Skip to main content

CEO speaks: 10 things Google chief Sundar Pichai told students at SRCC

Google's CEO Sundar Pichai is on his maiden visit to India in his capacity as CEO of the company. On Wednesday, he gave a keynote at a special event organised by the company called Google for India and on Thursday he addressed the students of Delhi's SRCC college. He's shown an unwitting commitment towards his home country and also has made few announcements regarding India. Here are the top 10 things he said at SRCC.



1. Pichai reiterated that Google was in talks with telecom operators and regulatory authorities in the country to bring Project Loon to India, especially for rural areas which lagged in connectivity. Overall he focussed on an India first focus. " We do work hard to bring our services to India. We're working hard to bring project Loon. Increasingly we also do thing first in India like YouTube Offline which started in India and is now in 77 countries. It is a goal to build things here. We do things we can build here at scale which will apply to the world," said Pichai.
2. Empowerment of women was on the top of the list of things. He talked about the pilot project Google is running to introduce the internet to rural women. "The most important thing a country can do nowadays is to help women get online... A lot of people are working for this in India. We are also helping," he said.
3. He told the students to not worry about taking risks. In fact, he encouraged it.  "It is worthwhile trying to take risks, it may not work out the first time around, but it will work out in the long run," he said.
4. Pichai talked about how at Google plans are made to solve big problems at scale. He encouraged people to think big. " At Google we always thought about solving problems. We always want to solve problems that would affect a billion people. For google books, the approach was what if we could bring all of the books online. We would always think about scale,"he said.
5. Pichai joked that he would run an online poll for the name of the next version of Android which is codenamed N. He believed if all Indians voted, N would get a name after an Indian delicacy. "May be for the next version -- Android N -- we will have online poll and if all Indian users vote, we are sure to have Android named after an Indian dessert," he said.
6. When asked about what would be the next frontiers of technology Pichia showed great faith in machine learning technology something at which Google specialises and also virtual reality. "Machine learning will apply to health care and many other fields," he said.
7. Sundar Pichai revealed he was a bit of sports nut. Cricket and Football are his favourite sports. In the US he is able to follow football more easily and he revealed that he was big Barcelona and Lionel Messi fan. He also said that he loved former Indian captain Sunil Gavaskar and was there at the second tied test in Chennai back in 1986.
8. Pichai felt that India was central to Google staying relevant in the future. ""We try and figure out what is next... It is also one of the reasons why we are so much interested in India because it will define future. That is why we are investing so much here," he said.
9. Pichai bought his first phone in 94/95. It was a Motorola Starc and in 2006 he bought his first smartphone. At his home, Pichai revealed, he had more than 20 phone mostly because of testing purposes.
10. For Pichai developers will help solve many technological problems of the world and they are central to Google too. "Developers are hunting the bloodline of software. India is unique positioned. There's tremendous in software development compared to other countries," said the Google CEO.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Modern garden with upcycling plastic bottles

The first stethoscope

René Laennec, a French doctor and inventor was born 235 years ago today, and Google has marked his birthday with a Doodle. Dr Laennec's importance to modern medicine was guaranteed by his invention of the very first stethoscope in 1816. Here are five things you (probably) didn't know about him : 1. Dr Laennec's stethoscope bears little semblance to the modern stethoscope. Unlike those used today, Dr Laennec's stethoscope was not a set of ear pieces connected by a plastic tube to a chest piece. His stethoscopes were simple cylinders made from wood and metal. The doctor using it would simply place it directly over the area in question and listen at the other end. 2. His first stethoscope was a rolled up piece of paper Described in his  1819 treatise  on this device, Dr Laennec invented the stethoscope while treating a young woman suffering from symptoms of heart disease. 3. The stethoscope was not his only contribution to medical science I...

EPA and the regulation of greenhouse gasses

This week, EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy joined private and public sector leaders for a second annual White House roundtable discussion about the progress made and new steps taken to curb emissions of hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), potent greenhouse gases used in refrigeration and air conditioning. Administrator McCarthy announced several new actions the agency will take to help support a smooth transition to climate-friendly alternatives to HFCs. "EPA is working closely with industry leaders to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, transition to climate-friendly refrigerants, and deploy advanced refrigeration technologies,” said EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy. “The powerful combination of EPA’s regulatory actions and innovations emerging from the private sector have put our country on track to significantly cut HFC use and deliver on the goals of the President’s Climate Action Plan.” Among the actions announced today, EPA proposed a rule that would improve t...