Hey—we've moved. Visit
The Keyword
for all the latest news and stories from Google
Official Blog
Insights from Googlers into our products, technology, and the Google culture
Explore Rio from every angle
July 29, 2016
With its beautiful beaches and breathtaking landscape, Rio de Janeiro is a city that appears on every traveler's bucket list. Now, thanks to the wonders of technology, you can now explore the "Marvelous City" and its rich cultural heritage even if you can't make the trip. We partnered with eight of Rio's top cultural institutions to create an
interactive online collection
of some of the city’s most famous art exhibits and landmarks, including some inspiring real-life stories from the city's favelas, all available on
Google Arts & Culture
. Bem-vindos ao Rio!
Arts, monuments and more
The collection includes 360° panoramas with Street View technology, some 3,000 images from photo archives and art exhibits, virtual reality tours with Google Cardboard and videos showcasing a new generation of Cariocas making their mark in the city's cultural landscape. From iconic
monuments
and
spectacular views
, to the history of
Guanabara Bay
and the
majestic Theatro Municipal
, these online exhibits capture Rio from every angle.
Take an interactive tour of Rio's best-known monument—the
Christ the Redeemer
statue perched atop Corcovado mountain—or explore its storied musical history through
album covers designed by Elifas Andreato
.
Left:
Bronze statue of Carlos Drummond de Andrade
Right:
Exploring Elifas' album covers through time
You can also go back in time by taking a peek at
one of the richest collections of archival photographs of Rio
, or tag along on a guided tour of the works of Rio-based artist and author
Ziraldo
, whose comics and children's books have marked the lives of generations of Brazilians.
Take a virtual reality tour with Cardboard
Mapping the whole city
A huge part of Rio’s history and culture resides in the hillside favelas that dot the landscape. In fact, one in five Rio residents live in favelas, but only 0.001 percent of the city's favelas appear on the map. That means 1.4 million people have no addresses to list on job applications or bank accounts, and aren’t able to access many economic opportunities, essential services, even basic rights as citizens. So we teamed up with local NGO Grupo Cultural AfroReggae to map the favelas. Two years later, streets and 10,000+ local businesses in 26 favelas now appear on Google Maps, thanks to "
Tá no Mapa
," our "
On the Map
" project.
The Rocinha favela before and after our mapping project
Beyond the Map
Along the way, we met some amazing people with remarkable stories, so we decided it was time to go "
Beyond the Map
" and shine a spotlight on an often overlooked side of Rio. With AfroReggae's help, we brought Street View and 360° technology to favelas for the first time, creating an immersive experience that lets you go beyond GPS coordinates and get to know the people and culture of communities that many people otherwise wouldn't get the chance to visit. You can even experience what it feels like to zip through the narrow streets of a favela on a motorcycle taxi!
This new online collection opens its virtual doors today at
g.co/riodejaneiro
on Google Arts & Culture. It is available on the web on mobile, tablet and desktop, and on the Google Arts & Culture app on
iOS
and
Android
devices. The Beyond the Map project can also be viewed at
g.co/beyondthemap
.
With the world’s eyes on Rio, we’re excited to give you a glimpse of all the splendor and creativity the city has to offer!
Posted by Alessandro Germano, Global Product Partnerships
Alessandro Germano
Global Product Partnerships
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgnRbxieH2AdTbUPJcvmvo1yGf2ClTXBYNFiqaOGtMjIdlIorXWWoUMjT1ZHJMaskRhDaz4SnS4BBFKYUa60LKp4I6-EuS_o8HSn6FUBPnTCaHsr7lmYnJ9duTMYNofjP0qsVtk/s1600/Conservac%25CC%25A7a%25CC%2583o+Rio%25282%2529.jpg
Update
Aug 1:
Added information about the "Beyond the Map" experience.
Google Play Family Library: Share what you love with the ones you love
July 27, 2016
Friday night is movie night at our home, and my wife and I look forward to our weekly ritual of putting the kids to bed, getting some takeout, and catching up on our movie wishlist. Whether it’s making the BLUE STEEL face from
Zoolander
, swapping tips on playing
Monument Valley
, or reading
Dragons Love Tacos
to the kids at bedtime, these shared moments bring us closer together.
For families like mine, who bond over shared entertainment, we’re introducing
Family Library
, a way for up to six family members to share purchases on
Google Play
. When you buy an eligible app, game, movie, TV show, or book in the Play Store, you can now share it with your family—across devices—with no additional sign-up fee.
Share across your family’s devices
Today’s families have a lot of devices, and it should be easy to share content no matter where we are or what we’re doing. Everyone in my family loves the
Star Wars
movies and we all want to be able to watch them, on our phones, tablets, laptops, or TV. All purchases added to Family Library are available across Android devices, and movies, TV shows, and books can be enjoyed on iOS devices and the web.
Easily manage sharing and family purchases
As with most family matters, flexibility and choice is important. With Family Library, you can choose which items you want to share and which to keep to yourself—for example, I’ll probably keep my collection of comic books in my personal library. Flexibility is also built into your purchasing options. When you sign up, you’ll select a credit card to share as your family payment method, but your family members will always have the option of buying stuff with their personal credit cards or gift cards. And for your younger family members, you’ll have the option to approve each of their purchases.
Share a Music subscription with your family
Finally, if your family loves music, you can also subscribe to the
Google Play Music family plan
. On this plan, up to six family members can stream millions of songs on demand for $14.99 a month. We
launched
the family plan late last year, and today we’re expanding it to Ireland, Italy, Mexico, and New Zealand. And you can now sign up on the web, in addition to your Android device.
Starting today, Family Library will be rolling out over the next few days and will be available in Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Mexico, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States. To get started,
sign up
in Google Play, invite your family members, and start sharing what you love!
Posted by Raj Iyengar, Product Manager, Google Play
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgRP0Awj6OKJxGm9n74P7sOGUQvGUzSJxcQOf688wd4brL13O-Gj_X_b-1Xv7o9fUZxofJ3KqG7UfEC4pgSISQkOg1af_QB1197vYJf7HDE-aRTNJbjOB3A1zgSq7LPTVQrjqC3/s200/FamilyPlay.jpg
Raj Iyengar
Product Manager
Google Play
The art of collaboration: from Sheets to the streets
July 19, 2016
Warhol & Basquiat. Buñuel & Dalí. Rauschenberg & Johns. There are countless examples of artists collaborating to bring a shared creative vision to life. So we wondered: Could technology help bring together two artists who might not otherwise meet? What would they create…if their canvas were a spreadsheet? And how could we celebrate and share their work of art with the world?
In partnership with
Refinery29
, a lifestyle digital media company, we linked up with renowned illustrators
Marina Esmeraldo
in Barcelona, and
Mallory Heyer
in NYC. We gave them a simple creative assignment—to “break the grid”—which literally can mean pushing the “grid” of
Google Sheets
to its limits, but also taps into the idea of supporting and celebrating women globally who break free of confined roles and ways of thinking, which is core to Refinery29's mission.
Marina and Mallory connected a handful of times on Google Hangouts to plan and sketch out ideas, and creatively “hack” Sheets in order to make art: resizing cells into thousands of pixel-like squares, merging cells to create color blocks, creating vibrant color gradients with
conditional formatting
and cell values, and other cool things we had no idea you could do with Sheets.
The
result
was a bright, beautiful design that celebrates the diversity and strength of women, and we wanted to share their finished project in a BIG way.
The final step was to convert Marina and Mallory’s final piece from the cells of a spreadsheet to the bricks of a giant wall—to go from Sheets to the streets. So, we turned to
Colossal Media
, a Brooklyn-based company that hand-paints murals all over the world.
After hand-mixing each of the colors and prepping the artwork for large-scale painting, Colossal spent five days painting each cell, letter, and gradient by hand, to create a 13’ x 34’ mural of the
spreadsheet
.
And that’s how art was #madewithGoogleSheets.
To see it for yourself, check out Marina & Mallory’s spreadsheet or head to
Bogart & Thames
in Brooklyn to visit the wall in person (until August 14). We're delighted by the creativity and imagination brought about by artistic collaboration, and proud to be associated with the work’s inspirational message supporting strong women everywhere.
Posted by Michael Bolognino, Product Marketing Manager
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEisqqsakdUlMS9nbGGquYCrR_1Zvjv2Lx67DFdON1icpfaRijkOyXNURul8JDa1xqoLsacuBV5kx2T-xC-vENoAmefTHS4Poo7jNwL5M3TZbLWZlPEoqUgdy5ccKvKZvzIKtWh8/s200/Screen+Shot+2016-07-19+at+1.33.29+PM.png
Michael Bolognino
Product Marketing Manager
Google
The new Google Arts & Culture, on exhibit now
July 19, 2016
Just as the world’s precious artworks and monuments need a touch-up to look their best, the home we’ve built to host the world’s cultural treasures online needs a lick of paint every now and then. We’re ready to pull off the dust sheets and introduce the new
Google Arts & Culture
website and app, by the Google Cultural Institute. The app lets you explore anything from
cats in art since 200 BCE
to the
color red in Abstract Expressionism
, and everything in between.
Our new tools will help you discover works and artifacts, allowing you to immerse yourself in cultural experiences across art, history and wonders of the world—from more than a thousand museums across 70 countries:
• Search for anything, from
shoes
to
all things gold
• Scroll through art by time—see how
Van Gogh’s works went from gloomy to vivid
• Browse by color and learn about
Monet’s 50 shades of gray
• Find a new fascinating story to discover every day—
today, it’s nine powerful men in heels
With a virtual reality viewer like
Google Cardboard
, you can use the Google Arts & Culture app on
iOS
and
Android
to
take a virtual tour of the street art scene in Rome
; step inside a creation by famous street artist, Insa; or even travel 2,500 years back in time and
look around the ancient Greek temple of Zeus
.
You can also subscribe to the new
Google Arts & Culture
YouTube channel. Find out
what Kandinsky and Kanye West have in common
and
meet the New York-based “cyborg artist” Neil Harbisson
.
We’re sure you’ll want to see some of the artworks in real life too—and the Google Arts & Culture app is there to help. Click “Visit” on a museum’s page to get opening times, find out what’s on that day and navigate there in one click. We’ve also been experimenting with a new feature. The Art Recognizer is now available in London’s
Dulwich Picture Gallery
, Sydney’s
Art Gallery of New South Wales
and the
National Gallery of Art
in Washington DC. Just pull up the app, point your phone’s camera to a painting on display and find all the information you want to know about the artwork. We’re planning to roll this out to museums around the world—so stay tuned.
There’s much to learn about our shared cultural heritage. Download the app for
iOS
and
Android
to unlock a world of experiences, every day.
Posted by Duncan Osborn, Product Manager, Google Cultural Institute
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEglGVuX0XmcL1jaE7rQ6rFpU9OBQog5FhZNGBZS3d10rGYHizgC1-t9anTwbdFX_iK3idaR_lrERX7Je0baHQeecQeuMAXNvqX04iY3T5CsK5-pAFZBDaViKxtsODx2ZKYedc8i/s200/Screen+Shot+2016-07-18+at+4.10.35+PM.png
Duncan Osborn
Product Manager
Google Cultural Institute
A voice for everyone in 2016
July 15, 2016
Every election matters and every vote counts. The American democracy relies on everyone’s participation in the political process. This November, Americans all across the country will line up at the polls to cast their ballots for the President of the United States. With states’ varied deadlines and methods, the voter registration process can be tricky. So starting on Monday, we're introducing a new tool in Search to simplify the voter registration process to make it easier for you to have your voice heard.
Now when you search for “register to vote” or similar queries, Google will display a detailed state-by-state guide providing information on how to register, general requirements, and deadlines.
No matter which state you’re in or how you plan to cast your ballot, you can find the step-by-step information you need to register correctly and on time—right at the top of your Search page and in the Google app.
And for the kickoff of the
Republican National Convention
next week (and coming in time for the Democratic National Convention the following week), when you search for these events on the Google app, you’ll find a summary of the event, nominees and the lineup of speakers. You’ll also find a livestream video from YouTube, and relevant social media posts, so you can stay up-to-date with both the political parties and the public.
We hope these new features in Search will help keep you informed this election season and make it easier for you to make it to the ballot box in November.
Posted by Jacob Schonberg, Product Manager
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgCreu1xFY8UF6adxVdItgPM-po9UvgTCQG9u7_dkHuMhA36sn8hn6zt9erArNQul0vSMiHc66p2WHBpTd4WEQWyqV026xjCYJWJNhV5w6D9GqcYGkXBNDA4qH6sPm9KBIq4sKg/s200/registerConvention.gif
Promoting gender equality through emoji 🙌 🎉
July 14, 2016
More than
90 percent
of the world's online population use emoji. But while there's a huge range of emoji, there aren't a lot that highlight the diversity of women's careers, or empower young girls. There are emoji like these for men:
but with options like these for women:
… the emoji representing women aren’t exactly, well, representative. So we've been working to make things better.
In May, we
proposed
a set of new emoji to the Unicode Technical Committee that represent a wider range of professions for women (as well as men), and reflect the pivotal roles that women play in the world. Since then, we've worked closely with members of the Unicode Emoji Subcommittee to bring the proposal to life.
Today, the
Unicode Emoji Subcommittee has agreed
to add 11 new professional emoji, in both male and female options and with all the skin tones. That’s more than 100 new emoji to choose from!
Unicode is also adding male and female versions to 33 existing emoji. For example, you'll be able to pick both a female runner emoji and a male runner emoji, or a man or woman getting a haircut:
These additions can be included in future versions of Android and other platforms—because Unicode helps make sure that people with different phones can send and receive the same emoji.
These new emoji are one of
several efforts
we’re making to better represent women in technology, and to connect girls with the education and resources they need to pursue careers in STEM. One such effort is Made with Code, which helps girls pursue and express their passions using computer science. Ahead of World Emoji Day this weekend,
Made with Code
is releasing a
new project
that teaches coding skills through the creation of emoji-inspired stickers.
We hope these updates help make emoji just a little more representative of the millions of people around the 🌎 who use them.
Posted by Nicole Bleuel, Marketing Lead & Diversity Champion, Emoji
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgA77QWnXDSu7mWcNUD3N8WnKe7aNw3rDdxMfwtTm3h1Gk_SwOXyDidtseJpZBbJUUtntqG9n8V0jajUGLL5uXbu5ObNn9jMONd-tho9fWt-eS94vmB5dyUM585FxKywZFJX6CD/s200/Skintones.gif
Labels
accessibility
41
acquisition
26
ads
131
Africa
19
Android
58
apps
419
April 1
4
Asia
39
books + book search
48
commerce
12
computing history
7
crisis response
33
culture
12
developers
120
diversity
35
doodles
68
education and research
144
entrepreneurs at Google
14
Europe
46
faster web
16
free expression
61
google.org
73
googleplus
50
googlers and culture
202
green
102
Latin America
18
maps and earth
194
mobile
124
online safety
19
open source
19
photos
39
policy and issues
139
politics
71
privacy
66
recruiting and hiring
32
scholarships
31
search
505
search quality
24
search trends
118
security
36
small business
31
user experience and usability
41
youtube and video
140
Archive
2016
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2015
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2014
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2013
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2012
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2011
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2010
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2009
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2008
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2007
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2006
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2005
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2004
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Feed
Google
on
Follow @google
Follow
Give us feedback in our
Product Forums
.