Author: admin

  • The man behind Google Meet went from being ‘the only Indian kid in my class’ to connecting 3 billion users worldwide. He test-drives the product every day

    The man behind Google Meet went from being ‘the only Indian kid in my class’ to connecting 3 billion users worldwide. He test-drives the product every day

    Awaneesh Verma leads Google Meet, Google Voice, and other real-time communication products at Alphabet, overseeing a massive network reaching about 3 billion users and 11 million companies worldwide.

    However, his drive to eliminate communication friction and ensure people are “truly understanding each other” is rooted in a personal journey that stretches back before his time at Uber and Duolingo—to when he learned how barriers can keep people from communicating.

    Born in the UK to parents who had immigrated from India, Verma spent his young childhood in the midlands city of Sheffield. He recalled in a recent interview with Fortune that, for the longest time, he was “the only Indian kid in my class.”

    While his hometown is “a great place,” he couldn’t help but wonder “what the rest of the world felt and looked like.” He recalled how he was fascinated with a physical atlas in the days before Google Maps. “I’m like just looking at maps and drawing places based on that.”

    Years later, when Verma was an engineering major at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, he heard Google’s head of engineering, Alan Eustace, give a talk about ongoing projects, including Google Translate. “I was like, ‘Wow, this is the future of connecting people.” Within a few years, Verma was working on Google Translate, part of a journey that took him to Duolingo as its first ever head of product, before a stop at Uber, also as head of project, and a return to Google.

    Verma told Fortune that he loves his work because he has always loved the idea of something having to do with travel, saying he wanted to be a travel show host when he was a kid.

    “I really liked the appeal of meeting people in different cultures and then truly understanding each other,” he said, adding that he’s been lucky to do a job that lets him do the same thing.

    Beta-testing while driving the machine

    As head of Google Meet, Verma told Fortune that he is always beta-testing his product, which billions of users depend on to do business. (Although more specifically, he said he’s always testing the product internally, from early research proof-of-concepts to end-user prototypes and beta.) He said the beauty of Google Meet is that it’s part of Google Workspace, which means that all the notes you take on it become part of your Google Drive.

    Verma said he uses Take Notes with Gemini in “pretty much all of my meetings.” With a single click, this tool instantly creates a live Google document of meeting notes, which become the team’s “decision of record,” transforming discussions into something “durable and sticky.”

    He noted that this reliability has made distributed collaboration easier, recalling a time when a third of his team in Stockholm felt confident skipping an inconvenient meeting, a huge change from just a few years ago. The team was trying to get some feedback from some Bay Area-based executives, but the timing just wasn’t right. Nevertheless, they felt confident in the meeting going on without them. “We trust that you’ll represent our point of view well and we’ll read the notes and we’ll read the transcript later on.”

    The Google Meet chief also relayed that he often debriefs on projects, and he asks team members what went well and what could have gone differently. Once all of those are written on a whiteboard, he cross-references them with what the Gemini AI notetaker thought of the meeting. “When in doubt, you can go back and read the transcript,” he said, noting that Gemini includes citations, so the minute anything is in doubt, “there’s a one click to that part of the transcript where you can then just read what happened there.”

    The goal is to use AI to facilitate the high fidelity of human conversation, including tone and emotion, allowing teams to reach resolutions faster than asynchronous communication. Verma illustrated this by recounting a 60-minute discussion with an engineering counterpart. By using Ask Gemini to summarize, they immediately produced a 15-bullet product specification.

    Real-time translate

    The innovations from Verma and his team spring to life when Fortune talks to Niklas Blum, a native German speaker based in Google’s aforementioned Stockholm office. He demonstrates Google’s real-time speech translator, a very different product from Google Translate.

    “Don’t you hear me, Nick? I’m speaking German to you now,” Blum said, as this journalist could hear him speaking in the background in something that sounded Germanic, while, with a few seconds delay, his voice came through the speakers in English, somewhat uncannily.

    Blum explained that AI technology has now progressed to the point where it clones his voice in real time to make it sound like he is talking in English.

    He added that Verma’s team worked closely with Google’s DeepMind on the various technologies, with multiple layers of AI working: the translation plus the generation of the translated voice. To some extent, he said, the lag is very dependent on the language being translated, since the AI has to account for the grammar and complexity of the language being used. German often puts the verb toward the end of the sentence, for instance, so there is a lag as the AI makes sure it has the correct meaning.

    This real-time translation tool came together over the course of about two years, Blum said, adding that it began as an exploration without a certain deadline. But the more they communicated with global companies that do business across language barriers, they saw a need in the marketplace.

    He said it was “really hard” for team conversations across different languages to be held while making sure that everyone received all the correct information. “We want Google Meet to not only be a tool to connect people, but [something] that creates value in the conversation,” he added.

    “The beauty of technology is not just the fact that it can automate and make it easier,” Verma said, but that you can trust “that it truly is neutrally representing everything that was said.”

    There’s an imperative behind this, of course, somehow providing a fix to the post-pandemic onslaught of endless meetings that define most workdays.

    Verma notes that these are often ineffective, leaving participants unsure of what was decided and what comes next. He said he feels a real need to address “meeting fatigue” that comes from meetings just not being run well.

    Verma affirms that every improvement is filtered through the question, “how could we have helped them do this better?”

    Continue Reading

  • People’s Pharmacy: Which form of niacin (vitamin B3) helps reduce the risk of skin cancer?

    People’s Pharmacy: Which form of niacin (vitamin B3) helps reduce the risk of skin cancer?

    Q. You wrote about the use of niacin against basal cell and squamous cell skin cancers. I would like to try this, but I’m having trouble with the flushing. To avoid this, I have to take the pill after a full meal. Even then, I can manage only…

    Continue Reading

  • Cannabis-Induced ‘Scromiting’ Is on the Rise, Study Finds

    Cannabis-Induced ‘Scromiting’ Is on the Rise, Study Finds

    As much fun and helpful as cannabis can be, every drug has its potential tradeoffs. Case in point, a study out this week finds that more Americans are coming down with a stomach-churning side effect of long-term use.

    Researchers…

    Continue Reading

  • The request could not be satisfied


    ERROR: The request could not be satisfied

    The request could not be satisfied.


    Request blocked.
    We can’t connect to the server for this app or website at this time. There might be too much traffic or a configuration error. Try again later, or…

    Continue Reading

  • US Options Market Grapples With ‘Concentration Risk’ in Clearing

    US Options Market Grapples With ‘Concentration Risk’ in Clearing

    As the US options market heads for a sixth straight year of record volume, some best-known names in the industry are growing nervous about its over-reliance on a small group of banks to guarantee trades for the biggest market makers.

    Every listed US options trade goes through The Options Clearing Corp., a central counterparty that handles more than 70 million contracts a day during busy periods. The trades are submitted to the OCC by its members — who help trades get to the clearing house and act as guarantors in case their clients go bust.

    Most Read from Bloomberg

    There’s a small group of firms at the top. Out of dozens of members, the top five contributed almost half of the OCC’s default fund in the second quarter of 2025. Market participants cite Bank of America Corp., Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. and ABN Amro Bank NV as the three biggest, handling most positions from market makers, who take the other side of almost every options trade. The fact so much volume goes through such a small number of firms raises the risk of widespread losses if one of them should fail.

    “I think there is significant concentration risk in clearing intermediation,” Craig Donohue, chief executive officer of Cboe Global Markets, Inc., said in an interview, without naming specific banks. “I do worry about that.”

    The risk of a major bank failing is unlikely — but not unheard of. Donohue has his own battle scars from a clearing member default: in October 2011, when he was CEO of CME Group Inc., MF Global declared bankruptcy.

    The more immediate risk is that these banks may run out of capacity to support the extraordinary growth of the listed derivatives market, with OCC average daily volume soaring 52% in October from a year earlier. That’s leading to a rise in “self-clearing” by market makers — meaning they become more direct members of the clearing house — which comes with its own risks, given that market makers are more thinly capitalized than banks.

    Bank of America and Goldman Sachs declined to comment. ABN Amro did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Related: SGX to List Perpetual Futures to Rival Crypto ‘Bucket Shops’

    Only a handful of clearing brokers have the ability to cross-margin between futures and options, where opposite positions in related instruments can cancel each other out, reducing the amount of margin needed. For example, if a trader is long S&P 500 E-Mini Futures, but short S&P 500 Index Options, the net risk position would be reduced.

    Continue Reading

  • PPP Chairman pays tribute to Shaheed Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, Shaheed Benazir Bhutto – RADIO PAKISTAN

    1. PPP Chairman pays tribute to Shaheed Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, Shaheed Benazir Bhutto  RADIO PAKISTAN
    2. Gilani celebrates PPP’s role for democracy  The Express Tribune
    3. A political legacy forged in courage  Geo News
    4. Sherry reaffirms PPP’s commitment to…

    Continue Reading

  • AI could be revolutionary, but don’t ‘lose your diversification,’ advisor says

    AI could be revolutionary, but don’t ‘lose your diversification,’ advisor says

    Continue Reading

  • Pakistan, Egypt agree to boost economic and defence ties after years of stagnation – Firstpost

    Pakistan, Egypt agree to boost economic and defence ties after years of stagnation – Firstpost

    Pakistan and Egypt agreed on Sunday to deepen ties in economic, commercial, cultural and defence sectors after years of stagnant relationship.

    In a push to revive a relationship that has remained largely inactive for years, Pakistan and Egypt on…

    Continue Reading

  • No heavy exercise, calorie counting: Doctor reveals how he lost 12 kg in 3 months

    No heavy exercise, calorie counting: Doctor reveals how he lost 12 kg in 3 months

    Losing excess body fat in a wholesome and lasting manner rarely comes with quick fixes. Modern markets are overflowing with pills, powders, and procedures that promise rapid transformation, yet most of these methods deliver only fleeting results….

    Continue Reading

  • Dewsbury recycling centre to move for railway upgrade work

    Dewsbury recycling centre to move for railway upgrade work

    A waste and recycling centre in Dewsbury is to be relocated from one side of its current site to the other so work can be carried out on a nearby railway track.

    It comes after the council-run Weaving Lane site was acquired by Network Rail as part of its multibillion-pound Transpennine route upgrade.

    The firm said the move was necessary so engineers could access the railway line to build a new retaining wall and create space for new tracks.

    The centre was expected to be closed on Sunday 30 November while containers and facilities were moved to the other side of the current site, and it was due to reopen in its new location on Monday 1 December, according to Kirklees Council.

    Access to the new location would still be through Thornhill Road and Weaving Lane, but visitors would need to turn left after the entrance gates instead of right, a council spokesperson said.

    Tyler Hawkins, cabinet member for highways and waste, said: “This has been a fantastic opportunity to deliver real improvements to recycling facilities in Kirklees.

    “The new layout will provide a more accessible facility over two levels with additional parking, making it much easier and safer for the public to access the containers and dispose of their household waste.”

    Andrew Campbell, Transpennine route upgrade sponsor, said the work would enable the firm “to press ahead with plans to install more tracks throughout this section of railway and beyond so that faster, more frequent, services can run in the future.

    “The Transpennine route upgrade will deliver improved rail journeys across the North, and our ongoing collaboration with Kirklees Council is vital.”

    Continue Reading