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TL;DR 115 — June 14th, 2018

Android P

Android P Beta 2 is now available. This update includes the final Android P APIs, the latest system images, and updated developer tools to help you get ready for the consumer release coming later in the summer. For more details on machine learning, simplicity, polish, and security in this release; head on over to the post.

Project Capillary

We advise developers to use keys generated on the user device to encrypt push messages end-to-end. But implementing such end-to-end encryption has historically required significant technical knowledge and effort. Which is why we’re excited to announce the Capillary open source library to greatly simplify the implementation of end-to-end encryption for push messages between developer servers and users’ Android devices. For more details and to get started, take a look at the pos.

Chrome 68 Beta

Chrome 68 Beta is now available and includes a new add to home screen behavior for progressive web apps, the Payment Handler API, the Page Lifecycle API, and more. Take a look at the post for all the details including screenshots and code.

Google Cloud Platform Console account

We recently announced changes including our new simplified Maps, Routes, and Places products as well as a new pricing plan to make our products easier to use and more scalable as you grow. Make sure to visit the post for the the three steps you need to take prior to June 11.

Sole-tenant nodes for Google Compute Engine

Sole-tenant nodes are now available on Google Compute Engine in beta. Sole-tenant nodes are physical Compute Engine servers designed for your dedicated use. Normally, VM instances run on physical hosts that may be shared by many customers. With sole-tenant nodes, you have the host all to yourself. Check out the post to get started.

Google at NAACL

Last week, New Orleans hosted the North American Association of Computational Linguistics conference, which is a venue for the latest research on computational approaches to understanding natural language. We presented our research on a diverse set of topics, including dialog, summarization, machine translation, and linguistic analysis. Take a look at the post for links to the papers and more.

Please remember to Like, Subscribe, and Share. I’m Amrit Sanjeev for The Developer show. Thanks for watching and we’ll see you next week!

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