Google stawia na Kraków. 300 nowych stanowisk pracy w kompleksie Tertium

05.07.2026


Google uruchomiło w Krakowie drugie biuro, wzmacniając rolę miasta jako jednego z kluczowych hubów inżynieryjnych koncernu na świecie. Nowa przestrzeń w kompleksie Tertium przy ul. Lublańskiej powstała na czterech piętrach budynku i oferuje 300 stanowisk pracy. Oprócz powierzchni biurowej przewidziano też laboratoria, sale konferencyjne, przestrzenie wspólne, stołówkę i kawiarnię.

Według dyrektorki krakowskiego oddziału Google Magdy Rabiej, lokalny zespół liczy obecnie ponad 400 specjalistów i nadal rośnie. Krakowskie centrum odgrywa istotną rolę w tworzeniu innowacji dla chmury obliczeniowej Google Cloud oraz systemów mobilnych. To z Krakowa rozwijane są fundamenty infrastruktury do przetwarzania danych, z których korzystają największe światowe przedsiębiorstwa.

Inżynierowie pracujący w dwóch krakowskich biurach – przy Rynku Głównym oraz w kompleksie Tertium – realizują projekty w ramach działu Platforms & Devices. Obejmują one m.in. innowacje w systemie Android, w tym rozwiązania na laptopy, tablety, komunikację biznesową oraz Android Auto, a także rozwój przeglądarki Chrome i całego ekosystemu webowego. W Krakowie prowadzone są również prace nad urządzeniami z linii Pixel oraz budową zaawansowanej infrastruktury inżynieryjnej (PDEIO), która wspiera te procesy.

Nowe biuro wpisuje się w szerszą obecność Google w Polsce. Koncern działa na rynku od 20 lat, a w biurach w Warszawie, Krakowie i we Wrocławiu zatrudnia łącznie około 3 tys. osób. Około 80 proc. polskiego zespołu stanowią programistki i programiści, co – według przedstawicieli firmy – czyni lokalny oddział jednym z najważniejszych ośrodków inżynieryjnych w globalnych strukturach Google.

Series of Raids on Hong Kong Indie Bookshops Raises Pressure on City’s Publishing Scene

05.07.2026


Hong Kong’s national security police have arrested the operators of Hunter Bookstore, one of the city’s best-known independent bookshops, in a move that underscores rising pressure on small publishers and retailers carrying titles deemed politically sensitive by authorities. Police said they detained a 33‑year‑old woman and a 32‑year‑old man on June 24 on suspicion of “acts with seditious intention” and handling property believed to represent the proceeds of an indictable offence. Local media identified one of those arrested as former district councillor and Hunter Bookstore founder Winnie Ho, though police did not name the suspects in their official statement.

Officers from the National Security Department searched the Hunter Bookstore premises in Sham Shui Po on Wednesday evening, according to police and local media accounts. More than a dozen officers were reported to have entered the shop, pulling down its metal shutters and removing stickers from the windows, while checking the identities of customers and passers-by. Police said they seized a batch of items, books and documents they described as having “seditious intention,” alleging that materials on display or for sale incited hatred against the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region government, the judiciary and law‑enforcement agencies, in breach of Article 24 of the city’s Safeguarding National Security Ordinance.

Authorities also said the two suspects were believed to have received multiple remittances from foreign political organisations, and indicated they are investigating potential violations of Hong Kong’s Organized and Serious Crimes Ordinance. Convictions for acts with seditious intent can carry sentences of up to seven years in prison, while handling property believed to be derived from an indictable offence can draw terms of up to 14 years. Local reports cited the presence of a biography of jailed media tycoon Jimmy Lai and works by political cartoonist Zunzi among the titles removed by police; similar books were previously described by pro‑Beijing outlets as “soft resistance” publications when criticising so‑called “yellow” bookstores that supported the 2019 protest movement.

The raid on Hunter Bookstore comes three months after national security officers searched another independent outlet, Yat-Chuen Bookhouse, and arrested its operator and three staff members over the display and sale of the same Jimmy Lai biography. All four were later granted bail, but the case sent a chill through Hong Kong’s small ecosystem of independent booksellers, many of which stock social and political titles alongside general literature. Ho has previously said that government departments carried out dozens of inspections and other actions targeting Hunter Bookstore over several years, even before the latest operation, as authorities and pro‑government media stepped up scrutiny of shops perceived to hold pro‑democracy views.

Ho, a former journalist and member of the now‑disbanded Civic Party, opened Hunter Bookstore after resigning her Sha Tin District Council seat and withdrawing from frontline politics in 2021. She has described the shop’s name, drawn from the Japanese manga “Hunter × Hunter,” as a statement against passivity, and has publicly argued that books should remain “open” and “free” unless and until explicitly banned. In interviews, she acknowledged a climate of fear among publishers and readers but said she sought to maintain a space for discussion within the narrowing bounds of Hong Kong’s legal environment. The latest arrests mark a further escalation in the city’s approach to independent bookshops, reinforcing a message that even small‑scale retail operations risk national‑security scrutiny over the choice of titles they carry and the sources of their funding.