
Google I/O 2022 has kicked off, and there’s plenty of hardware, software, and Android announcements for tech fans to sink their teeth into. We watched the whole thing live (though sadly from the confines of our respective homes) to serve up all the tastiest news morsels on one easily digestible page.
Without further ado, here’s the most important news from Google I/O 2022.
1. The Pixel Watch is finally official

After years of rumours and leaks, Google’s very own homegrown Pixel Watch is finally official. Matching recent leaks, it’s a rather attractive circular affair, with a beautiful curved glass screen dominating the entire body, along with a physical Apple Watch-like crown on the right hand side. It’s running Wear OS 3 (developed in collaboration with Samsung), and will land packing updated features like the New Google Wallet in addition to offline Maps navigation. It’s also rocking deeper integration with Google-owned Fitbit services, though we’re not sure how that will integrate with Google Fit or if it’ll end up replacing it entirely.
2. Pixel Buds Pro incoming
3. Hello Pixel 6a
4. Pixel 7 sneak peek

Google practically rushed through our official glance at the Pixel 7 ahead of its proper launch later on this year. There’s no word on detailed specs, but we got a good look at the design, which retains the Pixel 6 DNA with a more refined feel. The glass camera bump is now a sturdier aluminium, which also makes up the entire case of the phone. Inside we’ve got a second-gen Tensor chip that’s more powerful than ever, with, no doubt, lots of fancy AI-powered speech recognition, photo and security features at its disposal. Watch this space…
5. Magic Translation Glasses

Okay, so we haven’t actually got an official name for the glasses concept that Google very briefly teased at the end of its keynote, but colour us tentatively impressed nonetheless. Whether or not the glasses — which appear to have a set of AR lenses that overlay virtual live-translation text in real-time — will ever come to fruition remains to be seen, but the fact that we were treated to a glimpse into such a potentially game-changing product is enough. For now at least. (Please don’t be vaporware).
6. Pixel tablet incoming
7. Bye, Hey Google

“Hey Google” has always been clunkier to say compared to the short and snappy “Alexa”, but a new Nest Hub Max update offers a far easier way to call upon the powers of Google Assistant. The new feature — called Look and Talk — allows the Nest Hub Max to use its built-in camera to determine if you’re looking it it. If you are, you can simply ask it questions or bark your orders without the need for a “Hey Google” precursor.
It’s an opt-in feature that will require you to setup both Google’s Face Match and Voice Match services, with Look and Talk interactions processed directly on the device itself. We imagine it’s a feature that will roll out to other devices including smartphones in future, so watch this space.
8. Google Maps gets a slick Immersive View

Google Maps has a new mode called Immersive View which lets you explore select locations in beautifully detailed, glorious 3D computer-generated models, which are created using a combination of Google’s satellite captures and Street View shots. Zoom into a location from above, and you’ll be treated to a video game-like world, with support for most devices. Predictably it only supports a select few cities at launch — San Francisco, London, New York, Los Angeles, and Tokyo — with more supported expected in future.
9. (New) Google Wallet
Google Wallet has what appears to be a hefty update, introducing support beyond mere payment cards. These include things like plane tickets and student cards, to plane tickets, reservations and even government-issued IDs like drivers licenses and vaccine passes. Oh, and the all-important Disney World pass. The announcement was very US-centric, so we’ll have to wait and see what plans, if any, are slated for across the pond.
10. Supercharge your webcam and mic

If you use Google Meet for most of your online calls then you’re in for a treat, thanks to Google’s new Portrait Lighting and de-reverberation tool. The former uses AI magic to turn your laptop’s useless pixellated mess of a webcam into a sharper, clearer image. Not only that, buy you can also use a virtual repositionable light to do your face justice (or balance out a single light source such as a window). The de-reverberation tool does exactly what you’d expect — namely, taking your mic audio and making it less echoey — making it another useful tool for home office shenanigans.
11. Android 13 Beta 2 is out today

Developers and Android aficionados will be glad to hear that the second public beta of Android 13 will be available from today. Designed around three big themes — doing more with your phone, integrating with tablets and watches, and making everything work together harmoniously — it promises more features than ever before.
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