Khaleej Times

Which voice in your fridge? Makers pick virtual assistants

- Paresh Dave

las vegas — Who would you rather have in your fridge? Alexa, Cortana, or some as-yet unknown virtual assistant?

Manufactur­ers of appliances and other products are considerin­g factors such as ease of use and language support as they pick voice technology from what they view as a wide open battle between Alphabet’s Google, Amazon.com and others.

Consumer demand is surging for the ability to summon music, order food and control lights by voice commands. Amazon.com’s Alexa voice assistant is the early leader and could spur up to $12 billion in Amazon sales in 2020, Stifel, Nicolaus & Co analysts projected this week.

Amazon and Google combined have sold more than 30 million home speakers with virtual assistants, according to analyst estimates, and the firms are working with hardware partners to get the same software into more devices.

Hardware makers’ varying strategies and decisions, described in interviews with Reuters at this week’s consumer electronic­s industry’s CES conference in Las Vegas, reflect differing strengths of Google, Amazon and peers. Google Assistant attracts them with its expertise in answering complex questions, its ability to adapt to different settings and broader language support. Alexa can be used to command more devices, is associated with making purchases, and has become a household name. Microsoft Corp’s Cortana is optimised to work with its services, including Skype.

Apple, whose Siri assistant features on millions of iPhones, has yet to weigh in on the market.

Assistant makers are scouting for partners and offering technology for free, expecting to capitalise on their brand’s deeper integratio­n into customers’ lives. An advanced microphone can add as little as $8 to the cost of a product, according to chipset maker MediaTek Inc.

Neither Amazon nor Google is forcing exclusive deals, hardware executives say, with the understand­ing that consumers may prefer a different assistant in different settings.

LG Electronic­s chose Google for television­s it unveiled last week, but opted for Alexa in refrigerat­ors because of its online shopping functional­ity.

Big brands not only players

When Lenovo Group Ltd decided to create an assistant-enabled screen last summer that would sit on a kitchen counter like a miniTV, it turned to Google. That was due to a many-year relationsh­ip that would help the PC maker get the product in stores fast, said Jeff Meredith, senior vice-president for consumer computers and smart devices at Lenovo.

The biggest brands are not the only players in voice assistants.

Television maker TCL Corp is turning to video set top box manufactur­er Roku Inc, which makes TCL’s TV operating system and has data on TCL customers that could improve personalis­ation, said Chris Larson, senior vice president for North America at TCL. Roku’s assistant will be less complicate­d than Google or Alexa, and TCL had to stick to one assistant because it would too expensive to support multiple models, Larson added.

JBL, by comparison, offers several speaker models, each with a different assistant.

People can use a speaker with Cortana for Skype calls and access to their Outlook work calendar, said Michael Mauser, president of lifestyle audio at JBL parent Harman Kardon, a Samsung Electronic­s Co subsidiary.

Users who want multiple speakers find Google’s linking functional­ity more appealing, he said.

Ford Motor Co’s announced a year ago that Alexa would come to cars. That followed outreach by Amazon, which had seen social media posts about people using the portable Echo Dot smart speaker in their vehicles, said David Limp, Amazon’s senior vice-president for devices and services. — Reuters

 ?? — AP ?? LG Electronic­s opted for Alexa in its refrigerat­ors because of its online shopping functional­ity.
— AP LG Electronic­s opted for Alexa in its refrigerat­ors because of its online shopping functional­ity.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates