Oman Daily Observer

Google Assistant gets six new voices

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MAKING the competitio­n in Artificial Intelligen­ce (Ai)-powered assistants space tougher, Google last week announced that people will soon have a choice of choosing from six voices, including one of musician John Legend, to talk to “Google Assistant”.

At its annual developer conference Google I/O, the company said these six options, which feature both male and female voices, would be rolled out later this year.

Company CEO Sundar Pichai said that Google has been working on newer and more life-like version of its spoken AI that features natural voice that is “closer to how humans speak.”

The improvemen­ts include more natural pauses “that have meaning” and other subtleties to help create a “more natural dialogue” with Assistant. This new version of the Assistant is built on a tech machine learning technology called Wavenet, which the company started building out some 18 months ago.

Now instead of having to say “Hey Google” or “OK Google” every time to give a command, users only have to do this one time and then have a conversati­on with the Assistant. Google calls this feature “continued conversati­on” and it’ll roll out in the coming week.

The new powerful Assistant can now distinguis­h between two sentences that are joined by “and” and can reply with two different query-specific answers in one go.

The tech giant wants to bundle its voice assistant into every device and app and is bringing Google Assistant in Google Maps. It’ll be available on IOS and Android this summer. Users can now share estimated time of arrival with their contacts without touching the device. Further, the Assistant would soon be able make calls for you to make reservatio­ns at restaurant­s or salons.

It would also teach children to use polite language when interactin­g with the Google Assistant’s “Pretty Please feature. When kids say “Please” during a command, they would receive thanks from the virtual assistant in response.

 ??  ?? Google CEO Sundar Pichai speaks during the annual Google I/O developers conference in California.
— Reuters
Google CEO Sundar Pichai speaks during the annual Google I/O developers conference in California. — Reuters

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