Google CEO Larry Page Announced To Pull Of Google Labs

Google announced that it plans to shutter its Labs department in an effort to focus more on its products and also announced the loss of Labs, Google has decided to close its Labs initiative as part of the company’s efforts to streamline its product portfolio and focus its development efforts. The closing of Google Labs doesn’t affect the company’s policy to encourage employees to devote 20 percent of their work time and Google will continue to experiment with new features in each of our products……………

 

Google is shutting down its Google Labs site, which hosts experimental projects the search giant has in the hopper. In a July 20 blog post, Bill Coughran, senior vice president for research and systems infrastructure at Google, announced the phasing out of Google Labs, saying, “While we’ve learned a huge amount by launching very early prototypes in Labs, we believe that greater focus is crucial if we’re to make the most of the extraordinary opportunities ahead.” In his post entitled “More wood behind fewer arrows,” Coughran cited Google CEO Larry Page’s recent comments using those same words. Page also said, “Focus and prioritization are crucial given our amazing opportunities.” However, Coughran said Google would continue to push speed and innovation, which have been the driving forces behind Google Labs. “In many cases, this will mean ending Labs experiments—in others we’ll incorporate Labs products and technologies into different product areas,” Coughran said. “And many of the Labs products that are Android apps today will continue to be available on Android Market. We’ll update you on our progress via the Google Labs Website.” And in an update to his post, Coughran added that Google has no plans to change in-product experimentation channels like Gmail Labs or Maps Labs. “We’ll continue to experiment with new features in each of our products,” he said.

 

Google Labs has served as a channel for some of the projects Google engineers came up with during their 20 percent time – the 20 percent of their working time that Google encourages its people to experiment and work on other projects.

A Google FAQ on Google Labs said:

Google Labs is a playground where our more adventurous users can play around with prototypes of some of our wild and crazy ideas and offer feedback directly to the engineers who developed them. Please note that Labs is the first phase in a lengthy product-development process, and none of this stuff is guaranteed to make it onto Google.com. While some of our crazy ideas might grow into the next Gmail or Google, others might turn out to be, well, just plain crazy.

The FAQ posting also said:

At Google, we believe in launching early and often and Labs takes that philosophy to the max. The projects in Labs are intended to showcase some of our cool and wacky ideas but are not intended to be full-blown Google products. Labs experiments may be unavailable or be even removed without notice, and you may not be able to access any of your data. We recommend that you not use sensitive information in a Labs experiment. Google Labs is our playground. We try to keep is safe and orderly, but still keep it informal and, above all, fun.

One of the more recently highlighted Google Labs projects is Spiffy, a new Flash-to-HTML5 conversion tool. Google’s Spiffy fills a void for developers who are finding themselves in situations where they have to leave Flash behind. Spiffy started as a one-person project by a Google engineering intern named Pieter Semester who was trying to figure out how to display Flash animations on devices that do not support Flash.

 

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