreaking individual stories. The data is troubling: African Americans are incarcerated at nearly six times the rate of whites. An estimated 40 percent of all students expelled from U.S. schools are black, and 30 percent are Latino. Of course, Google and our own industry need to do more to promote equality and opportunities for all.
Social innovators can help us move closer to our ideals of equality and justice. That�s why last year, Google.org launched a new, dedicated effort to support leaders who are doing critical work to end mass incarceration and combat endemic educational inequality for black and brown students. We announced $2.35 million in grants to support leaders like #BlackLivesMatter co-founder Patrisse Cullors; Chris Chatmon, who leads Oakland's African American Male Achievement Initiative; and Raj Jayadev, who founded the criminal justice reform organization Silicon Valley De-Bug.
Patrisse Cullors, Co-Founder of #BlackLivesMatter, at the Google.org screening of 3 � Minutes and 10 bullets, Castro Theatre in San Francisco, Calif. on November 3, 2015.
Today, I'm excited to continue that momentum with the addition of four more organizations in this space, totalling $3 million in new grants. To help eliminate racial bias within our educational systems, we�re supporting San Francisco�s My Brother and Sister's Keeper (MBSK) program, Oakland�s Roses in Concrete Community School, and the tech-enabled college success startup, Beyond12. We're also supporting Bryan Stevenson and the national Equal Justice Initiative (EJI), which is focused on countering deep-seated bias against people of color in our communities and institutions. In addition to the grant, we�re committed to working with EJI to bring its public education work online so that millions more can experience it.
From left to right: David Drummond, Senior Vice President, Corporate Development, Alphabet; Bryan Stevenson, Founder and CEO, Equal Justice Initiative; Dr. Jeff Duncan-Andrade, Founder, Roses in Concrete Community School, Oakland; Landon Dickey, Special Assistant for African American Achievement & Leadership, San Francisco Unified School District; Alexandra Bernadotte, Founder and CEO, Beyond 12; Richard Carranza, Superintendent, San Francisco Unified School District; and Justin Steele, Principal, Google.org. Photo credit: 510Media.
Each of these organizations and their leaders have shown a deep, fundamental understanding of racial injustice and are actively finding ways to rid our systems of social, educational and economic exclusion. We as a company are proud to support them.
Posted by Justin Steele, Principal, Google.org https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj25NUwVLCz33z7iFQIi559sWTmLwVccK1dPmrNnjNJ7P85BPGx_m8ZgSWFuZSJlooT1gCAGkjU_pjXBdItqD7xuf7_P89s9gbz1WpSr_4xZLgfxOUj8U0fdaLYJCIhDUKAChvlvglxeYQ/s1600/first.jpg Justin Steele Principal Google.org
More recently, incidences of racial violence have again dominated our headlines, with the killing of young men like Tamir Rice and Jordan Davis, the deaths of Michael Brown and Sandra Bland, and countless other acts of injustice. And it isn�t just heartbreaking individual stories. The data is troubling: African Americans are incarcerated at nearly six times the rate of whites. An estimated 40 percent of all students expelled from U.S. schools are black, and 30 percent are Latino. Of course, Google and our own industry need to do more to promote equality and opportunities for all.
Social innovators can help us move closer to our ideals of equality and justice. That�s why last year, Google.org launched a new, dedicated effort to support leaders who are doing critical work to end mass incarceration and combat endemic educational inequality for black and brown students. We announced $2.35 million in grants to support leaders like #BlackLivesMatter co-founder Patrisse Cullors; Chris Chatmon, who leads Oakland's African American Male Achievement Initiative; and Raj Jayadev, who founded the criminal justice reform organization Silicon Valley De-Bug.
Patrisse Cullors, Co-Founder of #BlackLivesMatter, at the Google.org screening of 3 � Minutes and 10 bullets, Castro Theatre in San Francisco, Calif. on November 3, 2015.
Today, I'm excited to continue that momentum with the addition of four more organizations in this space, totalling $3 million in new grants. To help eliminate racial bias within our educational systems, we�re supporting San Francisco�s My Brother and Sister's Keeper (MBSK) program, Oakland�s Roses in Concrete Community School, and the tech-enabled college success startup, Beyond12. We're also supporting Bryan Stevenson and the national Equal Justice Initiative (EJI), which is focused on countering deep-seated bias against people of color in our communities and institutions. In addition to the grant, we�re committed to working with EJI to bring its public education work online so that millions more can experience it.
From left to right: David Drummond, Senior Vice President, Corporate Development, Alphabet; Bryan Stevenson, Founder and CEO, Equal Justice Initiative; Dr. Jeff Duncan-Andrade, Founder, Roses in Concrete Community School, Oakland; Landon Dickey, Special Assistant for African American Achievement & Leadership, San Francisco Unified School District; Alexandra Bernadotte, Founder and CEO, Beyond 12; Richard Carranza, Superintendent, San Francisco Unified School District; and Justin Steele, Principal, Google.org. Photo credit: 510Media.
Each of these organizations and their leaders have shown a deep, fundamental understanding of racial injustice and are actively finding ways to rid our systems of social, educational and economic exclusion. We as a company are proud to support them.
Posted by Justin Steele, Principal, Google.org https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj25NUwVLCz33z7iFQIi559sWTmLwVccK1dPmrNnjNJ7P85BPGx_m8ZgSWFuZSJlooT1gCAGkjU_pjXBdItqD7xuf7_P89s9gbz1WpSr_4xZLgfxOUj8U0fdaLYJCIhDUKAChvlvglxeYQ/s1600/first.jpg Justin Steele Principal Google.org
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
Popular posts from this blog
Google Allo Google Allo is another keen informing application for Android and iOS that causes you say increasingly and accomplish more. Communicate better with stickers, doodles, and colossal emoticons and content. Allo likewise presents to you the Google Assistant, review release. React rapidly with Smart Reply Google Allo makes it less demanding for you to react rapidly and keep the discussion going, notwithstanding when you're in a hurry. With Smart Reply, you can react to messages with only a tap, so you can send a speedy "yes" because of a companion asking "Are you on your way?" Smart Reply will likewise recommend reactions for photographs. On the off chance that your companion sends you a photograph of their pet, you may see Smart Reply proposals like "aww adorable!" And whether you're a "haha" or "😂" sort of individual, Smart Reply will enhance after some time and acclimate to your style. Meet your Google A...
Supporting women in tech at GHC 16
The 2016 Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing (GHC) begins today, and we�re thrilled to join the 15,000 women and allies convening in Houston for three days of learning, inspiration and community building. Thousands of women at Google are building tools and products that organize the world�s information, help businesses get online and prosper, and forge connections across a growing digital community of 3.5 billion people. So it only makes sense that Google would be part of the world's largest gathering of women technologists. We see GHC as a critical way to connect women in tech and help clear hurdles to their professional development. We know that there�s much more work to do to help level the playing field � and that�s why the mission of the Grace Hopper Celebration is so important. Just yesterday we reported new U.S. research from Gallup and Google that suggests girls are less likely than boys to be told by parents and teachers that they would be good at computer scien...
Capture and share VR photos with Cardboard Camera, now on iOS
Whether you�re hiking on the Olympic Peninsula or attending your cousin�s wedding, go beyond the flat photo or selfie. With Cardboard Camera�now available on iOS as well as Android �you can capture 3D 360-degree virtual reality photos. Just like Google Cardboard, it works with the phone you already have with you. VR photos taken with Cardboard Camera are three-dimensional panoramas that can transport you right back to the moment. Near things look near and far things look far. You can look around to explore the image in all directions, and even hear sound recorded while you took the photo to hear the moment exactly as it happened. To capture a VR photo, hold your phone vertically, tap record, then turn around as though you�re taking a panorama. Bugaboo Spire in B.C., Canada captured by Googler Adam Dickinson Starting today, you can also share your VR photos with friends and family on both iPhone and Android devices. Select multiple photos to create a virtual photo album, tap the share ...


Comments
Post a Comment