SAN FRANCISCO -- Google may have figured out a surefire way to get the Internet on your TV with its low-cost Chromecast dongle. But don't count Google TV out of the game just yet.
"Google TV is moving forward in a major way," Sundar Pichai told CNET after the company's press confab Wednesday morning announcing the Chromecast and the second version of theNexus 7.
Google's Chrome, Android, and Web apps leader was adamant that Google TV wasn't shuffling offstage anytime soon. "You'll see more partners announced at CES," the annual Consumer Electronics Show held in January, he said.
There hasn't been much noise coming from Google TV recently, but the comments aren't surprising. At its Google I/O developer conference earlier this year, the company announced that the Android-based "smart TV" system for running a mix of streaming media content, apps, and the Internet itself on your TV would get an update to Jelly Bean during Q3 of this year.
And in November 2012, the company argued that development on Google TV was "making progress".
What does that mean for the $35 Chromecast? It certainly looks like Google is pursuing a dual-pronged strategy for getting the Web "on all your screens," as Pichai emphasized several times on Wednesday. And if the version of Jelly Bean that lands on Google TV is Android 4.3, with its multiuser accounts and the restriction features those offer, parents could be taken with a TV system that allows for content control.


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