I reached the venue early at 8:45 and found out that the
queue today was moving comparatively faster. We were being handed a
brand new Nexus 9 on our way in.
I had installed Android M preview the previous night and I was already
seeing an improvement in the battery life and responsiveness of my
year-old Nexus 5. Excitedly, I activated my tablet while having
breakfast in the lower arena.
I had decided to check out all the stalls that day, so I
first went to the Android Auto area. Where in the world would you find a
Google engineer giving you a car demo? Here I was sitting with Nobu
Hayashi in an Audi powered by Android Auto.
The demo was seamless and in the discussion which followed
after, I got to know that Google is working with several partner
companies to integrate Android Auto with most of the upcoming car
launches. I even got to know that Audi TT had a model in the works which
sought to replace the traditional dashboard and the music/GPS system
with a single Android Auto installation. My mind started imagining all
the custom themes one could develop and how we could configure the
dashboard as per our convenience.

Next I moved back to Project ARA in the ATAP Section. The
Google Engineer gave me an excellent overview of the project. She said
that the project intended to create an ecosystem where any company could
create ARA devices and modules.
I even got to know about a few interesting modules being worked on,
like the credit card processing module. It was before the demo device
with a working camera module was unveiled, so I did not get to see the
demo device.

Next I moved to the Project Tango section, where I got to
experience the Tango tablet which had sensors to recreate a 3D
atmosphere around you in real time. They had a special arena to
themselves where I experienced a truly immersive VR-enabled game which
was aware of my movements and location, and even had depth awareness. So
I had total of six degrees of freedom in the demo. Next I played the 3D
tango-enabled shooter game in which, owing to my CS GO experience, I
even nailed the top position in their leaderboard.
Next I went to a session about Lovefield, which is an offline data
store for browsers. After the session I had a wonderful talk with the
core developers of Lovefield regarding their motives, possible
integration with Firebase, and the future of the project itself. I even
took up a challenge to create a community module for the project.
Androidify had set up a large stall where you could get the
stickers made in their app printed. Their sticker designs were really
awesome, so I decided to get a bunch of them printed. Unfortunately I
was not able to collect all of them.

Google had also invited companies like Test-Fairy and
Core-OS, so you could interact with their founders, network and even
discuss your problems related to the platform and get goodies for it.

After my share of interaction with the Google Launchpad
companies, I then moved to the Google Developer Experts arena, where I
met Victor Sanchez Belmar, who helped me catch up on recent advances in
the WebRTC area.
The clock was ticking, and soon it was the time for the
“Speechless at I/O” Showdown where a few Google employees had to present
on a topic such as a keynote, new product launch, etc., and had to make
it look funny. The show was thoroughly enjoyable. Suggestions for an
imaginary product from the audience resulted in a name made up by the
unix shell names ash-ksh-bsh.
A technically sound comedy for a technically sound audience,
needless to say the show was a hit. And everyone left the venue with a
happy, laughing mind.
My visit to Google I/O 2015 was full of surprises and one I
can never forget. Everything seemed to be part of the rewarding
engineering atmosphere that Google has fostered among its employees.
It’s a place where one can see a different world being worked on,
experience advancements in new fields and meet Google pioneers. Google
has occupied an essential part of our lives and continues to grow upon
us in almost all areas, and I/O is a place where you to get to
experience its developments.
I would like to thank Google and the GDG Global Team for
inviting me to the I/O, which made this wonderful experience come true. I
hope to get a second chance to experience the most Googly place for
non-Googlers.
If you’re interested in reading more about Google I/O, be sure to check out Paul’s take on Google I/O, as well.
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