It's not every day you get the CEO of a $2 trillion dollar company to take a chunk of time out of his schedule to be interrogated! I learned a lot about Sundar's leadership philosophy and look forward to watching the long game play out.
Emily, I'm truly impressed with your interview skills. Your questions were well thought out, addressing key issues that most people are curious about. Your energetic demeanor made the interview inviting, and you managed to ask tough questions without coming across as confrontational-a remarkable balance. While some were disappointed by Mr. Sundar's somewhat vague responses, I understand the constraints he faced in answering. Hats off to you for handling the interview so adeptly!
This wasn't an interrogation. It was the same corporate BS we always get. You had him pinned for a moment on the lay-offs, but you immediately let it slide. That should've been an uncomfortable moment where he tried to steer away from the subject. That's your journalistic purpose, that's your integrity.
@@g0d182 i don't think so. there were some questions he literally didn't answer, he just added some comments about other stuff related to the question, but not the question itself
That's a great answer to why Google is lagging behind chatGPT... "we didn't exist when Internet was invented. We were not the first company to do search, we were not the first to build a browser"
Do you understand what the role/responsibility of a CEO entails? Funny how you think he should answer like a search engine rather than be conscious/cautious about his answers.
@@Power_to_the_people567 Why would a company let media know about their decisions openly and tell them about their moves? Have you ever been in a leadership role at a company or are you the CEO of UA-cam comment warrior?
@@adswar My personal life has nothing to do with anything I said. He was asked very simple and non controversial questions and he avoided giving direct answers. It is in the public’s interest to know what sort of decisions these CEOs are making and why. Because their product affect the every day life of everyone who has to deal with their product. Not only is it important for the public to know but it is also important for the employees that are involved in the company. CEOs must provide honest answers to uphold trust, ensure legal compliance, maintain investor confidence, set ethical standards, enhance decision-making, and secure long-term corporate success. It is about transparency, accountability, trust, and integrity. Are you against those standards? Also, leave my personal status out of it. It makes you lose credibility. Attempting to discredit my criticism based on wether I’m a CEO or not is nonsensical
Great presence of a CEO in a company of this level. The kind of person you would give responsibilities too. He is calm, intelligent, long-term perspective, is not carried away by ignorant twitter influencers and rookie-CEO's at competing companies bashing him. He is talking about 10-20 years horizons while everyone else is talking about the next release from RookieAI.
I agree, if a company like google released an aggressive strategy of its use of AI to the general public and it fails, the negative connotation will be hard to remove. With so many google services integrated with each other, its a difficult strategy to implement realistically with all their services on a global scale. Long term strategy is a much better solution, especially as new innovation comes out within the AI space. The real goal for a company like Google is to make money, and thats exactly what they are focused on by providing services that help users be more efficient in their lives. Open ended questions begets open ended responses. AI research has actually been around for a long time, its only with the release of ChatGPT that sparked the AI frenzy once again.
I think it's important to stick to stocks that are immune to economic policies. I'm looking at NVIDIA and other AI stocks that have the potential to power and transform future technologies. It seems AI is the trajectory most companies are taking, including even established FAANG companies
Well all i know is that you cannot go wrong taking profit at near high. No one ever went broke taking a ~20% profit. It's best if you consult with a fiduciary advisor in situations like this so you can make informed decisions.
My CFA JULIANNE IWERSEN NIEMANN' a renowned figure in her line of work. I recommend researching her credentials further... She has many years of experience and is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market..
Thank you for sharing this. I took the time to Google the individual you mentioned, and after reviewing her resume, it is evident that she is a seasoned professional. I have reached out to her and am eagerly awaiting her response.
@@GK-qc5rythey aren't war material either. He told you, Sergey is there to code! It was Eric Shmidt who took Google to where it is now, not any of these guys.
@@DS-fv4rx the reporter was just a small noise compared bigger picture of where google is headed and they are coming out as a SUPER GLOBAL POWER HOUSE and other companies better watchout! Great Job Sundar, Way to go!. You got this!
The nature of this interview doesn't allow a deep discussion. Once sundar finishes, she asks a different question and not a followback to the previous question. This makes the intervewee more prone to give shallow answers and move on. If this interview was done on a lex fridman podcast, the answers could have been more honest and direct. Like how mark and elon musk did it to some extent in front of fridman
Not sure any one noticed..he is getting too much conscious about being asked any difficult questions that he almost forgot and show that at he is CEO.. not sure why he is so uncomfortable around a UA-camr or may be a journalist..he shd have shown some class..we all understand it is not easy job form him but still it shd not show on the outside
Yep She doesn’t softball. Not that it helped… he dodged her on every question. If she was going to get real answers from him, she would have to get unpleasant.
You call those tough questions? Those are tough sounding questions that are really not asking anything important. For example, she asked "do you think you're fit to lead the company?" Sounds tough doesn't it? But just take a minute to think. What did you expect him to say? "No"? Are you really that naive? Do you really think that he can answer that question honestly either way? Every single question she asked was carefully designed to make them sound tough but really they really are just blanket statements phrased like a question. It's very obvious to me that the interviewer doesn't know anything about how tech works. If i were in her place, I'd have brought real examples of Google's products failing hard, which really isn't that difficult to do. Literally every single google product is now far worse than what they used to be. Google search is unreliable, google ai is unusable, google pixels aren't selling, overheat and notoriously unreliable, UA-cam removed dislikes and full of scam live streams. They keep killing incredible projects that have the potential to become massive if they can just push through the first few years. The list goes on and on and on. But what does she ask? ArE u FiT tO lEaD? WeRe BlAcK fOuNdInG fAtHeRs rEaLlY uNacCpTaBlE?
Such a bold interview never expected such a bold questions - we need a panel Sundar and Sathya just purely discussing tech and where they see users trending ( not competition)
just totally loved the way he avoided those mean questions, sundar you really did a brilliant job, as he is not in the position to take actions according to your personal thoughts take over your actions
I felt Sundar did alright in this interview. He has never been the chest beating type-A personality and his cultural background may be a factor in how his responses are structured. What I got is that Google may not be seen as the first to market LLM (like ChatGPT) but the company has always been about the long game. There were some questions where he probably couldn't say much more for legal or confidentiality reasons.
he probably does not have minimal ego. no one has and certainly not a CEO of such an important company. But I agree he seems quite healthy and not an overt sociopath narcissist
I agree. He demonstrated throughout the interview that he can handle tough questions….i just wonder was he given a variety of possible questions before the interview?
the modest approach of Sundar Pichai ist outstanding. And describing someone as a peace maker is probably one of the most important attributes for a CEO!
Can someone be so down to earth, polite and knowledgeable as Sundar Pichai.. Amusing to see how it's so easy to ask tough and Interrogative questions and feel the pride & being in control when someone on the other side does all the heavy lifting for you !!
Standard CEO replies. That is not a negative comment. I do not think any CEO could answer better. It is probably due to the public setting too high expectations of CEOs and what they can do. CEOs will always give a careful response so they do not get in trouble.
Except that each time he dodged a question, she offered no followups. Especially the ‘when AGI’ question, he sort of gave a blanket definition of AGI but didn’t say how quickly we are advancing towards AGI, even in terms of the research. (I can understand him not saying in terms of any Google AGI projects, which should remain ‘real soon now’ for competitive reasons.)
14:11 "Can you walk through campus without being stopped?" -> "it has definitely being nice to see people, I enjoy it a lot"... his answer didn't have to do anything with the question, and this is just one example.
The evolving topic of AI and quantum computing is so complex for a single individual to entirely grasp despite his/her/they title. Sundar is intelligent, humble and open to progress.
Fantastic job, Emily! Your interview skills are impressive - perfectly balancing warmth and empathy with challenging questions. Keep up the great work! 💫
Did anyone see the twinkle/humour in his eye at 11:31 ? Unsure if it’s because the way the interviewer froze asking the question or the fact that Google is working on breakthroughs beyond the LLMs.
Hey Emily, wonderful interview with Sundar! There are so many innovations happening at Google that we will benefit from as time goes by. Google will make sure to keep AI at the forefront of their endeavors.🎉😊😊
It surprises me when I see interviews with CEOs of all these large companies because they have a desire to go out and dazzle with the technology of the moment, to be the gurus who control everything, to be the typical successful nerd, to have ambiguous answers and full of uncertainty. . For example in this case when they are asked the objective they have with AI. And of course, doing business means working with capital and seeking profitability, but it truly amazes me every time how far they seek to empathize when solutions are offered for all of us who are PEOPLE and they completely forget, I don't even see it in the speeches by Sam Altman, Satya Nadella and Sunday Pichai among others.
What a fantastic interview! The questions were well thought out and covered everything that I could think of, and the responses were such that they compelled thought from the listener. Always a pleasure to hear wise Q&As like this one. Thanks!
You think so ? Somebody who is CEO of 2 trillion dollar company wouldn’t have the means and ways to know the questions in advance ….😅😅😅😅…. Also these were the easiest questions and asked … no follow up , no pushing against the wall , nothing
I love how AI is being shoved down our throats, whether it is a useful technology or not, gotta keep the stock prices high now that all other hype has fizzled out.
Google has become a joke at this point. If it weren't for OpenAI, Google would be operating business as usual, with literally no innovation from this company in years.
They are doing... Doesn't mean all innovations succeed large scale... We tend to think innovations and success should be rolled out in some frequency, like a factory.... When you are alone you can spend time on your dreams, it's success or failure don't affect, you shall keep doing as long as you quit. Whereas, once you are representing large group of people, business interests and govts, thousands of ideas coming to desk, won't know which will succeed, have to show profit to rating agencies, investors... You won't have time to work on your dreams.
@@Rizlog Not answering something is a wise decision. Just like magician doesn't reveal a trick or chef doesn't reveal secret ingredients. Something has to be preserved for himself to be the best. Otherwise, no scientists reveal secret information about nuclear bombs.
Most of the audience is missing the bigger point. The role of the CEO is to make any interview less explosive and he made it effortless. Love u pichai 🔥🤌
Great interview, tech giants have their annual conferences soon and the main difference with previous years is that slowly they’re starting to present pieces of it ahead of time, probably to move the focus onto other topics. Only time will tell, I’m excited for the future ahead
"Whether or not Google executives see it this way, the employees who constantly adjust the search giant's algorithms are manipulating people every minute of every day." ~Elon Musk
Google is the most Talent-rich Compute-rich Capital-rich Data-rich Distribution-rich company in the world. How Google missed the boat? But yes they should expand more aggressively in the application part of ai (robotics, biotech, transport, energy, science)
I was always a big fan of this format walk and talk and I can definitely see why it’s so much easier to look behind the scenes and understand the whole picture. If you see more than just an interview room keep going that form and @emilychangtv I really appreciate and love to follow your videos and different styles. Looking forward to interview you one day in my own podcast 🙌
It's not every day you get the CEO of a $2 trillion dollar company to take a chunk of time out of his schedule to be interrogated! I learned a lot about Sundar's leadership philosophy and look forward to watching the long game play out.
You did a great job! (as always) He dodged well though
Emily, I'm truly impressed with your interview skills. Your questions were well thought out, addressing key issues that most people are curious about. Your energetic demeanor made the interview inviting, and you managed to ask tough questions without coming across as confrontational-a remarkable balance. While some were disappointed by Mr. Sundar's somewhat vague responses, I understand the constraints he faced in answering. Hats off to you for handling the interview so adeptly!
It was a PR stunt
Tough questions asked respectfully!
This wasn't an interrogation. It was the same corporate BS we always get. You had him pinned for a moment on the lay-offs, but you immediately let it slide. That should've been an uncomfortable moment where he tried to steer away from the subject. That's your journalistic purpose, that's your integrity.
The art of saying nothing by saying something
LOL I noticed that too, like bro c'mon answer the question properly, stop running away
@@henriquegduarte I think in a lot of the cases, he's basically saying the question is malformed
@@g0d182 i don't think so. there were some questions he literally didn't answer, he just added some comments about other stuff related to the question, but not the question itself
我们的q❤❤❤❤❤Aaa,我们的生活也是
Sundar is an excellent template speaker and well trained.
This interview exactly shows why being a CEO is difficult. I think both the reporter and sunder have nailed their roles to perfection.
sunder, come on your real account man! 🤣🤣
Very cool comment
Her questions are on point: his answer is cautious
Just fluffy general AI questions.
His answers were 110% reviewed by legal and PR
Hmm I guess u run a bigger company than his 🤔
He will never tell you the direction of the company, investors are listening.
One of major things investors want to be clear on is where the company is headed and I'm pretty sure they have it ultra clear
That's a great answer to why Google is lagging behind chatGPT... "we didn't exist when Internet was invented. We were not the first company to do search, we were not the first to build a browser"
Yea that's true
What an incredible interviewer Emily is!! Tough questions upfront & Sundar was smart enough to dodge most of them!
The irony of the CEO of a company whose biggest product is giving accurate answers dodging every meaningful question.
Do you understand what the role/responsibility of a CEO entails? Funny how you think he should answer like a search engine rather than be conscious/cautious about his answers.
BB is not known for harsh questions
@@adswarSo the CEO should not know the answers of questions pertaining the decision making of his own company?
@@Power_to_the_people567 Why would a company let media know about their decisions openly and tell them about their moves? Have you ever been in a leadership role at a company or are you the CEO of UA-cam comment warrior?
@@adswar My personal life has nothing to do with anything I said.
He was asked very simple and non controversial questions and he avoided giving direct answers.
It is in the public’s interest to know what sort of decisions these CEOs are making and why. Because their product affect the every day life of everyone who has to deal with their product. Not only is it important for the public to know but it is also important for the employees that are involved in the company.
CEOs must provide honest answers to uphold trust, ensure legal compliance, maintain investor confidence, set ethical standards, enhance decision-making, and secure long-term corporate success.
It is about transparency, accountability, trust, and integrity. Are you against those standards?
Also, leave my personal status out of it. It makes you lose credibility. Attempting to discredit my criticism based on wether I’m a CEO or not is nonsensical
This interview featured a truly exceptional line of questioning…
The majority of which, were left unanswered.
Looked just like ai for more than half of it
Your journalism standards are pretty low.
Great presence of a CEO in a company of this level. The kind of person you would give responsibilities too. He is calm, intelligent, long-term perspective, is not carried away by ignorant twitter influencers and rookie-CEO's at competing companies bashing him. He is talking about 10-20 years horizons while everyone else is talking about the next release from RookieAI.
I agree, if a company like google released an aggressive strategy of its use of AI to the general public and it fails, the negative connotation will be hard to remove. With so many google services integrated with each other, its a difficult strategy to implement realistically with all their services on a global scale. Long term strategy is a much better solution, especially as new innovation comes out within the AI space.
The real goal for a company like Google is to make money, and thats exactly what they are focused on by providing services that help users be more efficient in their lives. Open ended questions begets open ended responses. AI research has actually been around for a long time, its only with the release of ChatGPT that sparked the AI frenzy once again.
Your point is well made
LOL!!!!!!
2:53 - that cricket reference from Emily deserved an acknowledgement from the PitchAI
Softball lookin as questions....both were meh. She just smiles and gives him an easy script
I think it's important to stick to stocks that are immune to economic policies. I'm looking at NVIDIA and other AI stocks that have the potential to power and transform future technologies. It seems AI is the trajectory most companies are taking, including even established FAANG companies
Well all i know is that you cannot go wrong taking profit at near high. No one ever went broke taking a ~20% profit. It's best if you consult with a fiduciary advisor in situations like this so you can make informed decisions.
That's a great tip. I'm setting out 50k to invest in the market this year. Any particularly useful tips you could offer to me?
My CFA JULIANNE IWERSEN NIEMANN' a renowned figure in her line of work. I recommend researching her credentials further... She has many years of experience and is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market..
Thank you for sharing this. I took the time to Google the individual you mentioned, and after reviewing her resume, it is evident that she is a seasoned professional. I have reached out to her and am eagerly awaiting her response.
Sundar is a peace time CEO. Google is now at war unfortunately.
Might be why Sergey and Larry are back
@@GK-qc5rythey aren't war material either. He told you, Sergey is there to code! It was Eric Shmidt who took Google to where it is now, not any of these guys.
@@midnight-matches true
Ya we need someone like Churchill at Google 😅
@@midnight-matches yeah exactly they are literally train wrecks if history tells us anything
''She is more difficult than any ai to deal with'' He said such in relief😂
It takes skill to calmly ask someone that powerful questions like those to their face
@@DS-fv4rx the reporter was just a small noise compared bigger picture of where google is headed and they are coming out as a SUPER GLOBAL POWER HOUSE and other companies better watchout! Great Job Sundar, Way to go!. You got this!
My goodnesss😂
😢e😅😊😊😅😅😊😊😊😅😅😅e😅e😅w😅😅😊😊😅😊 2:35 i😊🎉😊
This is why this man is the CEO of Google. Calm composed and focused on what he's up to.
Speak less, do more. That's the mentality of Genius Sundar Pichai.
That's why I'm a huge fan of him
This hollow 20 mins of my life will never come back- Emily tried her best with the questions tho 👏
The woman asked brilliant questions.
Sundar sucks. You’re just left with more questions then answers after hearing him speak
The nature of this interview doesn't allow a deep discussion. Once sundar finishes, she asks a different question and not a followback to the previous question. This makes the intervewee more prone to give shallow answers and move on. If this interview was done on a lex fridman podcast, the answers could have been more honest and direct. Like how mark and elon musk did it to some extent in front of fridman
PichAI from ChennAI leading the revolution in GenAI.
Thu
😂😂😂
👏👏👏
actual original creative joke on youtube , wow!
Pichai in Tamil means “Beg”
The art of answering questions is mind blowing
What ?
You didn't state that right
The sad truth is India produces brilliant minds to serve foreign countries only..
you grew up in chennai in india..
google Ceo - Yes
Proud to be an indian ❤❤
as an indian i would be proud if we built our own companies than being ceo's of foreign companies.
Vanthutanunga😂
Now let’s do this with Tim Cook.
Hy
There’s a similar interview with Tim Cook done by (oddly enough) Dua Lipa. Maybe give that a listen.
@@brittonspeciale9075 yeah I saw that one. It was very cringe.
Haha that would be a bloodbath 😂
yea with a fox tail and use the pony checkpoint merge
Sundar didnt even answer 1 question properly.
I think in a lot of the cases, he's basically saying the question is malformed
He answered them exactly the way he wanted to. If he had answered them in the exact manner you approved of, it would have been “proper” then?
Coz he’s put in too many chips in Google
Just like Gemini
Not sure any one noticed..he is getting too much conscious about being asked any difficult questions that he almost forgot and show that at he is CEO.. not sure why he is so uncomfortable around a UA-camr or may be a journalist..he shd have shown some class..we all understand it is not easy job form him but still it shd not show on the outside
Wow, she asked tough questions is this Bloomberg?
It’s Emily. She’s credible
Yep
She doesn’t softball. Not that it helped… he dodged her on every question. If she was going to get real answers from him, she would have to get unpleasant.
You call those tough questions? Those are tough sounding questions that are really not asking anything important.
For example, she asked "do you think you're fit to lead the company?" Sounds tough doesn't it? But just take a minute to think. What did you expect him to say? "No"? Are you really that naive? Do you really think that he can answer that question honestly either way? Every single question she asked was carefully designed to make them sound tough but really they really are just blanket statements phrased like a question. It's very obvious to me that the interviewer doesn't know anything about how tech works.
If i were in her place, I'd have brought real examples of Google's products failing hard, which really isn't that difficult to do. Literally every single google product is now far worse than what they used to be. Google search is unreliable, google ai is unusable, google pixels aren't selling, overheat and notoriously unreliable, UA-cam removed dislikes and full of scam live streams. They keep killing incredible projects that have the potential to become massive if they can just push through the first few years. The list goes on and on and on. But what does she ask? ArE u FiT tO lEaD? WeRe BlAcK fOuNdInG fAtHeRs rEaLlY uNacCpTaBlE?
Im equally impressed with the interviewer
She asks sharp question and right on the point. Clever woman.
There is something he’s doing right. Earnings were ridiculous. So whatever he’s doing, and I don’t even need to know. Keep doing exactly that.
Google Cloud and Maps are the teal stars of the Alphabet portfolio
In 10 years he became the CEO of the biggest tech giant, this shows his working skills and developing new technology and innovation
this shows his skills usually found in politicians, diplomats with no morality and hypocrites.
@@falak300 Womp womp bullah, womping at others' success is all you bullahs can ever do 🤣🔥
She asked the correct questions that we all wanted to hear. He however dodged them brilliantly lol
This is why I don't like politicians
Does anyone like politicians apart from politicians?
Faxx💀
Such a bold interview never expected such a bold questions - we need a panel Sundar and Sathya just purely discussing tech and where they see users trending ( not competition)
what a bold interview? if he is playing wrong answers only game🤣🤣🤣🤣
Some questions asked by Emily were so intense and answering them peacefully was not so easy
This it the best interview ive seen and he is explaining why hes been the ceo for 20 years 🙌🏿
Nope he has been ceo since 2016
just totally loved the way he avoided those mean questions, sundar you really did a brilliant job, as he is not in the position to take actions according to your personal thoughts take over your actions
I felt Sundar did alright in this interview. He has never been the chest beating type-A personality and his cultural background may be a factor in how his responses are structured. What I got is that Google may not be seen as the first to market LLM (like ChatGPT) but the company has always been about the long game. There were some questions where he probably couldn't say much more for legal or confidentiality reasons.
The quote I found most insightful here is - "the biggest threat is not executing well." 🔥
The interviewer asked the CEO directly without any hesitation
And he slowly and smoothly skipped all😌
What a level-headed, rational, minimal ego CEO. Impressed.
he probably does not have minimal ego. no one has and certainly not a CEO of such an important company. But I agree he seems quite healthy and not an overt sociopath narcissist
I agree. He demonstrated throughout the interview that he can handle tough questions….i just wonder was he given a variety of possible questions before the interview?
As soon as the interview was over, he told his assistant, "Get rid of that dinosaur. Oh, and fire yourself."
😂😂
True
😂
The google colored dinosaur no less. Who approved that?!
Vadivelucomady
the modest approach of Sundar Pichai ist outstanding. And describing someone as a peace maker is probably one of the most important attributes for a CEO!
very accurate your comment, nobody knows the impact of the words than this man choose to say. For me was an great interview and correct answers.
People complaining he didn't answer questions, he did. He just didn't say what you wanted to hear
💯
Ceo was very polite on his answers ❤
Can someone be so down to earth, polite and knowledgeable as Sundar Pichai.. Amusing to see how it's so easy to ask tough and Interrogative questions and feel the pride & being in control when someone on the other side does all the heavy lifting for you !!
Avoiding Directly Answering the questions as always
Standard CEO replies. That is not a negative comment. I do not think any CEO could answer better. It is probably due to the public setting too high expectations of CEOs and what they can do. CEOs will always give a careful response so they do not get in trouble.
"I got 99 questions but an answer to none"
It is impressive how she does a strong question. In a lot of cases, he was nervous to explain correctly. Congrats to the interviewer.
Emily defines tech-journalism!
on point -- '*sees dinosaur statue* .... "how much do you worry about becoming a dinosaur"?
all the old big tech companies are basically dinosaurs but they have the currency they can use to buy the innovation.
the fact you pointed out and your clear understanding this tells that you use technology
Emily Chang shows no mercy, i love it!!
Except that each time he dodged a question, she offered no followups. Especially the ‘when AGI’ question, he sort of gave a blanket definition of AGI but didn’t say how quickly we are advancing towards AGI, even in terms of the research. (I can understand him not saying in terms of any Google AGI projects, which should remain ‘real soon now’ for competitive reasons.)
This interviewer thought she could get him, but the guy is way smarter, dodging every question. Brilliant interview.
Nice Having Sundar the CEO of Google clarify on some issues.
Asking "tough questions" but just accepting any response. No challenge.
He is too cautious to express himself, how sharply he's dodging 😅
14:11 "Can you walk through campus without being stopped?" -> "it has definitely being nice to see people, I enjoy it a lot"...
his answer didn't have to do anything with the question, and this is just one example.
It sounded like an AI response 😄
Answer translated : No I will get stopped a lot.
Answer was: No. Also, there's a cut.
I think he dont understand English
More than that, it shows he never gets out. That's a concern.
Emily's interviews are polished. She gives a fair interview, but asks the pointed questions well
The evolving topic of AI and quantum computing is so complex for a single individual to entirely grasp despite his/her/they title. Sundar is intelligent, humble and open to progress.
Sundar is an AI - generated CEO …😂😂
exactly 😂
Pichai is just Pitching AI
LOL u got me
Felt exactly like listening to an AI, i.e. he said a lot of words, but it was almost entirely hollow.
no cuz da i was thinking the same thing
Fantastic job, Emily! Your interview skills are impressive - perfectly balancing warmth and empathy with challenging questions. Keep up the great work! 💫
Gosh…these are really tough tough questions for sundar. But I just didn’t get the answer
Because she asked the right questions and he dodged every one of them like a baseball.
oh come on this was just a softball interview. this wasn't set up to be a hard-hitting interview it was a friendlier conversation
I enjoyed this interview as a founder of an AI-powered platform for experiences and events.
When CEO took 24 minutes to answer meaningless questions, you know something seriously wrong!
Why are his normal conversations beating the highest level diplomats🤧
Interview over. CEO to staff: Remove these dinosaurs now!
its really not easy being a ceo of a company like goggle.. and this lady never ceased to throw hard hitting question one after another
Those are the questions we want to know, and he didn't answer them honestly
Impressed with the questions.
Excellent interviewer! She pulled no punches!
Very proud.. Both Sunder and Satya nadendla are INDIANS 🫡
No, They are Americans
Did anyone see the twinkle/humour in his eye at 11:31 ? Unsure if it’s because the way the interviewer froze asking the question or the fact that Google is working on breakthroughs beyond the LLMs.
well, I think he meant the quantum computing development. Please check Google Quantum AI.
What a wonderful interview. Emily asking the right questions.
Brilliant interview! Learnt a lot
PichAI : A diplomat who is a tech CEO
He did amazing! Knows the game, google owns the data and compute. New culture, new rise! Opportunity ahead as he says! His chips are on google .
Meh, he is a vanilla ceo
Hey Emily, wonderful interview with Sundar! There are so many innovations happening at Google that we will benefit from as time goes by. Google will make sure to keep AI at the forefront of their endeavors.🎉😊😊
This comment written by AI
This felt like, "we getting knocked down, we need to be up there. Just say anything...".
Such crisp interview , quizzed , transactional play yet so amicable and comfortable conversation
It surprises me when I see interviews with CEOs of all these large companies because they have a desire to go out and dazzle with the technology of the moment, to be the gurus who control everything, to be the typical successful nerd, to have ambiguous answers and full of uncertainty. . For example in this case when they are asked the objective they have with AI. And of course, doing business means working with capital and seeking profitability, but it truly amazes me every time how far they seek to empathize when solutions are offered for all of us who are PEOPLE and they completely forget, I don't even see it in the speeches by Sam Altman, Satya Nadella and Sunday Pichai among others.
What a fantastic interview! The questions were well thought out and covered everything that I could think of, and the responses were such that they compelled thought from the listener. Always a pleasure to hear wise Q&As like this one. Thanks!
"Everything is happening everywhere all at once" ........ is that reference on purpose or am i the only one to hear that?????😅
you are the only one
It's a common phrase
I think Sundar didn't expect that kind of hard question haha 😅
Sundar never answered the questions so for him it didn't matter what he was asked.
You think so ? Somebody who is CEO of 2 trillion dollar company wouldn’t have the means and ways to know the questions in advance ….😅😅😅😅…. Also these were the easiest questions and asked … no follow up , no pushing against the wall , nothing
Such a terrific interview
they’re biggest fumble was not purchasing open ai
I love how AI is being shoved down our throats, whether it is a useful technology or not, gotta keep the stock prices high now that all other hype has fizzled out.
I swear now consultant firms are using AI for practice 😂, like do we need AI for everything
It's not a hype . People are using AI for coding and some general knowledge already . Search engines like google are falling behind.
Google has become a joke at this point. If it weren't for OpenAI, Google would be operating business as usual, with literally no innovation from this company in years.
They are doing... Doesn't mean all innovations succeed large scale... We tend to think innovations and success should be rolled out in some frequency, like a factory.... When you are alone you can spend time on your dreams, it's success or failure don't affect, you shall keep doing as long as you quit. Whereas, once you are representing large group of people, business interests and govts, thousands of ideas coming to desk, won't know which will succeed, have to show profit to rating agencies, investors... You won't have time to work on your dreams.
Sundar successfully saved his job as CEO after this interview.
He's well deserved CEO. That's why Google is so advanced.
@@RivanJD no doubt that's why he is CEO. I just commented that he was so cautious to answer many questions.
@@Rizlog
Not answering something is a wise decision. Just like magician doesn't reveal a trick or chef doesn't reveal secret ingredients. Something has to be preserved for himself to be the best. Otherwise, no scientists reveal secret information about nuclear bombs.
@@Rizlog
No scientists reveal secret data about nuclear weapons. Right?? Just like that some secrecy has to be preserved.
@@RivanJDhe's just a vanilla ceo. Who jst want to increase the company valuation and make the investors happy.
Most of the audience is missing the bigger point. The role of the CEO is to make any interview less explosive and he made it effortless. Love u pichai 🔥🤌
Beautiful interview
Great interview, tech giants have their annual conferences soon and the main difference with previous years is that slowly they’re starting to present pieces of it ahead of time, probably to move the focus onto other topics. Only time will tell, I’m excited for the future ahead
"Whether or not Google executives see it this way, the employees who constantly adjust the search giant's algorithms are manipulating people every minute of every day." ~Elon Musk
This feels less like an interview and more of an interrogation! But liked this.
im really impresed about the questions that emily made. congrats! great interview
Well done! This video was both informative and engaging. Keep up the great work.
Google is the most
Talent-rich
Compute-rich
Capital-rich
Data-rich
Distribution-rich
company in the world.
How Google missed the boat?
But yes they should expand more aggressively in the application part of ai (robotics, biotech, transport, energy, science)
is it possible to have the uncut version of this interview? it's very interesting
shaky cam is making me feel sea sick
@EmilyChang is becoming one of my favorite UA-camr!
All CEO's of Major AI Companies. All CEO's Fighting in the competition All CEO's of Google, MS, IBM 😍 All the best 😍
I was always a big fan of this format walk and talk and I can definitely see why it’s so much easier to look behind the scenes and understand the whole picture. If you see more than just an interview room keep going that form and @emilychangtv I really appreciate and love to follow your videos and different styles. Looking forward to interview you one day in my own podcast 🙌
Where are those people who were saying "Sunder is going to get fired" few months ago😂
A big journey from Madurai to Silicon Valley...lots of respect Sundar anna from Kolkata ❤️🙏🇮🇳
From India
Great interview
I like the way Pichai runs Google (overall), UA-cam, the way he can connect with Modi and the way he helps fund Firefox.