Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Pichai unveils $100 mn Google Career Certificates Fund

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Feb, 2022 11:12 AM
  • Pichai unveils $100 mn Google Career Certificates Fund

New Delhi, Feb 18 (IANS) Alphabet and Google CEO Sundar Pichai has announced a new $100 million Google Career Certificates Fund to prepare a skilled workforce for high-paying, high-growth jobs in fields like data analytics, IT support, project management and user experience design.

The goal, he said, is to enable 'Social Finance' to reach more than 20,000 American workers.

"This investment in America's future has the potential to drive $1 billion in wage gains," Pichai said in a statement late on Thursday.

Nearly 70,000 Americans have completed Google Career Certificates to date.

"They are available to anyone, no college degree required. Seventy-five percent of graduates report seeing a positive impact on their career within six months, including a raise or a new job," Pichai added.

He announced the fund at an event with US Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Economic Development, Alejandra Castillo, and the CEOs of Social Finance, Merit America and Year Up.

"A sense of purpose and optimism is what brought me to America nearly 30 years ago. And it's what drew me to Google and its mission to organise the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful," said Pichai.

Google's digital skills programme has also helped train 8 million Americans in all 50 states in the US.

"We'll invest Google capital and Google.org grants and provide our Career Certificate programme. We'll connect students to an employer consortium of more than 150 companies who are looking to hire workers with these skills," Pichai noted.

It's all designed around student success and they will receive all of this at no upfront cost, "and will only pay it back once they find a job earning at least $40,000 a year".

MORE Tech ARTICLES

Instagram Says It Will Show Posts In Order Of 'Relevance'

If that sounds familiar, it's because that's how Facebook decides what to show users of its online social network. 

Instagram Says It Will Show Posts In Order Of 'Relevance'

Robotics Expert: Self-driving Cars Not Ready For Deployment

Robotics Expert: Self-driving Cars Not Ready For Deployment
Self-driving cars are "absolutely not" ready for widespread deployment despite a rush to put them to put them on the road, a robotics expert warned Tuesday.

Robotics Expert: Self-driving Cars Not Ready For Deployment

Google Reveals 77 Per Cent Of Its Online Traffic Is Encrypted

Google Reveals 77 Per Cent Of Its Online Traffic Is Encrypted
Encryption shields 77 per cent of the requests sent from around the world to Google's data centres, up from 52 per cent at the end of 2013, according to company statistics released Tuesday.

Google Reveals 77 Per Cent Of Its Online Traffic Is Encrypted

Decoded: What Brain Does When You Reveal More On Facebook

Decoded: What Brain Does When You Reveal More On Facebook
Results showed that participants who share more about themselves on Facebook had greater connectivity of both the medial prefrontal cortex and precuneus. 

Decoded: What Brain Does When You Reveal More On Facebook

Never Tried Virtual Reality? Here's What It's Like

Never Tried Virtual Reality? Here's What It's Like
It doesn't take a high-tech headset to see that virtual reality is the rage. It's being touted as the future for all things sensory, from games to film and television, from storytelling to visual art

Never Tried Virtual Reality? Here's What It's Like

GM Buys Software Company To Speed Autonomous Car Development

GM Buys Software Company To Speed Autonomous Car Development
The Detroit automaker says it purchased Cruise Automation, a 40-person firm that was founded just three years ago.

GM Buys Software Company To Speed Autonomous Car Development