Master of the
house: Google's 'home of the future' is an on-message eye-opener
Cooking
using your voice, watching films with a dongle and improving snaps with an
app...Simon Usborne visits the house in London that the company has chosen as a
showcase for the way it wants to run your life.
SIMON
USBORNE Author Biography Thursday 07 November 2013
Stepping
into the domain of those select companies which present an ethos that requires
relentless smiling (see also: Disney) can feel less like drinking the Kool-Aid
than receiving a Kool-Aid enema in a Kool-Aid carwash; you leave feeling
cleansed but shaken and a tiny bit violated.
Which
brings us to Fitzroy Square in London on Wednesday afternoon. A Georgian townhouse
there was once a hangout for the Bloomsbury Set in which to show off the art
and design of the time. Picasso popped in for tea. It's now a posh house for
hire and, for two days only this week, a four-storey showcase for the way
Google wants to run your life.
When the
black door with its Google "G" knocker opens under a fanlight stained
in Google colours, Googlers pounce with rictus grins. They and we know what a
Google office looks like – the slides, scooters and breakout spaces have
slipped into cliche – but what about a Google house?
In the
Google kitchen, Ben and Jamie cook Google sweet potato bhajis. They are part of
a collective of cooks who run a Google-owned YouTube channel called Sorted Food
that has half a million subscribers.
"Convert
250 grams into ounces," Jamie tells his tablet. "250 grams is 8.82
ounces," a robotic woman replies (a big screen linked to his device shows
8.818 ounces, which is very precise in bhaji terms).
Voice
searches like this one are not new but Google wants to show it's winning a
vocal arms race with smarter search technology released this week on its
updated search app for iOS 7. It wants to outwit Siri –Apple's tablet and iPhone
devices – on her own turf.
"Remind
me to buy some turmeric next time I'm at Tesco." Ben's tablet registers
his spice shortage, as well as the location of his nearest Tesco. The next time
he's there, his tablet will know it, ping and tell him to buy turmeric.
Chromecast
dongle, a nameless Googler hosts a Google/Siri search-off. "How old is the
Queen?" Both get it right (87). "Who is she married to?" The
Duke of Edinburgh, Google says confidently.
A silent
Siri shows a random selection of similar results. "How many children does
she have?" Google displays pictures of them all and says they
"include Charles and Anne". Siri offers the Wikipedia entry for
"child." Hopeless.
Elsewhere,
two Googlers stage a real-time, slightly cringey German-English roleplay using
Google Translate. One takes a photo of a restaurant menu and translates a dish by
stroking it with her finger.
In the
sitting room a vast TV streams The Great Gatsby via a Google Chromecast dongle
(Google) In the sitting room a vast TV streams The Great Gatsby via a Google
Chromecast dongle (Google)
They
demonstrate Auto Awesome, a new photo app that automatically excludes
duplicates and duds from a gallery of holiday pics, and takes the smiles from a
series of photos of the same people and pools them into one, perfect shot.
After an
hour of Google immersion, before Team Google packs up and heads to Paris and
then Hamburg, the rain-splattered pavement outside represents a welcome return
to the present. But in a final test, can Google show me the way from Google
House to my house? "What's the best way to get home?"
At last,
Google is stumped. The first result it offers is a Yahoo Answer to the
question: "What's the best way to get rid of mice in your home?" I
turn back to ask a Googler for directions to the nearest station, and put my
phone in my pocket.
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