Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Legacy Archives

Google sees future in educational apps

Add as a preferred source on Google

Google is working with educational software companies to develop a marketplace for educational apps, according to Bloomberg Businessweek.

The new venture would provide third-party developers with a way to connect with tech-friendly schools and universities. “If we can provide access to education apps to our 10 million users in thousands of schools, then that would be a win all around,” Obadiah Greenberg, Google’s business development manager for education apps, tells Bloomberg.

Recommended Videos

It’s not solely an investment in the minds of future heads of state and would-be Mars explorers. Spearheading an educational app marketplace is also a potentially lucrative business move on Google’s part. Educational software sales in U.S. alone are expected to surpass $4.6 billion this year with potential to climb above $5 billion well before the launch of the first manned mission to the red planet.

Google already offers schools and colleges its own cloud-based free software programs that include Gmail, Google Docs, and Google Sites. There’s also several third-party educational apps currently available through the Google Apps Marketplace, which launched in March of 2010.

Currently, most of the revenue generated in the Google Apps Marketplace ends up in the pockets of developers. That is soon to change: Google plans to begin taking a 20 percent share from sales starting sometime in 2011. However, it’s not clear if the educational app marketplace will be subject to the same fee structure.

Aemon Malone
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Google just gave Workspace a 24/7 AI agent that sends emails and books meetings while you sleep
Google announcing five Workspace features at once is either confidence or chaos, but Gemini Spark acting on your behalf while you sleep is the one that actually changes what a productivity suite is supposed to do.
Google AI Inbox for Gmail users.

At the I/O 2026, Google announced several AI-powered updates for its Workspace apps. The main highlight of the announcement is Gemini Spark, a 24/7 personal AI agent that doesn’t just answer questions but takes actions on your behalf. 

It can send emails, add calendar events, and complete tasks across Workspace apps. And before you even ask, it asks before doing a high-stakes task, and you can choose whether you want to enable it or not. It's coming soon in preview for Workspace business customers in the Gemini app.

Read more
Gemini can now make videos, brief your morning, and do digital chores while you sleep
Gemini is now an AI intern that never logs off
Google Gemini App gets a major update

Google is giving the Gemini app a massive update, bringing a bunch of nifty changes. The chatbot phase is fading, and the company now wants Gemini to become something closer to a full-time digital assistant.

During Google I/O 2026, the company announced a redesigned Gemini app along with a new model, proactive daily summaries, video tools, and a 24/7 agent called Gemini Spark. Google claims that Gemini has now reached more than 900 million monthly users across 230 countries and more than 70 languages, up from 400 million last year.

Read more
Google Search is getting AI agents that will monitor the web for you
Set up an agent once, and Search will notify you when it finds what you're looking for.
Google Search information agents featured

Google used its I/O 2026 keynote to announce a major overhaul of Search, introducing AI agents, a redesigned search box, and agentic coding capabilities that can generate custom apps and dashboards on the fly.

A new search box

Read more