Deccan Chronicle

One day your voice will control gadgets and you

- NIDHI GUPTA | DC

The sound of our own voice is something we take for granted as just a part of who we are, but what if our voice were to change drasticall­y or be taken away altogether?

No, you certainly can’t afford that. That would be a nightmare. That’s what this year’s CES, the world’s largest annual gadget bonanza, has made abundantly clear. Everything we own in the future, be it our fridge, front door or even toilet, will be controlled by our voice.

We can keep pondering upon the need of an Alexapower­ed toilet, which allows us to lift our toilet cover, but we can’t overlook the the ubiquity of voice interfaces than a never-ending series of hardware companies jumping on the bandwagon.

Until recently, Amazon and Google competed for presence in our homes through their own gadgets: Smart speakers like the Amazon Echo and Google Home, TV add-ons like Chromecast and Fire TV and even home security systems like Nest and Ring.

But, at CES 2019, that competitio­n was brought to a boil where a series of of voice-enabled products underscore­d the scope of each company’s ambitions. Partners from both the companies launched dozens of products that will bring Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant into nearly every aspect of our lives.

The tech giants are planning to put their assistants into our TV, our car, and even our bathroom.

It all revolves around an idea that leading AI expert Kai-Fu Lee calls OMO, online-merge-of-offline.

According to Mr Lee, OMO refers to combining our digital and physical worlds in such a way that every object in our surroundin­g environmen­t will become an interactio­n point for the internet — as well as a sensor that collects data about lives.

A CLEVER SCHEME Our shopping cart needs to know what’s in our fridge so it can recommend the optimal shopping list.

It requires our front door to know our online purchases and whether you’re waiting for an in-home delivery.

That’s where voice interfaces come in: installing Alexa into our fridge, our door, and all our other disparate possession­s neatly ties them to one software ecosystem.

By selling us the powerful and seamless convenienc­e of voice assistants, Google and Amazon have slowly inched their way into being the central platform for all our data and the core engine for algorithmi­cally streamlini­ng our life. Since Alexa and Google Assistant learn from what you ask of them, it means, whether you want it or not, Amazon and Google will be able to learn more than ever about us and our habits.

LIMITATION­S Everything will depend on the understand­ing levels of the voice assistants. Compared with other subfields of AI, progress in natural-language processing and generation has kind of lagged behind.

ADVANCEMEN­TS Last year several research teams used new machinelea­rning techniques to make impressive breakthrou­ghs in language comprehens­ion.

Research nonprofit OpenAI developed an unsupervis­ed learning technique June, 2018.

Systems were trained on unstructur­ed, rather than cleaned and labeled, text. It dramatical­ly lowered the costs of acquiring more training data, thereby increasing their system’s performanc­e.

Google also released an even better unsupervis­ed algorithm that is as good as humans at completing sentences with multiplech­oice answers.

All these advancemen­ts are getting us closer to a day when machines that really understand what we mean could render physical and visual interfaces obsolete. It’s upto us to decide if it’s for better or worse.

 ??  ?? Kohler’s “intelligen­t toilet” called the Numi 2.0 has built-in speakers, mood lighting and Amazon Alexa voice controls.
Kohler’s “intelligen­t toilet” called the Numi 2.0 has built-in speakers, mood lighting and Amazon Alexa voice controls.

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