Astro Teller
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- News
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Google Parent Alphabet Unit to Drop Burritos by Drone
- Friday September 9, 2016
- Agence France-Presse
"We want to learn how people feel when they're receiving a package by air, and taking someone's time and/or money changes things more than a little."
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www.gadgets360.com
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Analysis: Google Is Letting You Inside Its Moonshot Lab To Justify Its Existence
- Saturday July 30, 2016
- World News | Brian Fung, The Washington Post
You may not have heard of Astro Teller, but you've probably heard of his workshop. Known simply as X, it has been responsible for some of the world's most ambitious science projects: Balloon-based Internet. Drone delivery. Google Glass. Self-driving cars.
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www.ndtv.com
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Google X Boss Says Company Should Have Curbed Glass Hype
- Wednesday March 18, 2015
- Business | Thomson Reuters
The Internet company did not do enough to make clear that the $1,500 computer that mounts to a pair of eyeglasses was merely a prototype and not a finished product, Google's Astro Teller said during a talk at the South by Southwest Interactive conference in Austin.
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www.ndtv.com/business
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Google Parent Alphabet Unit to Drop Burritos by Drone
- Friday September 9, 2016
- Agence France-Presse
"We want to learn how people feel when they're receiving a package by air, and taking someone's time and/or money changes things more than a little."
-
www.gadgets360.com
-
Analysis: Google Is Letting You Inside Its Moonshot Lab To Justify Its Existence
- Saturday July 30, 2016
- World News | Brian Fung, The Washington Post
You may not have heard of Astro Teller, but you've probably heard of his workshop. Known simply as X, it has been responsible for some of the world's most ambitious science projects: Balloon-based Internet. Drone delivery. Google Glass. Self-driving cars.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
Google X Boss Says Company Should Have Curbed Glass Hype
- Wednesday March 18, 2015
- Business | Thomson Reuters
The Internet company did not do enough to make clear that the $1,500 computer that mounts to a pair of eyeglasses was merely a prototype and not a finished product, Google's Astro Teller said during a talk at the South by Southwest Interactive conference in Austin.
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www.ndtv.com/business