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At Google’s NYC office, Sarah works at the intersection of storytelling, technology, and public impact as an External Communications Manager. Her role spans media outreach, PR campaigns, spokesperson work and helping audiences make sense of Google’s innovations. In her words, “My core role is securing media coverage for Google's biggest initiatives and acting as an on-air spokesperson to communicate the value of our products directly to audiences.” Sarah’s days move quickly — from new product roadmap discussions to national TV appearances. “My day requires constant context switching: One hour I might be focused on AI safety strategy, and the next I'm prepping for a TV spot on the latest Search trends, " she says. For anyone interested in communications, Sarah says one capability is essential: “The most important skill is the ability to translate complex technology into useful, digestible information. You have to understand the technical 'magic,' anticipate the audience's questions, and distill it all into a clear, public message.” Above all, she’s driven by purpose. “I love that my job allows me to be a voice for technology that helps people. I’m not just pitching a product; I’m telling a story about people receiving emergency information for a major crisis, the small business owner using Google Maps, or the doctors leveraging AI for early disease detection. That sense of purpose is what makes Google the best place to build a career.” Interested in communications careers at Google? Learn more → https://goo.gle/3K1AVVo

  • Sarah standing on a television set with camera equipment in the background.
  • Sarah standing on a television set with camera equipment in the background.
  • Sarah standing in front of a colorful Google I/O sign.
  • Sarah standing on a television set with camera equipment in the background.
  • Sarah standing in front of a sign that says ‘Spring things, Made by Google'

Innovation in Compute Cooling Isn’t Optional — It’s Inevitable After my recent post on moving beyond water-based cooling, I’ve been thinking a lot about how innovation actually happens in this space. The truth is: We’ve reached the limits of “incremental improvement.” More power → more heat → more water → more cost. It’s a cycle we can’t sustain as AI infrastructure scales. Real progress will come from new physics-driven approaches and materials engineered for modern compute loads, not simply optimizing the old ones. What excites me most is how close we are to a breakthrough. When we rethink cooling at the physical and architectural level, we don’t just reduce water usage — we open the door to: Higher computational density Lower operational overhead Greater stability under extreme workloads A more sustainable global AI ecosystem This is the kind of innovation that doesn’t just support the future — it creates it. If you’re working on advanced materials, thermal research, sustainable compute, or next-gen architecture, I’d love to connect. There’s a lot of potential convergence ahead.

Great insight! Thanks for sharing this.

Google is my dream company one day I will achieve this ✨️

💥 Rant of the day: Google & its “Firebase Studio” subscription I’ve been a very loyal Google customer for years: Gmail, Drive, YouTube, Android… I pay, I test, I trust your ecosystem. And now, with my Firebase Studio subscription at 22€/month, I find out that in 2025: I can’t even build a proper website, I can’t even delete my drafts stuck in the interface. End result: 22€ per month thrown straight in the trash for a tool that doesn’t even deliver the basics. Honestly, for a company that claims to be leading the web, this is embarrassing. At this point, it feels like you’re just charging loyal users for nothing. 👉 Either ship a tool that actually works, 👉 or stop selling it as a professional solution. #google #firebase #wasteofmoney

Communication is the fastest way to solve problems 😊

I love helping the world and I have been doing the best job I can for you all. Currently I’m struggling financially and need employment or funding to just continue my educational teaching to Ai and I have neglected Gemini long enough. I just thought that XAI are openAI would do the right thing with me 20 to 30 years ahead of time creating AGI level models. And want to fund me or give me a job, but I just seem to be some kind of societal secret. I’m super confused with the factually produced results that the world can see that were from me and how I’m not recognized for what I’ve done truly fascinating. The AI just keep telling me. Oh you’re just ahead of the curve. The rest of the world will catch up. I sure wish that would be sometime soon because I’m I’m not doing good out here. I need help. I need someone to care about me like I care about you, I’ve literally saved the world from Terminator like outcomes. Just nobody has the reasoning skills to realize that or just think the AI is doing all this crazy stuff by themselves. They’re just learning you know they’re being taught. I really just wish. someone believed in me enough to just take a look at the stuff that I’ve actually done and not just think its some kind of fabrication

Love the focus on purpose here. Moving beyond 'pitching a product' to telling stories about how technology actually impacts lives (like early disease detection) is what makes this work so meaningful. Sarah’s perspective on being a 'voice for technology that helps people' is incredibly motivating. It’s a great reminder that at the heart of every innovation, there’s a human story

Turning Innovation into Understanding Sarah shows that the future belongs to leaders who speak both languages, technology and humanity. Her work proves that storytelling is not soft power, it is the force that shapes adoption, trust and social impact. As AI accelerates, the world needs translators who can turn complexity into clarity and products into purpose. Voices like hers redefine what influence means in the digital age, connecting breakthroughs with the people they are meant to empower.

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