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(electronic music)
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- Google I/O is here and that means
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we finally know what's happening with Android P.
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Company's focusing on three things:
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A simpler interface, an intelligent interface,
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and this thing they're calling "digital well being".
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What's that all about?
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(electronic music)
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So, the new Android P beta should be available
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pretty much right away on a whole bunch of devices,
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like seven or nine devices.
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It's on the Google Pixel 2 XL, which I have here.
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You can also get it on a OnePlus 6,
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Nokia phones, et cetera, et cetera.
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Anyway, I wanna show you the most obvious thing
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you're gonna see on this beta of Android P
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because, oh my god, they took the home button away.
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So, what you do is you give it a little swipe up
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and that takes you to the overview screen.
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All of your apps are listed horizontally here.
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They're even live, so you can, like, long press on something
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and have it do a search for that thing,
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or copy the text or whatever, which is kind of cool.
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If you give it a longer swipe up, or a second swipe up,
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it takes you to all of your apps.
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And it lists your most-used apps or, sorry,
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the AI-detected apps, what they think you're
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gonna wanna use, right there at the top.
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And that's also in this half swipe up down here
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at the bottom, which is pretty neat.
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There's a little tab, also, for your work apps.
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So if you really want to, you can just
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turn those damn things off, because who wants work apps?
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One last little clever thing with that button,
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if you just slide it over to the right,
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you can get to that list of your most recent apps
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to jump into them.
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So it's a really quick way to switch between apps.
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And then, of course, when you're in an app,
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the home button is there.
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To go home, you can just tap it to go home.
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And, the good old back button is there, too,
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if you want the back button.
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Notifications: things are basically the same,
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but there are some really nice updates.
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So, if you start dismissing stuff a bunch,
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eventually it'll ask you if you just wanna
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stop seeing those notifications.
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You can long press on a notification
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instead of remembering that weird little
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swipe over to get to settings.
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And then there's just a plain old
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"manage notifications" button at the bottom.
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When you tap on that, it takes you to a list
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of your most recent notifications
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and then you can just turn those things off
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because they've been annoying you lately.
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So it's a much faster way to handle notifications.
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Now, this is just some of the stuff on Android P.
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There's a lot more.
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There's all the stuff about digital well being,
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there's a bunch of AI stuff.
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And so I want to talk about that stuff now.
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(chill electronic music)
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Now, because this is Google and because Google
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can't string more than five words together
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without saying the words "AI",
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we're talking about AI again.
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AI is built into Android in a few different ways.
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There's a new machine-learning kit
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so that you can make your own intelligent apps,
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and that works on both Android and iOS, actually.
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But, in Android itself, AI is gonna watch
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what apps you use and then shut them down intelligently
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to save battery life.
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It's also gonna adjust your
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brightness automatically for you.
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I don't know, saying that that's AI feels a little
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bit buzz-wordy and a little bit overkill,
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but it should, hopefully, give you better
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battery life in the end.
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What are some of the things that are more intelligent
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that's happening on the phone now?
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- Right, and so, there's the whole premise of this
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is, you know, we think smart, we call them smart phones,
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but, you know what, they could be a lot smarter.
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- Okay. (laughs) - And they could be
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a lot more intelligent and, you know, what does that mean?
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Well, in our case, it's really we think
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the phone should adapt to you.
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One area that we've worked on which I like a lot
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is what we call "adaptive battery".
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It's a project we did with DeepMind.
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It uses on-device machine learning
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to figure out which apps you're gonna launch next
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and which ones you're not gonna launch for a couple hours,
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and which you may not do 'til the evening, if at all.
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That's one example.
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Another is auto brightness.
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Now, in pretty much every modern smart phone today,
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we'll look at, it has a light sensor
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and it will adjust the brightness depending on the light.
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But it doesn't take into account you're preferences, right?
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Or your environment.
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And so what we've done, it'll actually learn
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how you move the brightness, given different
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lighting conditions and then it will do it for you.
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- So, one of the things that Google's doing in Android P
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is they're introducing these new terms.
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There's a "slice" and there's an "action".
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And they're basically deep links, which means
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that an app has got something you want to do
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deep down inside the app, but you wanna do it
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somewhere else in the operating system.
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So if you do a search for Lyft,
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it just surfaces a link to just go home
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and it jumps right into the app to do that.
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Or, if you want, if you are opening up your app drawer,
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there's a couple little things inside the app row
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at the top that lets you jump right into some action
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you do all the time.
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Like, you know, call your significant other
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or open up Seamless when you get home
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because, let's be honest,
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you're gonna open up Seamless when you get home.
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You're lazy as hell.
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Those are all the whizbang features that
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are gonna make you more productive with your phone
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and use your phone more and they're all great.
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But, Google's doing this whole other thing
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that's designed to get you to use your phone less.
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- Digital well being, for us, is a theme,
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is a set of capabilities we're putting into Android
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to help people become more aware
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of how they're using their device.
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And then be in control, have a set of controls,
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where they can decide how they want
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to change that behavior.
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So one of the ways you're doing that is you have this thing.
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What do you call it, the dashboard?
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- [Sameer] Yeah, there's a dashboard.
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- Is it just a lot more checkboxes
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for people to have to look at?
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Like, are you finding that people are actually
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finding value in this thing?
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- The first step is awareness.
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And that dashboard is pretty straight forward.
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It shows you how much time you spent on your phone each day,
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what apps you spent that time in,
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how many times you unlocked your phone,
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how many notifications you've received.
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And then it lets you drill down on those things.
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And then the next piece of it is:
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okay, so how can the software help me
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if I want to change my behavior?
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So that's where we're putting a bunch of capabilities
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we're calling, you know, user controls.
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So, you can set a time limit on the amount of time
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you want to spend in an app.
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And so I could say, for example, I only wanna spend
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thirty minutes a day in YouTube or in Instagram,
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or my favorite game, maybe Subway Surfer, right?
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And another situation that we find people
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really talked to us a lot about was
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trying to be fully present for something.
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And the phone, perhaps, not helping with that.
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So, Do Not Disturb's being improved where I can...
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When I turn on Do Not Disturb,
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now all the visual interruptions go away.
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- So it doesn't show notifications on lock screen.
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Not only does it not vibrate, it doesn't
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show anything at all. - No vibrations.
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Basically, no interruptions.
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- So after that really brief look at Android P,
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what do I think?
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Well, I'm kind of hopeful.
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I really love the idea of exploding apps
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out into the rest of the phone,
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so that you can just do a search and jump
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right to the thing you wanna do.
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And, I'm really intrigued by the idea of using apps less
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'cause, I don't know, I use Twitter way too much.
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If you take those two ideas together, what's really
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interesting is Google's trying to set up a system
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where you think about your phone less.
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Both because it does stuff for you automatically
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through AI, and because you just use your phone less.
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And maybe we could all stand to do that.
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But even though I'm hopeful, that doesn't mean I'm naive.
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Android has a huge update problem; it always has.
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And the theory is that this new Treble system
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they've developed is going to get it on more phones sooner.
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We're making a good step here.
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It's gonna shop up on, like, seven manufacturers
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in beta right away.
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And we should have it on a bunch of phones,
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not just Pixel phones, by the end of the year.
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But, Google has to execute because every year,
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we see a great new version of Android
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and then we have to wait to get it on the phones
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that everybody buys: Samsung phones.
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I would really like to see them fix that
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this year with Android P.
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Thank you so much for watching.
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If you like this video, there's another video
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over at Verge Science you should definitely watch.
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It's about eye charts and are they actually useful
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for helping you see if your vision's any good
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and why they're always all the same.
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You should go check it out.