Innovation advice from Google X head: Ask how your solution can disappear into peoples lives

Posted: May 7, 2014 at 11:40 pm

NEW YORK With a name like Astro Teller, youd better be ready to speak at length about the future.

As the captain of moonshots at Google X, the search giants secretive lab for ambitious technology solutions, Teller is someone who lives and breathes futurism. At the TechCrunch Disrupt conference today, he gave the audience a primer on what makes Google X tick and faced criticisms of Google Glass head-on.

With the verve of a Baptist preacher, Teller kicked things off by professing his love for anti-lock breaks a far cry the moonshot concepts hes normally associated with.

[ABS] is a wonderful technology moment, he said. We dont have to mess with it. We just say at a very high level this is what we want, and its taken care of.

When technology is invisible and vanishes into our lives, thats actually its ultimate goal, Teller added.

Thats ultimately what Google is aiming for with X. Its self-driving cars could save countless lives by making driving on-demand and computer controlled rather than something which requires us to spend hours learning and then spending the rest of our lives being constantly vigilant. For people with diabetes, the recently announced glucose-sensing contact lenses are a far better user experience than pricking themselves every day to test their blood sugar. And while Google Glass is far from mature, its a stab at making us less addicted to whipping out our phones at every buzz and beep.

Teller suggested that people working on new technology ask themselves: How could the thing Im working on take away a feature? How can the thing Im working on take away a user interface? How can the thing Im working on disappear into peoples lives?

He was also quick to dismiss some of the privacy concerns around Google Glass. This is the worlds worst spy camera, Teller said, while wearing a bright blue Glass unit on stage at Disrupt. He pointed out that there are far better spy cameras on the market, and that Glass owners often ask people for permission before taking pictures and video (something smartphone owners dont typically do).

For the foreseeable future, Glass will continue to be the worlds worst spy camera, he said.

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Innovation advice from Google X head: Ask how your solution can disappear into peoples lives

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