Author Archives: Johnny Luu

VidCon 2018: Helping creators earn more money and build stronger communities

I just stepped off the stage at VidCon, a conference created from scratch by Hank and John Green in 2010 that brings together fans, creators, and industry leaders to celebrate the power of online video. I talked about how over the last 13 years, YouTube has grown from an ambitious idea into a worldwide movement built on free expression and the power of openness.
With more than 1.9 billion logged-in users who come to YouTube every month and localized versions stretching across 90 countries and 80 languages, we’re opening up the world to anyone with a cell phone and an internet connection.
YouTube is a vibrant community where everyone has a voice. Every day, creators use their voice to entertain, spur action and bring about positive change. That’s why over the last year we’ve doubled down on building the products and tools that the creator community needs. Not only to thrive on YouTube, but to continue to develop the video platform of the future.
The next big steps for creator monetization 
YouTube lets creators connect with their community and gives them the opportunity to earn money while doing what they love. Thanks to advertisers, creators around the world have been able to build businesses, creating an entirely new global economy that’s seen incredible growth. The number of creators earning five figures a year is up by 35 percent and the number of creators earning six figures is up by 40 percent. As in previous years, the vast majority of the revenue is coming from our advertising partners. We’ll continue investing here, but we also want to think beyond ads. Creators should have as many ways and opportunities to make money as possible.
We’ve been working on new tools that not only help creators better engage with their fans, they also enable them to make money while doing it. This is an idea that really began last year with Super Chat, a product that allows fans to purchase messages that stand out within a live chat. We’ve seen tremendous success with Super Chat and have since expanded to Ticketing, Merchandise, Channel Memberships and more. We’re also bringing creators and brands together to form unique marketing partnerships via FameBit.
Channel Memberships 
With Channel Memberships, viewers pay a monthly recurring fee of US$4.99 to get unique badges, new emoji, Members-only posts in the Community tab, and access to unique custom perks offered by creators, such as exclusive livestreams, extra videos, or shout-outs. Channel Memberships have already been available for a select group of creators on YouTube as Sponsorships. We’ve seen a lot of creators find success with this new business model. So, we’ll soon be expanding this to eligible channels with more than 100,000 subscribers on YouTube under the new name Channel Memberships. We hope to bring it to even more creators in the coming months.
Creators who have already been experimenting with this feature on YouTube have seen encouraging results. Since launching in January, comedy creator Mike Falzone more than tripled his YouTube revenue. And traveling duo Simon and Martina have built a closer-knit community and revamped a miniseries exclusively for their members, in more than 30 countries from Finland to the Philippines.

Merchandise 
Merchandise has been a part of many creators’ businesses for a long time. We want to make it easier for more creators to sell merch directly from their channel. So we’ve built a product that allows them to do just that. From shirts with a logo to phone cases with a creator’s face, we’ve joined forces with Teespring so creators can choose from over 20 merchandise items to customize and sell via a shelf on their channel. This will be available to all eligible U.S.-based channels with over 10,000 subscribers starting today, and we plan to bring even more merchandising partners and creators in soon.
Just take a look at Joshua Slice’s merchandise shelf. The creator of Lucas the Spider recently turned his hero character into a plushie selling over 60,000 furry friends and generating over $1 million in profit in just 18 days, according to Teespring.

Introducing Premieres 
The engagement between fans and creators is at the heart of YouTube. We’re working on new ways to help creators strengthen those unique bonds. Livestreams have brought the YouTube community together during the biggest music, science, and gaming events. We’ve also built a Community Tab that allows creators to move beyond just video to build even deeper connections with fans through GIFs, pics, polls, and text. And we’ve started experimenting with our take on Stories, but designed specifically for YouTube creators—coming to all eligible creators with more than 10,000 subscribers later this year.
Today, we’re introducing a new way for creators to upload content to YouTube called Premieres. With Premieres, creators will be able to debut pre-recorded videos as a live moment. When creators choose to release a Premiere, we’ll automatically create a public landing page to build anticipation and hype up new content. When all fans show up to watch the premiere, they’ll be able to chat with each other (and with the creator!) in real time via live chat. It’s as if a creator’s entire community is in one theater together watching their latest upload.

Premieres also unlocks new revenue streams. For the first time, creators can use Super Chat on traditional YouTube uploads and take advantage of Channel Memberships perks that were previously only available on Live videos.
Premieres are starting to roll out to creators today and will be available broadly soon. If you want to experience one for yourself, check out some upcoming premieres from creators such as Leroy Sanchez, JacksFilms, Jackson Bird, and Ari Fitz, with more Premieres coming from Corridor Digital and Inanna Sarkis soon.
YouTube creators are the heartbeat of our platform. That’s why we’re committed to building products that empower and support the creator community. We hope these tools help creators build a stronger community and earn more money while doing it, because when they succeed, the entire YouTube community thrives.

YouTube Music and YouTube Premium Launch in New Zealand and 16 Other Countries: It’s All Here

The wait is over! Starting today, YouTube Music is available to everyone in New Zealand, Australia, the U.S, Mexico and South Korea* in addition to 12 new countries including Austria, Canada, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Norway, Russia, Spain, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. Now fans around the world can find more of the music they love and effortlessly discover new favourites.
YouTube Music is a new music streaming service built on top of all the music on YouTube that you can’t find anywhere else - personalised and all simply organised in one new app and web player.
Here’s how it all comes together:

  1. It’s ALL here. Not just music videos, but official albums, singles, remixes, live performances, covers and hard-to-find music you can only get on YouTube.
  2. Recommendations built for you. A home screen that dynamically adapts to provide recommendations based on the artists and songs you’ve played before, where you are and what you’re doing. Chilling at the beach with friends? Need some motivation? The right music is right here, built just for you.
  3. Thousands of playlists across any genre, mood or activity. Try The Happiest Pop for brighter tunes on a cloudy day, the Pop Hotlist for the biggest hits around the world or Distrito Latino for Latin pop hits of the moment.
  4. Smart search so we’ll find the song, even if you can’t remember what it’s called. “That space-themed Spice Girls song in the desert.” Here you go. You can also search by lyrics (even if they’re wrong). It’s “Hold me closer, Tony Danza”, right?
  5. The hottest videos. We’ll keep you on top of what’s hot! The hottest videos in the world right now are right there, on their own dedicated Hotlist screen. Today in New Zealand, it features “APES**T” by THE CARTERS, while in the U.S., it’s “Nervous” by Shawn Mendes, in the U.K., it’s “Drippy” by IAMDDB, and in France, it’s “Fais moi la passe” by JUL.
  6. Ad-free listening, downloads and more. Get YouTube Music Premium to listen ad-free, in the background and on-the-go with downloads. Plus, your Offline Mixtape automatically downloads songs you love just in case you forgot to. For a limited time, get three months free of YouTube Music Premium, ($12.99 per month after, $19.99 per month for a Family Plan)*.

YouTube Premium also launches today
Starting today, YouTube Premium (formerly YouTube Red) will be available in 17 countries, providing members with the benefits of Music Premium, plus ad-free, background, and downloads across all of YouTube. YouTube Premium members also get access to the full slate of YouTube Originals shows and movies including the hit series Cobra Kai, Impulse, F2 Finding Football and The Sidemen Show. For a limited time, get three months free of YouTube Premium here, ($15.99 per month after, $23.99 per month for a Family Plan)*.
Current YouTube Red and Google Play Music members (including family plans) in New Zealand, Australia, the U.S., and Mexico will automatically receive access to YouTube Premium at their current price. Google Play Music subscribers in all other countries will automatically receive access to YouTube Music Premium at their current price as it becomes available there. Nothing is changing with Google Play Music - you'll still be able to access all of your purchased music, uploads and playlists in Google Play Music just like always.
Try YouTube Music and YouTube Premium
Get the new YouTube Music from the Play Store and App Store today or check out the brand new web player at music.youtube.com. You can sign up for YouTube Premium at youtube.com/premium.
*YouTube Music Premium is $12.99 per month and YouTube Premium is $15.99 per month for individual memberships in New Zealand. Pricing and Family Plan availability varies by country. Only first-time YouTube Premium, YouTube Music Premium, YouTube Red and Google Play subscribers are eligible for free trials. South Korea will only offer YouTube Premium at the current price of YouTube Red.

YouTube Music and YouTube Premium Launch in Australia and 16 Other Countries: It’s All Here

The wait is over! Starting today, YouTube Music is available to everyone in Australia, New Zealand, the U.S, Mexico and South Korea* in addition to 12 new countries including Austria, Canada, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Norway, Russia, Spain, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. Now fans around the world can find more of the music they love and effortlessly discover new favourites.
YouTube Music is a new music streaming service built on top of all the music on YouTube that you can’t find anywhere else - personalised and all simply organised in one new app and web player. 
Here’s how it all comes together:
  1. It’s ALL here. Not just music videos, but official albums, singles, remixes, live performances, covers and hard-to-find music you can only get on YouTube. 
  2. Recommendations built for you. A home screen that dynamically adapts to provide recommendations based on the artists and songs you’ve played before, where you are and what you’re doing. Chilling at the beach with friends? Need some motivation? The right music is right here, built just for you. 
  3. Thousands of playlists across any genre, mood or activity. Try “The Happiest Pop” for brighter tunes on a cloudy day, The Pop Hotlist for the biggest hits around the world or Independent Women of Australia for the best tunes from the finest female-centric alternative artists Down Under. 
  4. Smart search so we’ll find the song, even if you can’t remember what it’s called. “That space-themed Spice Girls song in the desert.” Here you go. You can also search by lyrics (even if they’re wrong). It’s “Hold me closer, Tony Danza”, right? 
  5. The hottest videos. We’ll keep you on top of what’s hot! The hottest videos in the world right now are right there, on their own dedicated Hotlist screen. Today in Australia, it features “I’m Upset” by Drake, while in the U.S., it’s “Nervous” by Shawn Mendes, in the U.K., it’s “Drippy” by IAMDDB, and in France, it’s “When we ride” by Møme
  6. Ad-free listening, downloads and more. Get YouTube Music Premium to listen ad-free, in the background and on-the-go with downloads. Plus, your Offline Mixtape automatically downloads songs you love just in case you forgot to. For a limited time, get three months free of YouTube Music Premium, ($11.99 per month after, $17.99 per month for a Family Plan)*. 

YouTube Premium also launches today
Starting today, YouTube Premium (formerly YouTube Red) will be available in 17 countries, providing members with the benefits of Music Premium, plus ad-free, background, and downloads across all of YouTube. YouTube Premium members also get access to the full slate of YouTube Originals shows and movies including the hit series Cobra Kai, Impulse, F2 Finding Football and The Sidemen Show. For a limited time, get three months free of YouTube Premium here, ($14.99 per month after, $22.99 per month for a Family Plan)*.
Current YouTube Red and Google Play Music members (including family plans) in Australia, New Zealand, the U.S., and Mexico will automatically receive access to YouTube Premium at their current price. Google Play Music subscribers in all other countries will automatically receive access to YouTube Music Premium at their current price as it becomes available there. Nothing is changing with Google Play Music - you'll still be able to access all of your purchased music, uploads and playlists in Google Play Music just like always.

Try YouTube Music and YouTube Premium 
Get the new YouTube Music from the Play Store and App Store today or check out the brand new web player at music.youtube.com. You can sign up for YouTube Premium at youtube.com/premium
*YouTube Music Premium is $11.99 per month and YouTube Premium is $14.99 per month for individual memberships in Australia. Pricing and Family Plan availability varies by country. Only first-time YouTube Premium, YouTube Music Premium, YouTube Red and Google Play subscribers are eligible for free trials. South Korea will only offer YouTube Premium at the current price of YouTube Red. 
Posted by Team YouTube

GOOOAL! Get ready for the 2018 FIFA World Cup™ on YouTube

Australians waiting to watch Ronaldo, Messi, Neymar, Pogba and Mbappé 


As the world eagerly awaits the 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia, football fans are turning to YouTube to research and gear up for this summer’s tournament. In fact, global interest for the 2018 FIFA World Cup continues to grow, with search volume across Google and YouTube besting that of the Olympics, as well as other major sporting events.
To better understand what football fans are watching on YouTube, we researched which national teams, players, and football-related videos were trending on the platform over the past year:
Latin American teams and players lead the world in viewership 
YouTube users around the world spent the most time watching videos related to Latin American teams. When it comes to watch time in 2017, the top five most popular national teams consist of Argentina, Brazil, Peru, Portugal, and Mexico.
Below are the most popular 2018 FIFA World Cup teams in each of the world’s countries (by the watch time each team received in that country in 2017):

Videos of superstar football players, including Lionel Messi, Neymar da Silva Santos Jr., and Cristiano Ronaldo, all had an 80 percent increase in watch time last year (versus the year prior).
Last year in Australia, the most watched soccer players of the 2018 World Cup were Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel Messi, Neymar da Silva Santos Jr. (Neymar), Paul Pogba, and Kylian Mbappé.

Match recaps, game highlights and trick shots scored high with soccer fans 
When it comes to football-related content on YouTube, match recaps, game highlights and trick shots proved popular. Over the past two years, the amount of time people spent watching match recaps on YouTube has more than doubled, and since the last World Cup, watch time for soccer game highlights has grown by 9x, while watch time for soccer-related trick shots has gone up by 50 percent.
On YouTube, football fans don’t just watch, they participate 
People are also turning to YouTube to improve their own soccer skills, with watch time of “Drills & Skills” videos increasing 6x since 2014. Check out some popular soccer tutorials here:


How to watch your favorite 2018 FIFA World Cup moments 
Miss a game? Can’t get enough of the action? On YouTube globally, you can catch up on your favorite 2018 FIFA World Cup moments with select video highlights from official FIFA broadcasters in more than 80 countries around the world.
The excitement doesn’t end on the pitch. There are hundreds of YouTube channels that will take you beyond the games for the complete 2018 FIFA World Cup experience, with live shows, training footage, interviews, banter and match analysis. The official FIFA channel will share content from around the tournament and keep users up-to-date with the latest news. A number of channels will have regular original and exclusive content including the FA with daily content from the English national football team, Germany’s DFB Die Mannschaft will report from the training camp as well as the team’s base camp, and FC Barcelona will even host interviews with Barça World Cup legends.

Join us in the countdown to the official kickoff…


Celebrating extraordinary Australian AI stories


For over a decade, we’ve been working on artificial intelligence to make more of the world’s information accessible and useful. Today, AI is infused in almost all our products – helping you to snap the perfect selfie with Portrait Mode on Pixel 2, breaking down language barriers in Google Translate, and making it easier to respond to an email with Smart Reply in Gmail. We’ve even taken AI into the kitchen, teaming up with a bakery to whip up the world’s first smart cookie.


But the impact of AI goes beyond making products more useful (or tasty). We’re starting to see how AI can be a positive force for society––from high school students who built a machine learning tool to detect diseases on plants and skin, to conservationists preventing illegal logging in the Amazon rainforest with AI – and researchers partnering with astronomers hunting new planets with machine learning. The potential of AI to solve complex, real-world problems is huge. To help more people tackle challenges with AI, we’ve open-sourced machine learning tools like TensorFlow, we help others innovate with Cloud AI – and collaborate with researchers around the globe.


And here in Australia, researchers, developers and businesses are using these AI tools to solve difficult problems in the fields of heath, conservation, linguistics and more. Today, we celebrated some of these stories with an event in our Sydney office, to show how AI is driving impact in extraordinary, unexpected and tangible ways––here and now.


Here’s a snapshot of some Aussie AI-powered products and projects in a range of fields:


Saving dugongs with AI
Credit: Ahmed M. Shawky















Dugongs are the gentle giants of the sea and despite their size, are hard to keep track of. This has presented a challenge for conservation researchers working to save this endangered species.  For decades, scientists had to spend days peering out of small planes to count populations, which was expensive, time consuming and often hazardous. Researchers then analysed imagery manually, zooming in to count dugongs one-by-one.


Dr. Amanda Hodgson of Murdoch University and Dr. Frederic Maire of Queensland University of Technology knew there must be a better way. In 2010, they began testing drones, which take aerial photography of the ocean––and in 2014, they applied the magic of machine learning in their quest to make the processing of images from drones faster and cheaper, and therefore make drone surveys a realistic option. Using TensorFlow, Google’s free open source machine learning platform, the team built a detector that could learn to find dugongs in these photos automatically.  




So far, the team have processed 37k+ images––identifying 70% of the sea cows they’d found manually in images. This analysis took 18 hours to complete, compared to the 377 hours required for manual analysis. Hodgson and Frederic have now integrated this detection software with mapping software to plot all sightings, giving them richer data about the volume and locations of dugongs.


Preserving precious languages
While there are 6,000+ languages in the world, only 50% of web content is in English. AI can help us make this content accessible, break down language barriers and even preserve endangered languages. Since 2012, Google's language technology teams have been using neural networks to make the world’s diverse language content universally accessible and useful.

Professor Janet Wiles and Ben Foley, researchers with the ARC Centre of Excellence for the Dynamics of Language (CoEDL) are working to transcribe and preserve endangered languages. There are over 300 Indigenous languages in Australia––which can be as distinct as Japanese is to German. Indigenous languages are also inextricably connected to the land, imbued with history and sacred songlines––passed down through oral tradition.



CoEDL conducting traditional methods of fieldwork


With many indigenous languages endangered, research and transcription is both time sensitive and intensive. CoEDL has fieldworkers working with ~130 languages, recording mountains of data (almost 50K hours of language audio in archives), which could take 1.9M hours to transcribe using traditional methods. Recognising the importance and the sheer enormity of the work, Wiles and Foley realized AI could help provide a new solution to harness the contributions of community members and linguists, while protecting the integrity of this precious language data.


CoEDL and Google teams building language models at a recent workshop


In 2016, Wiles and Foley looked to Google’s open-source AI technology to build unique models for several Indigenous languages––allowing for faster transcription and a bespoke solution. While this project is still in its early stages, Google and CoEDL are delighted to announce this partnership to implement TensorFlow and Kaldi to transcribe indigenous languages. So far, we’ve co-hosted workshops with 35 linguists, and have built initial models for 12 Indigenous languages including Bininj Kunwok, Kriol, Mangarayi, Nakkara, Pitjantjatjara, Warlpiri, Wubuy – as well as indigenous languages in regions surrounding Australia, such as Abui (spoken in Indonesia) and Cook Islands Maori.


CoEDL aim to train more language workers to contribute to the models, and build an even simpler interface. Long-term, the team has a dream to integrate recognition and synthesis systems into their social robot Opie, designed with the Ngukurr Language Center to promote community engagement and the revitalisation of endangered languages.

Enhancing healthcare with AI

There’s a huge opportunity for AI to help solve numerous difficult problems, and in healthcare we’re already seeing some really encouraging applications that could benefit billions of people.  Working closely with clinicians and medical providers, we’re developing tools that we hope will improve the availability and accuracy of medical services across a range of conditions, from diabetic eye disease, to cardiovascular health, and cancer.

In early 2017 we partnered with Dr Elliot Smith, of Brisbane-based medical data specialist Maxwell Plus, to combine deep learning with medical imaging to diagnose prostate cancer in a faster, more affordable and accurate way.  Dr Smith, an expert in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) systems with a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering, was troubled that highly trained diagnostics are a scarce resource and unevenly distributed in Australia. Moreover, prostate cancer diagnostic methods can take up to seven days to process results. Smith felt compelled to find a scalable solution and make this clinical brainpower available to all doctors, to offer patients better care.

Dr Smith leveraged Google Cloud AI to ‘train’ a system to analyse hundreds of thousands of prostate cancer images using AI. This delivered results to clinicians in 10-15 minutes rather than 2-7 days by traditional diagnostic methods. Maxwell Plus has since expanded to cover breast and lung cancer diagnostics – and has a goal to process 150,000 cases by the end of 2018.
















Maxwell Plus’ interface running cancer diagnostics, powered by Google Cloud Platform

Cherishing memories, art and culture


Advances in computer vision and mobile photography allow you to search, stylise and share your photo––and learn about the world around you.


Three years ago, we introduced Google Photos as a home for all of your pictures and videos, organized and brought to life. One AI powered feature which will be rolling out soon is Colour Pop, which detects the subject of your photo through machine learning and leaves it in colour–– while the background is set to black and white.


We’ve also seen breakthroughs in computational photography when AI, software and hardware come together. HDR+ (which runs on all recent Pixel and Nexus phones) produces photos and videos with low noise and sharp details, even in dim lighting. To see this in action, here’s a video by Aussie surf photography leader Aquabumps, showcasing HDR+ quality in video:



The Pixel 2 also contains a specialized neural network to produce portrait mode, which researchers trained on almost a million images. By using machine learning, the device can make predictions about what should stay sharp in the photo and create a mask around it, producing professional-looking shallow depth-of-field image. Here are a few portrait mode snaps taken in Australia by photographers @karin_samsovona and @samscrim.



Australian AI stories offer a glimpse of the potential of AI to improve people’s lives––giving you the tools to capture your most precious moments, supporting doctors to serve their patients, helping animal populations grow, and preserving languages to live on. It is a privilege to partner with so many brilliant minds and creative thinkers to discover new applications of AI, and uncover new avenues to tackle some of our most pressing social issues.   

Backing Australia’s forward thinkers

Every day, Australian nonprofits and social enterprises are finding new ways to address some of our most challenging social problems - from education and economic opportunity to inclusion.

We know that technology can be part of the solution. Big ideas, such as using machine learning to help health professionals detect cancer, highlight the transformative potential of technology. Many Australian nonprofits already use technology to tackle challenges and some have big ideas that need an extra boost, that’s why we’re launching the 2018 Google.org Impact Challenge.

Through the Google.org Impact Challenge, we’re backing Australia’s forward thinkers. This year, nonprofits and social enterprises can apply for a share of $5.5 million to support projects that use technology for good. Grants of up to $1 million will be available to the winners. We’re excited to announce that applications open today.



This is the third Google.org Impact Challenge in Australia. Previous winners include supporting Fred Hollows’ low-cost mobile camera to detect and prevent blindness caused by diabetes, investing in Infoxchange’s web app called Ask Izzy to connect people experiencing homelessness with social services, and supporting the Great Barrier Reef Foundation to develop autonomous underwater vehicles to help protect the reef.

Australia has a long history of innovating for impact, whether it’s the bionic ear or WiFi. Through the Google.org Impact Challenge we want to champion our emerging innovators.

Ten finalists will be announced in October, and then we want to hear from you! Australians will be invited to vote for your favourite idea - which will take out the $1 million People’s Choice prize.

If you know a nonprofit or social enterprise with a big idea to make a difference, encourage them to apply before 6 July 2018. Find out more at: g.co/australiachallenge and get behind Australia’s forward thinkers!

Google New Zealand Blog 2018-05-25 07:39:00

Industry has long been talking about the need for STEM skills in our future workforce, and increasingly we’re seeing that a core competency in computational thinking is critical for the jobs of the future. To equip teachers with the skills needed to both inspire and prepare students for this future we are delighted to announce our 2018 Google Educator Professional Development Grant recipients.

Google’s Educator PD Grants (formerly CS4HS) program has been running in Australia and New Zealand since 2011, and in that time has trained over 12,000 teachers. The program aims to equip teachers through practical professional development workshops, giving them the skills and resources they need to confidently teach computational thinking and computer science concepts in new and exciting ways.

A recipient of our 2017 program Mahsa Mohaghegh from Auckland University of Technology’s workshop was held in November 2017 and included hands-on activities for teachers to engage in. Attendee Barry Hook, a Computer Science teacher, who has attended several workshops shared that the hands on activities offered, along with the opportunity to connect with peers are the key to building confidence and skills in teachers to deliver the digital technologies curriculum.

“The major thing we have here [in NZ] is a curriculum which defines what we have to do, but not how we do it. Without having conversations outside of your normal confidence area, you just can’t expand your experience," said Barry. "Until today, I’d never thought of using the Internet of Things. Suddenly, I have a purpose for which I can use some of my robotics resources. It suddenly introduces a twist, and it’s that twist which will make the kids find it more interesting; students which are currently losing interest will now have something to excite them again.”


New Zealand Educators at the Auckland University of Technology CS4HS 2017 Workshop
Conferences and workshops like these connect like-minded educators, and has allowed Barry to “open up conversations or ways and approaches which I would not have had the opportunity to observe in my own development online”. Discussing his PD exposure, he said, “I basically rely upon these Google conferences as my sole source of non-self-directed professional development.”

We’re excited to announce the following 2018 CS Educator Grants Awardees, which will continue to motivate and inspire educators like Roxy and Peter around Australia and New Zealand.

2018 CS Educator Grants Funding Recipients 

Auckland University of Technology

Core Education Ltd

The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa

Victoria University of Wellington












Announcing Australia’s 2018 CS Educator Grants funding recipients

Industry has long been talking about the need for STEM skills in our future workforce, and increasingly we’re seeing that a core competency in computational thinking is critical for the jobs of the future. To equip teachers with the skills needed to both inspire and prepare students for this future we are delighted to announce our 2018 Google Educator Professional Development Grant recipients.
Google’s Educator PD Grants (formerly CS4HS) program has been running in Australia and New Zealand since 2011, and in that time has trained over 12,000 teachers.
The program aims to equip teachers through practical professional development workshops, giving them the skills and resources they need to confidently teach computational thinking and computer science concepts in new and exciting ways.
Roxy Clark is one of many educators who attended the 2017 CS4HS workshop at Herdmans Cove Primary School in Tasmania. At the workshop, teachers like Roxy worked together to discuss how to build Digital Technologies into their classroom projects using the BBC Microbit, a handheld, easily programmable computer. The workshop allowed teachers to incorporate specific curriculum outcomes into the classroom, using the BBC Microbit to support the cross discipline activities they are doing with their students.

Teachers and students at the 2017 CS4HS Herdsman Cove Primary School Workshop
After a fun and exciting workshop, Roxy had the confidence to directly implement the Digital Technologies curriculum into an existing class project, engaging with her Year 2 and 3 students in a refreshing and interactive program.
Peter Lelong from TASITE has been organising and running workshops like these in Tasmania for over 4 years, dedicated to equipping educators with practical skills through hands-on professional development events. Peter has been a CS Educator Grant recipient for the past 3 years, and is committed to growing the CS education community in Tasmania by supporting professional learning for teachers in Digital Technologies.
We’re excited to announce the following 2018 CS Educator Grants Awardees, which will continue to motivate and inspire educators like Roxy and Peter around Australia and New Zealand.
2018 CS Educator Grants Funding Recipients 
Australia
Australian Catholic University
Bentley Park College
Catholic Schools Office
Cessnock High School Learning Community
Deakin University
Faith Lutheran College
Griffith University
ICT Educators NSW
Information Technology Educators ACT
John Monash Science School
Macquarie University
Mountain Creek State High School
Nazareth Catholic College
Our Lady of Mercy Catholic School 
Pedare Christian College 
Queensland Society for Information Technology in Education
RDA Hunter
Tahmoor Public School
The University of Adelaide
The University of Melbourne
The University of Newcastle
The University of Newcastle (SMART)
The University of Sydney (MadMaker)
The University of Western Australia

New Zealand
Auckland University of Technology
Core Education Ltd
The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa
Victoria University of Wellington

YouTube Music starts rolling out today. 6 reasons you’re gonna like it

Last week we announced the new YouTube Music. Today, we’re excited to start rolling out early access of the new YouTube Music in the U.S., Mexico, Australia, New Zealand and South Korea. To be the first to know when it’s available for you, head to music.youtube.com/coming-soon.

Here are six reasons we think you’re gonna like it:

  1. It’s ALL here. Not just music videos, but official albums, singles, remixes, live performances, covers and hard-to-find music you can only get on YouTube. 
  2. Recommendations built for you. A home screen that dynamically adapts to provide recommendations based on what you’ve played before, where you are and what you’re doing. At the gym workin’ on that fitness? Escaping during your commute? The right music is right here, built just for you. 
  3. Thousands of playlists across any genre, mood or activity. Try “Blogged 50” to discover new music or “Indie Under Pressure” to get the heart rate going. 
  4. Smart search so we’ll find the song, even if you can’t remember what it’s called. “That rap song with flute”? We got you. You can also search by lyrics (even if they’re wrong). It’s “Starbucks lovers”, right? 
  5. The hottest videos. We’ll keep you on top of what’s hot! The hottest videos in the world right now are right there, on their own dedicated Hotlist screen. Today in the U.S., it features Anderson.Paak, Jessie Reyez, and G-Eazy. 
  6. No internet? No problem. Paid members can download music and listen ads-free and in the background. Plus, your Offline Mixtape automatically downloads songs you love just in case you forgot to.


To the Google Play Music users out there, nothing will change - you’ll still be able to access and add to all of your purchased music, uploads and playlists in Google Play Music just like always. For additional information on what we announced last week, be sure to check out our blog.
We can’t wait for music fans across the globe to get their hands on YouTube Music! If you’re interested in learning more and getting access, head to music.youtube.com/coming-soon.

YouTube Music starts rolling out today. 6 reasons you’re gonna like it

Last week we announced the new YouTube Music. Today, we’re excited to start rolling out early access of the new YouTube Music in the U.S., Mexico, Australia, New Zealand and South Korea. To be the first to know when it’s available for you, head to music.youtube.com/coming-soon.
Here are six reasons we think you’re gonna like it:
  1. It’s ALL here. Not just music videos, but official albums, singles, remixes, live performances, covers and hard-to-find music you can only get on YouTube. 
  2. Recommendations built for you. A home screen that dynamically adapts to provide recommendations based on what you’ve played before, where you are and what you’re doing. At the gym workin’ on that fitness? Escaping during your commute? The right music is right here, built just for you. 
  3. Thousands of playlists across any genre, mood or activity. Try “Blogged 50” to discover new music or “Indie Under Pressure” to get the heart rate going. 
  4. Smart search so we’ll find the song, even if you can’t remember what it’s called. “That rap song with flute”? We got you. You can also search by lyrics (even if they’re wrong). It’s “Starbucks lovers”, right? 
  5. The hottest videos. We’ll keep you on top of what’s hot! The hottest videos in the world right now are right there, on their own dedicated Hotlist screen. Today in the U.S., it features Anderson.Paak, Jessie Reyez, and G-Eazy. 
  6. No internet? No problem. Paid members can download music and listen ads-free and in the background. Plus, your Offline Mixtape automatically downloads songs you love just in case you forgot to.

To the Google Play Music users out there, nothing will change - you’ll still be able to access and add to all of your purchased music, uploads and playlists in Google Play Music just like always. For additional information on what we announced last week, be sure to check out our blog.
We can’t wait for music fans across the globe to get their hands on YouTube Music! If you’re interested in learning more and getting access, head to music.youtube.com/coming-soon.