Imagine a future in which you have long-running personal
conversations with the software that controls your home entertainment system
while letting an algorithmic chatbot handle texting your mom for you. Google
pretty much showcased that vision of the future at its annual developer
conference, I/O, which kicked off Wednesday in Mountain View, California.
In his first I/O appearance since he was named CEO last
August, Sundar Pichai opened by introducing Google Assistant, a voice-activated
virtual assistant akin to Apple's Siri and Amazon's Alexa. Like Siri, Google
Assistant will be accessible to users through Google's Android phones and
tablets; like Alexa, she'll also live in a stylish new standalone wireless
speaker, which will go on sale later this year. (Evidently, tech companies
can't help but make all their assistants female: In the demos, Google Assistant
speaks by default in a woman's voice, like both Alexa and Siri.)
"We want to be there for our users asking them, 'Hi,
how can I help?'" Pichai told an audience of developers and journalists.
"Think of it as a conversational assistant. We want users to have an
ongoing two-way dialogue with Google."
Google Assistant embodies Google's vision for how people
will interact with the tech giant in the future--through voice, ambient
computing, and context-aware artificial intelligence. It is also a key feature
of the company's much anticipated Google Home device, also revealed at today's
event, which will compete directly with Amazon's successful Echo. "Credit
to the team at Amazon for creating a lot of excitement in this space,"
Pichai said, while claiming that Google Home will be considerably superior in
its "far-field voice recognition" (ability to decipher speech against
background noise at different distances), its integrations with other
smart-home systems like Google-owned Nest, and its aptitude to understand and
manage things like restaurant reservations, travel itineraries, and contact
lists.
"It's like having a voice-activated remote control to
the real world whenever you need it," Mario Queiroz, Google vice president
of product management, said. According to the company, the same artificial
intelligence that allows Google Assistant to understand conversational
questions from humans also allows it to generate conversational snippets that
human users can pass off as their own.
After Pichai finished showing off Google Home, he handed
over the stage to Erik Kay, an engineering director who unveiled a new
"smart messaging app" called Allo.
In the crowded messaging market, Google is hoping to set
Allo apart with a range of features: end-to-end encryption (like WhatsApp),
disappearing conversations (like Confide), and a "Whisper/Shout"
slider that lets you adjust the font size on each message.
But the "smart" part of Allo lies in its ability
to auto-suggest quick text replies to incoming messages--not just generic ones
like "I'm busy" but specific, context-aware answers that seem
expressly designed to fool the person on the other end of the exchange into
thinking they came from a person, not a bot. Demonstrating this feature, Kay
showed an image of a text message thread in which an Allo user receives a
friend's dog photo. The suggested replies: "Cute dog!"
"Aww!" and "Nice Bernese mountain dog."
Technology that frees you up from talking to people so you
can spend more time talking to machines. That's one form of progress.
Source: inc.com
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