area120

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  • Klaus Vedfelt via Getty Images

    Google is making a short-form video sharing app for DIY tutorials

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    01.29.2020

    Today, Google introduced Tangi, an experimental video sharing app created in Area 120, Google's lab for experimental projects. The app lets users post 60-second how-to videos on topics like crafting, cooking, makeup and clothing. It seems that Google hopes the focus on creativity and DIY projects will help Tangi stand out from other bite-sized video apps like Byte or TikTok.

  • d3sign via Getty Images

    Google's Waze-like app for public transit hits five more cities

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    11.05.2019

    Last year, Google incubator Area 120 announced a public transit app that works in a similar way to Waze. Users of Pigeon report transit information to help others know if they're likely to face delays or other issues. Until now, it's only been available in New York City, but as of today, it's going live in Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington, D.C.

  • AdLingo

    Google-backed startup's chat bots turn ads into conversations

    by 
    Kristen Bobst
    Kristen Bobst
    10.17.2018

    AdLingo, a marketing platform fresh out of Google's Area 120 incubator program, is making advertisements "conversational" with the help of AI. AdLingo doesn't build its own chatbots, but instead connects third-party chatbot tools with a company's marketing department.

  • Google ends its Reply smart notification experiment for Android

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    10.10.2018

    Google's experiment with smart notification responses is winding down... although this won't be the last you hear of it. The company's Area 120 team has ended the Android test after roughly 10 months, noting that the work "will live on in other Google products." You can still use Reply for a few months more, but you could encounter glitches or less-than-ideal suggestions. Not that there's much reason to break out the tissues -- you can already see some of the benefits.

  • 9to5Google

    Outdated concepts for Google's 'Shortwave' podcast app leak

    by 
    Richard Lawler
    Richard Lawler
    09.07.2018

    A few weeks ago, Google confirmed its Area 120 startup incubator is working on a podcast app called Shortwave. It told The Verge at the time that it "helps users discover and consume spoken-word audio in new ways" but didn't get specific about how. Now 9to5Google has posted some related "design experiments" that portray an app focused on surfacing small segments from within longer podcast episodes.

  • Area 120

    Google incubator's New York City subway app offers Waze-like alerts

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    06.03.2018

    Crowdsourced navigation apps like Waze are helpful for avoiding the real-world hazards that conventional apps don't mention. But what if you use mass transit -- why can't you get alerts that go beyond official route closures and delays? You can now, if you live in New York City. Google incubator Area 120 has released an invitation-only Pigeon app for iOS that offers NYC subway directions based both on real-time train positions and user-submitted feedback. If a train faces an extended delay or there's a glut of people at a given station, you can switch lines and stops to make your commute a little faster (or at least, less painful).

  • Google / Area 120

    Google’s Grasshopper app teaches you how to code

    by 
    David Lumb
    David Lumb
    04.19.2018

    Google's incubator for employees' "20 percent time" side projects, Area 120, typically produces fun things like an app to make YouTube more social and expanding Smart Replies. Now the workshop has released an app to help beginners learn to code in Javascript, which could be helpful for novices who want to build websites.

  • AOL

    Google team will bring Smart Replies to more chat apps

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    02.13.2018

    If you've wanted to use Google's canned Smart Replies in chat apps, you've been limited to using Allo or (if you're on the right carrier) Android Messages. But what if you're one of the many, many people using something else? Don't fret: Google's experimental Area 120 group is working on a Reply project that, as the name implies, will bring Smart Replies to many messaging clients (currently just for Android). Hangouts is logically on the list, but so are third-party apps like Facebook Messenger, Skype, WhatsApp and even Twitter's direct messages. You'd only have to tap a button in your notifications to confirm that you're on your way or say you're doing well.

  • Devindra Hardawar/Engadget

    You won't escape Google ads in VR

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    06.28.2017

    Sorry, folks, donning a virtual reality headset won't offer a refuge from internet advertising. Google's Area 120 incubator is experimenting with online ad formats designed with VR in mind. It's a lot trickier than slapping a banner on a website, as you might have already guessed. The team says it's trying to create ads that feel at home in VR and are relatively flexible, but are also "non-intrusive" and genuinely useful if you're interested. Area 120's first concept appears to hit that mark.

  • Google

    Google's YouTube party app is available without an invitation

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    06.26.2017

    You no longer need an invitation to see whether or not Uptime, the YouTube social viewing app, lives up to the hype. Google incubator Area 120 has made the app accessible to anyone in the US with an iOS device -- sorry, there's still no Android version. The app has gone through a few upgrades since its debut, including a new home screen to help you discover videos, support for music videos and an option for finding friends through Facebook. Either way, the core concept remains the same: you can either watch videos 'live' with your friends or watch their reactions to a previous session.

  • Google

    Google's Uptime is all about snarky YouTube parties

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    03.13.2017

    Last year, Google created Area 120, an incubator where employees with (approved) ideas can spend their "20 percent time" on side projects. One of the groups has just released Uptime, an app that lets you meet friends, share YouTube videos and add stickers, "sparkles," hearts and snarky comments. You can search for video content within the app, which can also will help you find friends "based on common connections within Uptime," according to the FAQ. Ironically, it's only available on iOS and not Google's Android, at least for now.

  • Michael Short/Bloomberg via Getty Images

    Google confirms a new in-house startup incubator

    by 
    David Lumb
    David Lumb
    05.20.2016

    Big companies have always supported startups to do the nimble and risky innovating they could not, even building their own investment arms to directly fund them. But sometimes those startups are founded by ex-employees of big companies that break out of corporate limitations. Following rumors last month, Google officially confirmed that it will launch its own in-house incubator, likely as a way of retaining entrepreneurs and keeping marketable ideas in-house.

  • Michael Short/Bloomberg via Getty Images

    Google is creating a startup haven to prevent staff from leaving

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    04.24.2016

    It's hard to swing a stick in Silicon Valley without hitting startups created by ex-Google employees determined to bring their clever (though only sometimes successful) ideas to light. That's good for innovation, but lousy for Google -- and the search giant now appears bent on doing what it can to keep those curious minds in-house. The Information's sources understand that Google is creating Area 120, a startup incubator that would let some employees pursue their "20% projects" (those personal projects Google allows in a fifth of your working hours) full-time. Anyone wanting to sign up would submit a business plan and, if accepted, spend several months working solely on that idea. You could scratch that inventor's itch without worrying that you'll lose your cushy Google job if it it doesn't pan out.