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- Google CEO Sundar Pichai: Future of AI Insights | The Circuit
Google CEO Sundar Pichai: Future of AI Insights | The Circuit
Explore the future of AI with Google CEO Sundar Pichai on The Circuit. Dive into how Google has transformed our lives and what the future holds for their presence in the ever-evolving digital landscape.
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Video Transcript
We are in the Plex.
This is the center of Google.
It's hard to remember life before Google.
It changed literally everything.
How we live, how we work, how we communicate, how we literally get around on a colored bike.
Google has been the front door of the internet for over two decades.
And now there are so many doors.
Google may not be your first place to go.
So, what are they going to do about it?
Hello!
Emily, so good to see you again.
Good to see you.
I'm glad you chose this opportunity to come on campus.
I'm glad you chose this opportunity to come on campus.
Sundar Pichai, welcome to the panel.
He is the CEO of Google, and his mother, rising to the top after battling to become the moderator and peace maker.
He runs a tech giant that functions more like a corporate lab, overseeing business structures
such as YouTube, DeepMind, Cloud, and of course Search.
Pichai has been carefully designing a strategy that uses AI to put the customer service into
the business.
That delivery was a surprise to the long-standing rivals Microsoft and OpenAI, where in unfortunate
enough their corporate presence and talent for Google challenged their chat GPT.
Chet splashed a code red and a branch-wide hoax around KI,
which has not been seen since the Dotcom boom.
But for Pichai, the plumbing is just part of the long game.
I saw it's your 20th anniversary.
That's right, it was last week. It came on me.
Are you coffee or tea?
I'll go for coffee.
How about you?
I'm gonna have a green tea.
Does it feel like you've been here for 20 years?
Uh, not quite. Yeah, time flies by. I didn't know why.
I was a kid when I started with Google, so that flew by.
Google is famous for those out-of-box job interview questions.
Do you remember any of those?
Like, did you have to figure out how many golf balls were in the school box or something like that?
Thank God, no.
You know, but I remember very clearly.
I interviewed people on April 1st, which was April Fool's Day 2004.
There was rumor.
There were rumors. I didn't know whether it actually happened, but Gmail saw my interviewer
and all my people wanted to know what I thought about it. And it definitely wasn't a fake
blow. They actually started it, but I never allow no, no promise to be put through. I
think it's too contrived. You just had a blow, the stock jumped far and far. Did that feel
was that a little vindication or as they say in cricket, was that bad talking?
In many ways, we were very hard-serving.
I'm very proud to be a part of this.
You know, in 2016, when I first became CEO,
I said to myself,