Together with departing Google vice president Clay Bower, Bret Taylor, who just quit as co-CEO of Salesforce Inc., is creating an artificial intelligence firm.
In a LinkedIn post, Bavor, who worked for Google for over seven years as the vice president of augmented reality and virtual reality as part of an 18-year career, was vague about his future plans but made it apparent that he is working with Bret Taylor.
Since the two of them joined Google together years ago, he claimed that they had known one another for a long time. He stated that he has “always admired [Taylor’s] keen product sense and entrepreneurial spirit, his technical chops, and, above all, his character and integrity.”
Bavor stated, “We share an obsession with recent advances in AI, and we’re excited to build a new company to apply AI to solve some of the most important problems in business,” possibly teasing what may happen next. Will there be an AR/VR component? Right now, it’s tough to say, but the two are working on something.
He wasn’t being detailed, but next month we could learn more about whatever it is. He noted, “I’ll be setting out with Bret on this next adventure in March, and will have more to share once we get started. Until then, I’ll be focusing on transitioning my teams and projects, and wrapping things up properly at Google.”
Also Read: Salesforce co-CEO Taylor to leave as Benioff takes sole charge
Prior to embarking on an entrepreneurial path and launching the pioneering social network FriendFeed in 2007, Taylor worked at Google for four years beginning in March 2003. In 2009, Facebook bought the company where Taylor served as CTO for a while.
Later, he founded Quip, a business document collaboration platform that Salesforce purchased in 2016 for $750 million. He climbed the ranks to become co-CEO and is now going back to his entrepreneurial origins of business development.
Bavor, who joined Google in 2005, advanced through the organization’s ranks to become a manager on Gmail and Google Drive. He is regarded as Sundar Pichai’s preferred lieutenant.
Bavor was chosen to lead Google’s virtual reality division in 2015 in an effort to outperform competitors regarding the next computer platform. Although Google has introduced a number of devices and waves of software, its products have not been widely adopted, and the corporation has pulled back from this market.
A company spokesperson stated that Google had no plans to announce a replacement for Bavor. Projects from the laboratories devoted to cutting-edge technology will be transferred to Google’s Tech & Society division, which is run by senior vice president James Manica. Executives from Google Hiroshi Lockheimer and Rick Osterloh will be in charge of the augmented reality lab projects.
Also Read: Samsung, Google & Qualcomm team up on mixed-reality platform
Bavor recently wrote an email outlining changes to Google’s R&D initiatives within the Google Labs division, which housed the business’s internal incubator Area 120. After a reorganization in 2021, Bavor was the head of Labs, although many of its innovative initiatives were severely harmed by Alphabet’s widespread layoffs.
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