Google’s profit jumps thanks to mobile and YouTube ad revenue

Yesterday, Google declared its financial results for Q2 2015, posting an impressive 11 percent increase in profits year over year. Further details have come to light which suggest that mobile and YouTube have been big winners this year for Google.
Specific numbers weren’t given out in the report, but Google CFO Ruth Porat states that the gap between mobile and desktop advertising revenue has continued to shrink. Mobile search results have apparently been a leading contributor to advertising revenue in the past year.
Much of the growth appears to have come from emerging markets, where mobile is the primary method of connecting to the Internet for many users. In 10 countries Google has noted that more searches are placed from mobile than from PC devices.
Overall, paid advertisement clicks have seen growth of 18-percent year over year. Paid clicks on Google websites saw a 30-percent year over year and 10-percent quarter over quarter increase.
It’s not just search results showing improvement, YouTube ad revenue has continued to grow, particularly in the mobile space. Porat pointed out that mobile YouTube watch time has more than doubled, which has helped to offset the falling cost per click. The number of companies placing YouTube advertisements has increased 40 percent and the average amount that a company spends is up by 60 percent.
YouTube is becoming an even bigger earner for Google, and services such as game streaming could attract new audiences.
Other Google services are also apparently playing a role in increasing the company’s mobile presence. Google Play is continuing to grow thanks to “deep linking”, which sees in-app ads link to other downloads. Google Play is also showing strong growth as a mobile gaming platform, which has become a hugely profitable industry.
Along with a boost to Google Photos and Android Pay, Google’s investments into additional mobile services appears to be paying off.
Google Inbox suggests the perfect time to resurface ‘snoozed’ emails

When you snooze an email in Google’s Inbox app, you’re normally given a few different reminder options: three customised defaults, “someday,” the last custom time you used, and a manually set place or time. For many emails, that means tapping the latter option and choosing a time slot the old fashioned way. It can be a little tiresome, so now Google is introducing contextual reminders. If you snooze an email that contains a date and time, Google will automatically suggest when to resurface it. So if you’ve booked a table at a restaurant, that might be an hour beforehand, or if you’re waiting on a package it could be the morning that it’s due to arrive. It’s not the most earth-shattering addition, but Inbox is all about smarter email management — and now it’s just a little bit smarter.

Filed under: Cellphones, Google
Source: Google
Shot through the heart: Huawei Nexus will have a Snapdragon 810, not the 820
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Many of us in the Android community are getting pretty hyped – the promise (or at least, rumoured promise) of two Nexus devices, one from LG and one from Huawei, is almost too good to be true. Today’s rumour refers to the Huawei part of the equation, and it could almost be seen as bad news. Just yesterday, renowned leaker @evleaks said that the Huawei Nexus was going to have the brand new Qualcomm Snapdragon 820 processor when it launches in Q4 this year. An analyst has come out of the woodwork today to refute this – according to Pan Jiutang, it’s pretty much impossible for the Snapdragon 820 to be in the Huawei Nexus due to the fact Qualcomm won’t be shipping the chip till December. The implicit meaning in all of this is that Huawei Nexus will have a Snapdragon 810 if it really does launch in Q4, which Pan and @evleaks both agree on – that isn’t bad necessarily, but it’s not exactly the beast we were hoping for.
Depending on which side of the fence you’re sitting on, this could be a dealbreaker. What’s more, if Pan’s prediction is indeed true, this implies that the Snapdragon 820 won’t feature in the LG Nexus either, which is expected to launch sometime in October or November. Maybe Google will have to rely on Huawei’s Kirin processor after all. I’m sure many of you are hoping that Pan is wrong in his analysis – we shall see.
Would you get the Huawei Nexus if it doesn’t have the Snapdragon 820? Let us know your opinion in the comments below.
Source: Mobipicker via Phone Arena
The post Shot through the heart: Huawei Nexus will have a Snapdragon 810, not the 820 appeared first on AndroidSPIN.
Google needs your help improving its search engine rankings
Despite the fact that Google itself created the algorithms that drive its search rankings, it would appear that the Mountain View-based company could use a bit of assistance in the SEO department. According to a recent job listing posted to its Careers portal, Google’s in the market for a new SEO manager at its California headquarters.
The “Program Manager, Search Engine Optimization” position is marketing-centric requiring any qualified candidate to “work with cross-functional teams across Marketing, Sales, Product Development, Engineering and more to help drive organic traffic and business growth.” You’ll need a BA/BS in Computer Science or Engineering, four years of website development experience, another two years of direct SEO experience and a healthy sense of irony if you want to apply.
[Image Credit: shutterstock]
Via: Search Engine Land
Source: Google Careers
Google continues to make money thanks to mobile and YouTube
While Google has been enjoying consistent financial growth for quite some time, it was dinged the last two quarters for not living up to Wall Street expectations. But in today’s Q2 earnings announcement, the Mountain View firm has made significant strides in rectifying that reputation. It reported a revenue of $17.7 billion this past quarter, which is an 11 percent growth year over year and a 3 percent growth since Q1. This has beat Wall Street estimates handily, causing its stock to climb by 11 percent at closing. What’s contributing to this success? As CFO Ruth Porat puts it, it’s all thanks to mobile, with YouTube playing a star role.
Though Google won’t reveal specific numbers, Porat said that “the gap between mobile and desktop continues to narrow” when it comes to the money it makes from advertising. There’s apparently been a particularly strong surge in mobile search, which is a significant contributor to ad revenue. Chief Business Officer Omid Kordestani said on the earnings call that “more searches happen on mobile than computers in 10 countries.” It’s why the company is putting even more resources behind creating a better mobile experience. He says that around 30 percent of mobile searches are location-related — perhaps they want to know what’s around them or where’s the closest gas station. “When people search on mobile, they want immediacy and action,” he said.
It’s not just search either. Google has also invested in other key mobile experiences, especially in a world where people are less likely to head directly to google.com to search. Kordestani states that efforts like Google Photos, Now On Tap and Android Pay all factor in to making Google’s mobile presence more widespread. He also credited deep linking — where users are led to install new apps from links within other apps — for a boost in traffic. Indeed, Porat said that Google Play “continues to grow at an impressive clip” and is the “fastest growing mobile gaming platform.”
What’s particularly impressive is that YouTube ad revenue has also blossomed, particularly in mobile. The “Trueview” ad format — basically all those pre-roll ads you see before YouTube clips — has really grown of late. Porat said that YouTube has experienced an accelerated 16 percent growth rate and that “mobile watch time has more than doubled.” Cost per clicks have gone down, but that’s alright as those aforementioned Trueview ad hits have increased. A new feature of Trueview that automatically adds product information and pricing in video ads is cited for the growth.
Indeed, the number of advertisers running ads on YouTube has gone up by 40 percent and the average spend is up by 60 percent. Kordestani said that the average viewing time on YouTube is also more than 40 minutes and that more 18 to 49 year olds watch YouTube on mobile than any cable network. He said YouTube is great for content creators too, as the number of channels making six figures is up by 50 percent from this time last year.
As for Google’s other projects — Nest, Fiber and Google Life Sciences — those are now under “tighter governance” and are seen as more longer-term sources for revenue. Which basically means that they’re not quite making money hand over fist from those units just yet, but the potential is there.
[Image credit: Bloomberg via Getty Images]
Filed under: Google
Source: Google
Google reports $17.7 billion in revenue for Q2 2015, up 11% year over year

Google has just posted its financial reports for Q2 2015. The company saw tremendous growth in revenue, net income and paid advertisement clicks, which have all remained strong despite being faced with severe foreign currency fluctuations.
Google earned a total of $17.7 billion in revenue from the beginning of April to the end of June, an 11-percent increase year over year. Net income has seen an increase to $3.93 billion, up from the $3.35 billion the company earned last year at this time. Sites owned by Google generated $12.4 billion, up 13% year over year. Paid advertisement clicks have seen an 18-percent year over year increase, and paid clicks on Google’s websites saw a 30-percent year over year and 10-percent quarter over quarter increase.
The company says had foreign exchange rates remained constant from Q2 2014 to Q2 2015, Google’s revenues would have been $1.1 billion higher.
Moving on, the semi-vague ‘other revenues’ portion generated a total of $1.7 billion, which marks a 17-percent increase year over year. This section includes a number of highly-profitable areas such as Google Play revenue and the Nexus program, among others. It should be noted that Google’s other revenues have seen a 3-percent decline from Q1 2015, which should come to no surprise considering the most recent Nexus launch happened back in October.
Google’s operating costs totaled a massive $6.32 billion, up from $5.58 billion from the year prior. It should be noted that Google hired roughly 8,500 employees since this time last year, which contributes a lot to the increase in operating costs.
Huawei and Google: it’s more than just the Nexus

It looks like Google is smitten with a new Android partner. Chinese manufacturer Huawei can do no wrong right now. The feelings are definitely mutual, and a closer relationship could deliver major benefits for both companies. Not least because Huawei can help Google get into China, and Google can help Huawei get out.
Why else would Huawei and Google look to partner? Where is Huawei coming from? What is Google after? And what could it all mean for Android users?
Huawei aims high
We took a close look at the Chinese manufacturer at the start in the year in Huawei – Past, Present, and Future. The company has been growing steadily for the last few years. According to IDC, Huawei is now the fourth largest smartphone vendor in the world by market share, securing 5.2% of shipments in the first three months of 2015. It was third for a while, until rival Lenovo acquired Motorola.
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Huawei has done well in China and a number of other emerging markets around the world. It has also been doing increasingly well in Europe, but it has not yet cracked the lucrative U.S. market. It’s one thing to sell quality hardware at knock-down prices and generate a lot of sales. But selling premium devices with a huge markup is what most companies aspire to, and Huawei is no different.

The Huawei Watch was the biggest surprise of MWC – few expected anything to get excited about, much less the best-looking Android Wear smartwatch to date. Since then, we’ve been hearing persistent rumors about a Huawei Nexus smartphone. It’s pretty obvious that Huawei wants to secure a prime slice of that high-end market, but it needs a little marketing help.
A partnership with Google could provide design insight, marketing tips, and be interpreted as a general thumbs up for a company that many Western consumers have little knowledge of. Google could help to open doors for Huawei, but it won’t do so unless it stands to gain something.
Winning Google’s affections
If you look at the ebb and flow of Google’s partnerships on the Android scene, you can generally see the motivation behind them. HTC and Samsung produced smartphones capable of competing with the iPhone. LG and Asus offered lower prices without compromising quality.

It’s pretty easy to see what Google wants because it can often be reduced to – as many people as possible accessing the Internet through Google services or apps. Hardware for Google, whether it’s a smartphone, tablet, or laptop, is just a delivery device.
As the smartphone market has grown saturated, prices have dropped until they’re low enough to persuade every last holdout to snag a smartphone. Google’s Android platform is dominant everywhere, except in the largest and fastest growing market in the world.
Google’s relationship with China has been awkward for a while now and it’s falling behind just as the market is really taking off. Apple has been making a concerted effort to secure a decent market share in China and it’s paying off. Maybe Google is looking for a route in. According to IDC, Apple was the largest vendor in China for the first three months of the year (14.7%), with Xiaomi in second (13.7%), and Huawei in third (11.4%). Google already has a relationship with Lenovo (it came fifth with 8.3%).
Android boss Sundar Pichai talked publicly about Google’s ambition to return to China
Could they work out some kind of deal to include Google services on Huawei’s Chinese smartphones? Will Huawei wield its influence with the Chinese government to help hammer out some kind of a deal with Google? Maybe Huawei will help Google to gain market share for a Chinese Play Store. If Google does want to get into China, then partnering with Huawei makes a lot of sense. It’s also worth remembering, though, that Huawei is strong in lots of other markets and Google wants everyone it can get.
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Could a deal go deeper?
Huawei also has major credentials in the wireless networking industry, providing equipment for many major carriers across the globe. Even after the claims about Huawei equipment being suspect on political grounds in the US, the company is in a strong position. Gartner’s Magic Quadrant for LTE Network Infrastructure names Huawei as a leader, and points out that it has a broad portfolio that spans the globe.
It’s another potential attraction for Google. We’ve seen some interest in this with Google launching Project Fi. It makes some sense for Google to want to drive the Internet further, delivering better speeds and a better experience, or taking it to areas that have sub-standard service, or no service at all. After all, people can’t enjoy Google services without a decent connection.
If Google was looking to scale up a service like this, offering seamless transition between Wi-Fi and LTE, it could do a lot worse than partner with Huawei. It has the equipment, the expertise, and the patents that Google may need. It’s not going to happen in the short term, but in the future – who knows?
Balloons alone can’t make Internet ubiquitous, and Huawei can be potent ally for Google
What does it mean for now?
For right now, a closer relationship between Google and Huawei means that the Huawei Watch is likely to be the best Android Wear smartwatch so far. How meaningful that is will depend on how sold you are on the smartwatch trend, but don’t discount it until you see one up close – it’s a really nice device. If you want a premium competitor for the Apple Watch, this could be it.
The prospect of a Huawei Nexus may be more exciting for many Android fans because we’ll probably get great specs with decent pricing. Whether we’ll see a return to the kind of value LG’s Nexus 4 and 5 offered, we’ll just have to wait and see.
Whatever else Huawei may or may not be doing for Google is firmly behind the scenes, but those two forthcoming devices are reason enough for a closer relationship.
Google will finally add iPhone-like visual voicemail to Android
Android users on select networks will soon get native “visual voicemail,” a feature that iPhone users have enjoyed since forever. In case you’re wondering, that’s a way of checking and deleting voice mails via an app, rather than having to call a carrier number and go through them one by one. The feature was spied by Android Police on a support ticket for the upcoming Android M release and via Google+ user Danny Hollis. Hollis showed a screen cap of the new interface (below), and said it’s now implemented for T-Mobile in a preview build.
The only problem with the new feature is that it won’t work unless carriers support it, and for now, the only two that do are T-Mobile and Orange in France. Hollis also mentioned that “voicemail will not load on WiFi. Only on mobile data,” so you won’t get the service unless you have a cell signal. The support ticket revealed native voicemail-to-text transcriptions as well, but it’ll reportedly require carrier support, and none are doing so for now. That said, the app is still in a basic state, and features like transcription may be available when Android M arrives in the fall.

Filed under: Cellphones, Google
Via: Android Police
Source: Google (Android Preview)
Marshall’s ‘London’ is a smartphone for music lovers
For a long time, Marshall’s bread and butter was guitar amps. Then came headphones and Bluetooth speakers (via its partnership with Zound, makers of Urbanears) — a fairly fitting diversification. Today, the brand is moving on to phones, announcing the “London,” an Android (Lollipop) device for music lovers. We bet you weren’t expecting that? Us neither, to be honest. But it’s happening, and we’d be lying if we said we weren’t a little curios.
The Marshall London looks a lot like you might imagine it would, if you’ve ever set eyes on one of the company’s other products. the Flat, rectangular handset has a soft-touch faux-leather finish, with knurled gold color buttons. There are dual speakers on the front, along with two stereo jacks up top. All of which hint at the London’s music focus. More on that later.
What about the actual phone? Well, it’s a 4.7-inch (720p/IPS) device, with 16GB of internal storage (expandable via SD card), running on a Snapdragon 410 chip (1.4GHz, quad-core), 8- and 2-megapixel cameras and a Wolfson DSP. Some of that specification may seem a little modest by today’s flagship standards, but it’s fair to say Marshall’s not going after the typical flagship-phone buyer here. Marshall partnered with Finnish firm, Creoir, whose previous collaborations include Jolla and Nokia, to create the hardware to Marshall’s specification.

The London’s music focus is a mix of hardware and software. The dual headphone jacks let two people listen to music in stereo, and mean no more having to split a pair of earbuds. Neat enough, but the London also has a bespoke DJ app, and the dual outputs lets wannabe jocks cue and mix their tunes in headphones, while the current track plays through a speaker. Something that other phones cannot do (without crude workarounds).
If you’re into recording, rather than mixing, London’s dual microphones will scoop up your impromptu acapellas, and help your calls with active noise cancellation too. Again, Marshall has installed a custom app to help you along with your recordings. We hear there will be some app goodies for guitarists, too, but we’ve no details on specifics just yet.
Should you just want to consume, rather than create music, then the London’s got a few tricks in that department also. We saw a quick glimpse of an app that combines all your music sources (Spotify, music collection etc.) into one place, along with a global E.Q., which sounded impressively loud on the phone’s dual speakers. There’s also support for FLAC files, which will please audio fiends.
The question is, is all this enough to woo buyers? The London will cost $499/£399 when it’s finally available in August (21st). This makes it a tough choice when you compare it to other, higher spec phones at that price (and a world of third-party music apps to choose from). Believers, bands and beat-lovers can pre-order starting today.

Filed under: Cellphones, Mobile, Google
ICYMI: A haunting 3D heart, dino robot bellhop and more
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Today on In Case You Missed It: Japan’s come up with some cool tech in the past, but this week it reached a whole new boss level. A new hotel opened in Nagasaki, manned by talking robots– including a dinosaur robot. GE Healthcare showed off its new full-color 3D ultrasound machine. And Google’s new video series takes us for a walk with the Street View Trekker. Presumably the same kind of gear climbers commandeered to bring Street View to El Capitan.
Today’s bonus gave the video team a case of the awwws: A robot designed to play Peekaboo in the cutest possible way.
If you come across any interesting videos, we’d love to see them! Just tweet us with the #ICYMI hashtag @engadget or @mskerryd.
Filed under: Displays, Misc, GPS, Peripherals, Robots, Transportation, Internet, Google








