The Asian Age

VOICE FOR ALL

VOICE IS THE NEW FORM OF TWO-WAY MAN-TO-MACHINE COMMUNICAT­ION, AND INDIA IS LEADING THE RACE

- VISHNU ANAND

Even ten years ago, if someone ever saw you talking to a machine, they had one word for you — lunatic, or other variants of this word, depending on your choice of regional dialect. Today, things have changed. Millennial­s are uber comfortabl­e talking into and hearing back from a machine, and if the non-millennial­s do not catch up, they are going to be called lunatics the next time they ask directions from a human being!

Voice assistants, from day one, had massive potential, from changing web surfing behaviour to making voice the virtual keyboard to all the informatio­n in the world. A major step was taken a few days back in India, to kickstart the next wave of voice enabled computing. Amazon India, at its Voxcon event, revealed that Alexa will now understand and speak in Hindi!

With this developmen­t, Alexa now becomes that virtual allknowing, ever-responsive girl who can now converse with millions of middle class Indian households. From typical activities like playing music to dimming lights, the powers of Alexa can now be leveraged to turn up family soaps, get Ramayan or Quran recitation­s, and become the central family compute device for entertainm­ent and informatio­n. On one hand, mass adoption of Hindi voice computing opens up huge opportunit­ies for rural computing at the grassroots, and on the other, allows brands to build applicatio­n with Hindi voice at the centre pillar. Global IoT brand Tuya Smart envisions a smart home where every device talks (literally) to each other. The company has created a solution where a small piece of hardware can be plugged in to anything from a fan or an AC or a TV or even a washing machine, to make it voiceready. Tuya takes care of the entire back end mesh of connectivi­ty formats and standards, giving the manufactur­e an affordable option to smarten their electronic devices, and the consumer, more devices that ‘listen’ to you. On the software side of things, there are companies like Agrahyah Technologi­es that voice-enables companies that already have non-voice websites or apps. From car comparison­s to mutual fund plans, this Indian company has voiceenabl­ed over 100 brands, and hopes to grow massively in the coming months. And then we have companies like Hungama, that have unlocked unique insights on Indian consumers of digital entertainm­ent, and are looking at voice to give them a platform for growth. Unlike the rest of the world, music is categorise­d in India not by the singer, but the actor that has acted in the song, and Hungama has voiceenabl­ed results to suit this global deviation just for India. The company also believes that entertainm­ent video consumptio­n is at an all-time high in India and Hindi voice will only grow it further. Alexa now has an

Indian visa and can speak Hindi fluently. Be tween her and her sisters at Apple and Google, the trio is ready to rock India with Hindi. Next step — regional languages. Let’s wait to see which sister jumps on to that bandwagon!

From typical activities like playing music to dimming lights, the powers of Alexa can now be leveraged to turn up family soaps, get Ramayan or Quran recitation­s, and become the central family compute device for entertainm­ent and informatio­n

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