Google I/O 2023: all the news from Google’s big developer event

Each year at its annual developer conference, Google shows off the future of its biggest products — and this year, the company has got a whole lot to show.

Google I/O 2023 is expected to have a heavy focus on AI as Google shows what comes next for its chatbot Bard and speaks to what other generative tech it’s building to keep up with OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Microsoft’s Bing, and other competitors that are racing into the space.

Google’s also certain to preview its next wave of Pixel devices. The company teased the Pixel Fold, its first foldable phone, with an early announcement and promised more details to come at the event. We’re also likely to learn more about the long-teased Pixel Tablet and see the announcement of the heavily leaked Pixel 7A.

And, of course, there’s Android. Android 14 is already in the works, and Google always uses its developer conference to announce the key new features that consumers should expect when it’s finally available.

There should be plenty of other announcements, too. Google usually teases new features coming to Maps and Photos, shows its latest augmented reality tools, and previews updates to the Google Assistant.

The event kicks off on May 10th at 1PM ET / 10AM PT. You can tune in here to get updates live.

Highlights

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    Google Campus Ahead Of Alphabet Earnings Figures

    Google Campus Ahead Of Alphabet Earnings Figures
    Image: Getty

    It’s time for Google’s annual developer conference — and this year, the company has a lot to prove.

    At Google I/O 2023, we’re expecting to see Google’s normal array of announcements: new features for Maps and Photos, design tweaks to the next version of Android, and a tease of future hardware. That includes some big news for the Pixel line, where we’re expecting to see the Pixel 7A and the long-awaited Pixel Fold.

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  • A boy on a bench in a screenshot of Google’s Magic Editor tool.

    A boy on a bench in a screenshot of Google’s Magic Editor tool.
    Image: Google

    Google’s latest Photos trick is a feature it’s calling Magic Editor, which uses generative AI to let you make major edits to a photo without professional tools. The company revealed the feature at Google I/O 2023.

    Google shared a couple examples of Magic Editor in action that are both pretty cool. In one, a photo of a person in front of a waterfall, Google entirely moves the person further to the side of the photo, erases people in the background, and makes the sky a prettier blue. Watch this GIF to see it all happen:

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  • Google upgrades its Gmail AI writing assistant.

    From Smart Reply to Smart Compose to “Help me write” — that’s the new branding for Gmail’s AI-powered writing assistant, as announced at I/O. It looks like they’ll be more options to compose messages and tweak the tone but it’s not clear who’ll have access. Follow our liveblog for more details here.

  • A screenshot of Google’s Immersive View for routes.

    A screenshot of Google’s Immersive View for routes.
    Image: Google

    Google Maps is bringing its recently launched Immersive View to your travel routes, which could make it much easier to understand where you want to go. The new feature, which Google calls Immersive View for routes, was shown off at Google I/O 2023 on Wednesday.

    Immersive View currently offers a 3D view of a place and adds information like weather or traffic to give you a better idea of what’s going on at that location. (It’s kind of like Apple’s Flyover view but with more detail.) By bringing the Immersive View to route planning, you’ll be able to get a bird’s-eye view to help you better visualize the landmarks and buildings you might see while navigating somewhere new. Google will even let you see traffic simulations so that you can understand what you might be dealing with on the roads.

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  • Google I/O kicks off in just 10 minutes.

    We’re expecting a barrage of news, from Pixel devices to AI announcements. If you want up to the second updates, you can follow along with our live blog. Our team is seated at the Shoreline Amphitheatre and reporting on… a duck with lips.

    41 minutes ago
  • An image showing the Pixel Fold opened

    An image showing the Pixel Fold opened

    Yet another leaked teaser for the Pixel Fold has surfaced just hours before its expected launch at Google I/O. In a promo video by leaker SnoopyTech, Google highlights just how thin its flagship foldable really is and also shows off how you can prop the device up on a table when watching videos.

    The ad offers a look at what multitasking on the device might be like as well. As shown in the clip, a user has a video call open in one panel when the device is unfolded, while Google Drive is open in another. They’re also able to drag and drop files across both screens.

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  • Google’s in trouble — here’s where it goes next.

    Ahead of the big Google I/O keynote later today, we have this segment of The Vergecast, as Nilay, David, and Alex discuss some of the issues facing the tech giant (like setting a YouTube promo ad for the Pixel Fold to premiere at the correct time) and how it might address them with AI news revealed during today’s event.

    The full episode will be available later, but for now, you can check out this part of the conversation right here.

  • Google is so thirsty to show what developers can do with AI, that it built this AI hype game for I/O.

    Ahead of the I/O keynote speech later today, Google shared this I/O Flip card game as an example of what its tools are capable of, using generative AI tools for the art and descriptions that say things like “Dash the Wizard lives in a castle with his pet dragon. He loves to cast spells and make people laugh.”

    Images were pre-generated using two technologies pioneered out of Google Research: Muse, a text-to-image AI model from the Imagen family of models, and DreamBooth,

    Card descriptions were prototyped in MakerSuite and pre-generated using the PaLM API which accesses Google’s large language models.

  • Image of the Google “G” logo on a blue, black, and purple background.

    Image of the Google “G” logo on a blue, black, and purple background.
    Illustration: The Verge

    Google has had a rough six months. Since ChatGPT launched last November — followed by the new Bing in February and GPT-4 in March — the company has failed to establish its AI credentials. Its own offering, the “experimental” chatbot Bard, compares poorly to rivals, and insider reports have portrayed a company in panic and disarray. Today, at its annual I/O conference, the company needs to convince the public (and shareholders) that it has a meaningful response. But to do that, it needs a new playbook.

    Google is undoubtedly a leader in AI research. As its executives like to point out, it was Googlers who created the transformer architecture that powers chatbots like ChatGPT. Just as significantly, it was Googlers who drew attention to these systems’ failings (and, as thanks, were fired). But Google has failed at making AI products; it’s failed to take this labor and mold it into tools that engage the public imagination. In short, it’s missed out on the AI zeitgeist, which — for all the discussions of existential risk and economic threat — is also defined by a sense of exploration, experimentation, and creative, chaotic fun. 

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  • Screenshot taken from the “Google Pixel x NBA: The Greatest Watch Party” ad that shows the Pixel Fold being handled in everyday situations.

    Screenshot taken from the “Google Pixel x NBA: The Greatest Watch Party” ad that shows the Pixel Fold being handled in everyday situations.
    The video has since been removed, but not before we grabbed a few screenshots.
    Image: Google

    Footage of the Pixel Fold has appeared in a YouTube ad ahead of its anticipated announcement at Google I/O later today. As reported by 9to5Google, the unlisted YouTube video features NBA and WNBA stars, the comedian Druski, and multiple close-up shots of the upcoming Pixel Fold in everyday use.

    Titled “Google Pixel x NBA: The Greatest Watch Party,” the link was shared in a tweet posted by the official Google Pixel account last night. It seems Google published the link prematurely as the tweet teasingly instructed readers to “check back in tomorrow.” That said, the tweet also includes a picture of MVP Joel Embiid clearly holding the Pixel Fold, so probably best to not think too hard about it.

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  • Google I/O is almost here, and that means the launch of the highly anticipated Pixel Fold and Pixel Tablet is right around the corner. While the annual conference is largely geared toward developers, the company always holds a keynote revealing the latest and greatest things that’ll wind up in consumers’ hands.

    If you want to watch the keynote live but aren’t attending the event, here’s all the information about when and where you can stream it, as well as what you can expect.

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  • An illustration of the Google logo.

    An illustration of the Google logo.
    Illustration: The Verge

    Google’s I/O event is less than two days away, and a new CNBC report might have just revealed some of the major AI-focused updates to be announced at the show.

    One big component will be a new large language model (LLM), PaLM 2, which CNBC describes as a “general-use” LLM that is Google’s “most recent and advanced.” The LLM has apparently performed “a broad range of coding and math tests as well as creative writing tests and analysis,” according to CNBC, so I wouldn’t be surprised to see Google show off some of those capabilities onstage. (The first PaLM was announced in April 2022, months before the recent AI boom fueled by applications like ChatGPT.)

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  • An image of a Google Nest Hub.

    An image of a Google Nest Hub.
    The Nest Hub interface has been essentially the same since 2020. But maybe not for long.
    Photo by Dan Seifert / The Verge

    Google I/O is a couple of days away and, with it, the likely launch of the Pixel Tablet. By itself, the device is just another Android tablet, but when it’s connected to its charging dock, which has built-in speakers, it looks an awful lot like the Nest Hub Max. Like the Nest Hub Max, it can act as a smart home controller — and I sure hope it paves the way for a better smart home interface. It had better.

    The Nest Hub exemplifies everything that’s gone wrong with smart home controls: its interface is unintuitive and inflexible, its responses are laggy, and its responses are unpredictable and often just plain wrong.

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  • Google’s Pixel Fold foldable phone, showing two phones slightly opened back to back to show both the inside and outside screens.

    Google’s Pixel Fold foldable phone, showing two phones slightly opened back to back to show both the inside and outside screens.
    Pixel Fold
    Image: Google

    The rumors are true: next week, Google will introduce its first foldable phone, the Pixel Fold, during the Google I/O 2023 event.

    Google hasn’t revealed any specs for the device, but a brief teaser video shows off a full-size outer display on a phone that opens up similarly to Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold devices. The camera bar on the back is similar to other Pixel devices but doesn’t stick out as prominently, reflecting what we’ve seen in leaked marketing materials and even a hands-on video.

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  • A big screen on the outside, a bigger screen within. A folding phone in profile.

    A big screen on the outside, a bigger screen within. A folding phone in profile.
    The Pixel Fold in 4K.
    Image via Evan Blass (@evleaks)

    You’ve seen renders. You’ve seen a little footage. You’ve heard the marketing leaks. Now, you can feast your eyes on what are almost certainly the first images from Google itself of the leaked Pixel Fold. And if you haven’t looked at this story in a while, there’s a new third image as well:

    Those are the sorts of images that are the bread and butter of Evan Blass, aka @evleaks, and while his Twitter account is still private, he’s a friend of The Verge who’s happy to let us share them with you this fine evening. (Evening for me, anyhow, I’m in California.)

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  • Image via Kuba Wojciechowski

    You’ve seen renders and perhaps even a plastic mockup, but real-life footage of Google’s first foldable phone? Unless we’re getting the wool pulled over our eyes, behold the Pixel Fold!

    It’s true, there’s not a lot to distinguish this as the Google foldable in this video alone — no logos, no distinctive design touches like a big camera bar, just a selfie camera up front, internal bezels, and a folding screen with rounded edges. It looks like it could be a Samsung prototype as easily as a Google device.

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  • A screenshot of the Pixel Tablet in a coral color.

    A screenshot of the Pixel Tablet in a coral color.

    The Pixel Tablet is supposed to launch sometime this year — Google I/O in May feels like a pretty good venue! — and ahead of its eventual release, somebody captured a video of the tablet in real life at Google’s “Shaped by Water” installation currently happening as part of Milan Design Week (via 9to5Google).

    In the Instagram video from Saori Masuda (you’ll need to browse over to the very last video in the gallery), you can see many Google and Pixel devices laid out along a table, including some Pixel Tablets, Pixel Watches, different versions of Pixel Buds, and Pixel phones.

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  • A render of Google’s rumored Pixel foldable in white.

    A render of Google’s rumored Pixel foldable in white.
    This is what Google’s foldable Pixel smartphone might look like.
    Image: OnLeaks and HowToiSolve

    When will we finally see Google’s first foldable phone? The smart money is now on May 10th, with availability in June. CNBC says it got hold of internal marketing materials showing Google will launch the repeatedly reportedly delayed smartphone at Google I/O.

    Most of CNBC’s report corroborates what leakers like Roland Quandt and OnLeaks have already told us. You should expect a closed-book 5.8-inch phone that folds out into a 7.6-inch tablet, powered by Google’s Tensor G2 processor, starting at north of $1,700 — making it a direct competitor to Samsung’s $1,800 Galaxy Z Fold 4.

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  • A Pixel 6A.

    A Pixel 6A.
    A Pixel 6A.
    Photo by Vjeran Pavic / The Verge

    Google’s still-unannounced Pixel 7A might cost $499, meaning the rumored midrange phone will launch at a $50 premium over last year’s Pixel 6A, according to 9to5Google. While that price might be a bit of a disappointment, the new phone will apparently getting some big upgrades that could justify the cost.

    The cameras, for example, are moving up to a 64MP main camera (up from 12MP in the Pixel 6A) and a 13MP ultrawide camera (up from 12MP), 9to5Google reports. The phone will apparently also be getting a 90hz display, the Tensor G2 chip that powers the Pixel 7 and 7 Pro, and wireless charging. Those all seem like nice improvements from the very-good Pixel 6A.

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  • Renders of Google’s rumored Pixel foldable phone.

    Renders of Google’s rumored Pixel foldable phone.
    Image: OnLeaks and HowToiSolve

    The Google Pixel Fold could be available as soon as the second week in June, according to WinFuture’s Roland Quandt. The reliable leaker tweeted on Tuesday that the phone will come with 256GB base storage and that you’ll be able to get it in either a black / dark gray color or white.

    The foldable has been rumored for a long time, and there have been whispers that it would be announced sometime in the next few months. However, a January report from The Elec threw some cold water on that idea, saying that the screen wasn’t even set to go into production until July or August.

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  • Image: Google

    Google has announced its annual I/O conference will begin on May 10th. The company says it’ll be “broadcast in front of a limited live audience and is open to everyone online” and that you can register to attend today.

    This year, the biggest expectations revolve around all of the artificial intelligence technology Google is developing. Expect news about Bard, Google’s answer to ChatGPT, as well as other products to generate images, write code for apps, or test product prototypes.

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