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Here's what happened during Google's biggest event of the year (GOOG)

Google started its annual I/O developers conference with a keynote highlighting new products.

Google CEO Sundar Pichai at last year's I/O.

MOUNTAIN VIEW, California — Google CEO Sundar Pichai said there were now 2 billion active devices based on the company's Android software and touted the company's new artificial-intelligence efforts as he took the stage at I/O, Google's annual developers conference, on Wednesday.

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He also announced a new product called Google Lens, which will be part of the Google Assistant for Android phones. Lens can identify objects in the real world for a variety of uses.

"It's been a very busy year since last year," Pichai said. "We've been focused on our core mission of organizing the world's information."

He also said Google's efforts in AI were solving the world's problems at scale.

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For example, Pichai spoke about how machine learning and AI were being used in the medical and scientific industries to analyze molecules and other big-data problems. The company launched Google.ai to document these efforts.

Later, Scott Huffman, vice president of Google Assistant, detailed its advances, such as the ability to type in queries.

But Lens has some of the most impressive new features. You can scan just about anything with your phone's camera and have Assistant analyze its contents. For example, if you take a photo of a concert venue, you can listen to an artist's music, buy tickets, and more.

And the big headline: Google Assistant is coming to the iPhone. It's no longer stuck on Android.

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Google is also expanding its third-party support for Assistant. Before, third parties could build "actions" for the Assistant in the Google Home speaker. Now they'll work wherever Assistant is, including Android phones and the iPhone.

It also works with transactions. In a demo, Google showed off a Panera Bread integration where the user could order with her voice. Google says it's just like ordering from a human in a store.

Google Home, the company's connected speaker, also got some new features. The Assistant inside Home now has proactive alerts, so when you ask it "what's up?" it can send you notifications based on your schedule, like telling you when to leave for your next meeting.

But the big news is that Google Home will soon let you call any number in the US or Canada from the speaker for free. (Amazon's Echo, on the other hand, can call only other Echos or devices running the Alexa app.) Google says it can even recognize individual voices so the person you're calling has the appropriate caller ID.

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Calling will roll out to the Home speaker later this year.

Google also gave updates on Google Photos, its online storage service. It can now suggest photos you might want to share with your friends through facial recognition and use other signals to pick the best photos. It also has a new feature to let you order prints and books of your photos.

As for YouTube, Google updated its Super Chat feature for comments that adds a new layer of interactivity to live videos. Users can pay to have things happen in live broadcasts, and it's up to the broadcaster to get creative with it. (For a demo, YouTube brought out its stars The Slow Mo Guys, who got pelted with balloons for $500.)

Google didn't forget about Android. It showed off some features in Android O, the new version coming this fall. It's not a major update, but there are some new things worth highlighting — for example, you can now use picture-in-picture video to watch video or video chat while doing other stuff on your phone.

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Android is getting a new auto-fill feature that knows your password and log-ins for apps so you can sign in with one click. There's also a new copy/paste feature that uses machine learning to automatically predict text you'd likely want, such as an address.

But overall, Android O's improvements help with stuff under the hood, like battery life and processing power. Most people probably won't notice it. You can download a beta version of Android O starting Wednesday if you have a Google Pixel phone.

Google's Daydream virtual-reality platform now supports standalone headsets, not just ones that need to be powered by smartphones. HTC and Lenovo will be two of the first companies to make standalone Daydream headsets that launch later this year.

As for augmented reality, Google is bringing its Tango feature, which maps indoor environments, to more Android phones this year. Tango could be used to help people find things in crowded stores, for example. Google calls this a visual position service, or VPS, since Tango uses visual cues in the environment to create maps.

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That's it! Overall, we didn't see any massive or unexpected news, but we did get a peek at how Google views AI and machine learning as its next major platforms.

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