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Google Play Console: Streamlining workflows, from testing to growth
AI Summary
This video explores updates to the Google Play Console, covering features for app testing, monitoring, growth, and monetization. Learners will encounter business and tech vocabulary such as 'deep links,' 'emulator,' 'localization,' and 'actionable metrics.' The conversational interview format provides great practice for understanding professional dialogue about app development and digital business tools.
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CEFR Level
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Subtitles (42 segments)
DownloadSo you can go from a prompt to an interface to code in just a minute or so.
Gemini 2.5 Pro is awesome at coding. You did all of this with what?
AI and five lines of code? That's so cool.
At Google I/O, a big theme we saw over and over again was around how AI is helping developers be really more productive.
The gap between thinking of a new idea and building is in a matter of hours, not days.
But this got me thinking. If developers are building new experiences at the speed of light, what about everything else that comes after? Will developers be able to keep up their business operations to the speed of their code?
I've been closely following some of the changes players made to the play Console UI recently.
The team reimagined the Console's App Dashboard, putting the most important actionable metrics front and center and really reorganizing them around four main reasons a developer visits the Console: To test, monitor, grow, or monetize their app.
I had the chance to catch up with Sanjna Verma, a product manager on the Play team, to learn more about the team's thinking.
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Key Vocabulary (14)
Used to refer to the person or people that the speaker is addressing. It is the second-person pronoun used for both singular and plural subjects and objects.
To engage in activity for enjoyment and recreation rather than for a serious or practical purpose. It is also used to describe participating in a sport or performing music on an instrument.
A system of words, letters, figures, or other symbols used to represent others, especially for the purposes of secrecy or computer programming. It also refers to a set of rules or principles that a group of people agree to follow.
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