The Gmail app takes calls now, too, because Google wants it to do everything – The Verge

Posted: September 10, 2021 at 5:33 am

Google is announcing even more Workspace features today, part of an increased cadence of changes to the companys office and communications software suite over the past year or so. Todays announcement is a bit of a milestone, however. Although there is still the smattering of small and coming-soon updates, the bigger change is that Gmail is getting a redesign that reveals its true nature in Googles eyes: the central hub for every Google communication app.

To begin, Google is adding the ability to ring another Google user with Google Meet but inside the Gmail mobile app, not inside the Meet app. When the feature rolls out and turns on, your Gmail app will be able to be called just like any other VOIP app (in addition to being able to join Google Meet meetings). Google says the standalone Meet app will get the same ability to place calls, not just create group meetings, at some point in the future.

That Gmail was the first place Google thought to put its calling feature reveals how important Gmail has become to the larger changes happening within Google Workspace. Google has not been shy about leveraging Gmails popularity to drive adoption of its other services.

Now, Gmail is essentially Googles equivalent to Microsofts Outlook. Its a central hub for multiple services. Outlook is Microsofts hub for email, calendar, and contacts; Gmail is Googles hub for email, one-on-one chats, group chats, videoconferencing, and now calls. The email part of Gmail is just one tab in a group of four, next to Chat, Spaces, and Meet.

Spaces is Googles rebranding of Rooms, a Slack-alike product that offers group chats. With the rename, Googles making it easier to find Spaces within a company by making them discoverable to search (as an option) and also finally adding full support for threaded messages. As with other group chat apps, threads will appear in an extra column on the right-hand side. (For those keeping count, that means a Spaces user could have up to five columns of different information on their screen at once.)

Google says users will be able to hide the tabs they dont use, as before, and that the redesign is rolling out to enterprise users first, in the coming weeks. After that, it will start to appear in Gmail for regular consumers.

As for the smaller updates, Google Calendar will now let you RSVP to a meeting invite with an indication of your location. Google will finally launch the so-called Companion mode feature this November. Its the system that has you log into a meeting on your laptop alongside the main rooms AV system, muted by default so theres not an embarrassing audio feedback loop.

Finally, Google is expanding the Series One line of Google Meet-compatible hardware. Unlike Made by Google hardware like the Pixel, Series One devices are made by other companies to look like they fit in with Googles design aesthetic and work primarily with Googles software.

To me, the more interesting device is the Series One Desk 27. Its a touchscreen display designed primarily to serve as a Google Meet videoconferencing station, but it also has a simple USB-C port and can serve as an external monitor for a laptop. When you plug in, you can use its soundbar and 5-megapixel camera with whatever video conference app you like, as well. Google says it has an Edge TPU (a custom, Google processor) for listening to Hey Google commands, but otherwise it uses a standard Intel chip for its main functions.

Its definitely a device meant more for corporate spaces than consumers homes and has a price to match: $1,999.

Theres also the Series One Panel 65, a TV thats also able to take stylus input and work a little like Googles own Jamboard. Google says both will run on Chrome OS and are all-in-one meeting devices, but beyond that, we dont have a ton of specs. The devices are made by Avocor, which makes a bunch of other custom meeting devices. It will launch in 2022. Pricing is not available yet.

Google is partnering with Cisco to ensure that hardware designed for Google Meet will be able to dial into Webex meetings and that hardware designed for Webex will be able to dial into Google Meet. As for Zoom, theres nothing to announce.

Theres been more work put into Google Workspace in the past year than seems to have gone into it in the several years before that, the vast majority of it focused on communication. Thats great news for companies and consumers who use all of Workspaces various apps. But for those of us who just want Gmail to keep being just an email app, its going to be increasingly difficult to keep it that way.

Correction, 5:25PM ET September 8th: The Gmail redesign is rolling out to enterprise customers in the coming weeks, not today as the article originally stated. We regret the error.

Excerpt from:

The Gmail app takes calls now, too, because Google wants it to do everything - The Verge

Related Posts