If you're an Android developer, you can go through the source code for the Google I/O 2017 app to see what new techniques you can implement into your own apps.
Google has announced that third-party actions will be coming to Google Assistant on your phones and through Google Home. These will allow you to do things such as order and pay for lunch without installing any applications, all from Assistant.
Google I/O 2017 is set to kick off, and Google will be live-streaming the keynote for the event. Quentyn from Phandroid has shared how you can watch the event in all its glory.
Ron from Ars Technica has published an in-depth guide to everything that Google has been working on, which we plan to hear about, ahead of Google I/O 2017.
Google had previously uploaded some of the sessions that will be taking place at Google I/O 2017. However, it wasn't complete but today Google has announced they are all available and that you should go ahead and plan your schedule.
Google I/O is huge and includes dozens of different talks from various employees at Google. The company just published various sessions that will be taking place, with the keynote being 2 hours long.
Many people can't afford Google I/O tickets this year but Google is offering a way to award some talented devleopers. So if you've created something that follows Google's Android Experiments, Chrome Experiments, or AI Experiments guidelines, then you can enter for your chance to win a free trip...
To get a ticket into Google I/O, you have to apply and hope you get chosen. The application window for this year's event begins on the 22nd of this month and will end on the 27th.
After the puzzle was revealed on Twitter, it seems it has already been solved. If everything was done correctly, it looks like Google I/O will take place at the Shoreline Amphitheater this year from May 17th through the 19th.
The AndroidDev Twitter account just tweeted a URL that tasks you with completing 5 different puzzles. Once completed, you're supposed to send you answers in and reveal the secret. No one knows what it is exactly right now, but many speculate that it could be related to Google I/O 2017.
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