Read the passage and answer
the question that follows.
It was
an event that included sky divers, stunt bikers and people rappelling down the
side of a building. Then came another spectacle: watching Google, the Web
search giant, re-imagine itself as a hardware maker.
On
Wednesday at Google I/O, the company's annual conference
for developers, Google unveiled a new 7-inch tablet computer, called Nexus 7, and a
sphere-shaped device for streaming music and video that it is calling Nexus Q.
Both debuts paled in comparison to the
company's ramped-up demonstration of Project Glass, a device that puts a camera
and a tiny video screen into a kind of eyeglass frame. This involved Sergey Brin, Google's co-founder, jumping on stage wearing the
device and engaging in a live video chat on Google's social network with a
couple of wing-suited sky divers as they jumped out of a plane. They were
followed by stunt bikers and rappellers who dropped down the face of the
Moscone West convention center, all the while sharing what they were seeing
through experimental versions of the glasses.
Brin said Google would make a $1,500 prototype of the
glasses - which it calls the Google Glass Explorer Edition - available to
developers from the United States who attended the conference. He said the
glasses were slated to ship early next year.
Google's
focus on hardware is a strategic shift for the company, which makes the vast
majority of its revenue from advertising. Google is likely to sell the Nexus 7
and Nexus Q at cost, or even at a loss, but hopes
to make up for those losses - and then some - with additional revenue from
purchases made on Google Play, its app and content store; additional traffic to
its YouTube video site; and the advertising it reaps from all of its Internet
products.
By
selling Google-branded devices, the company also aims to protect its core
search business as competitors hover. Facebook is deepening its partnership
with Microsoft's Bing search engine and Microsoft just announced plans for its
own branded tablet. Apple is moving to cut Google out of its mobile and desktop
operating systems with its own cloud, search and mapping services.
"Google
is a hardware company now," said Colin Gillis, an Internet analyst with
BGC Partners. "Hardware is becoming the doorway to products and services.
If you're going to use the Internet, you are going to have to use a device.
Whoever makes that device controls what services and products are offered to
you, and those nickels and dimes add up over time."
Google's
Nexus 7 tablet, which will be manufactured by Asus, the Taiwanese hardware
maker, features a lightweight design, 7-inch screen and high-definition
display. Google priced its tablet at $199, which puts it in direct competition
with Amazon's Kindle Fire. The cheapest version of Apple's latest iPad sells
for $500.
The
Nexus 7 will feature Google's new version of its Android mobile operating system, called Jelly Bean, which was made available to
developers Wednesday and will come to some Android devices next month.
Joe
Britt, an engineering director at Google, said the Android updates include a
simpler and more accurate on-screen keyboard and a smarter auto-correct
feature. The new software will also transcribe speech even when the device is
not online.
State
whether the following statements are true or false.
1) Google
IO is a new hardware device.
2)
Nexus Q is a new tablet device.
3)
Nexus 7 is going to compete with Kindle Fire.
4)
Google Play is gaming device being launched by Google.
5)
Google has a plan ready for making up the losses it will deliberately make
through the sales of Nexus 7 and Nexus Q.
6)
Jelly Bean is new operating system.
7) With
new focus on hardware, Google is not giving priority to its search engine
anymore.
Sir Isn't Q6 True ?
ReplyDeletesir whr i can get 'Articles' section for practice?
ReplyDelete