The Asian Age

The Amazon- Google AI battle at CES 2018

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The flash of the CES technology show in Las Vegas is all about robots, drones and smart gadgets. But its subtext is all about Google versus Amazon. Both companies usually shun convention­s like CES, preferring to debut gadgets at their own press events. But these tech giants have built an imposing presence this year as they work to weave voice- operated digital assistants more deeply into our personal lives. Google has plastered digital billboards and the Las Vegas Monorail with the “Hey Google” wake- up command. It’s announced a range of new gadgets featuring its assistant on everything from smart displays to pressure cookers. And it’s sent out the clowns — a jumpsuit- wearing army of advertisin­g associates wearing brightly coloured Converse sneakers that are hovering around partner firms’ booths to explain how Google’s technology works.

Amazon, which grabbed an early lead in this market, opted for a more subtle approach. Instead of an advertisin­g blitz, its Alexa digital assistant has merely been popping up regularly in “smart” products across the convention — everything from mirrors and toilets to headphones and car dashboards. THE STAKES

The two companies — and to a lesser extent, Apple, with Siri, and Microsoft, with Cortana — are waging a fierce struggle to establish their assistants as de facto standards for a new generation of voice- controlled devices. It’s similar in some respects to the decade- old battle between the iPhone and Google’s Android system in smartphone­s, or to the much older fight between Apple’s Mac computers and Microsoft’s Windows PCs.

Both companies see the competitio­n in existentia­l terms. Getting shut out of voice devices could imperil Google’s lucrative digital-advertisin­g business, the source of its financial strength. Amazon, meanwhile, wants to ensure that its customers can directly access its “everything store” in contrast to now when they mostly shop via devices and software systems controlled by Amazon’s rivals.

THE EVERPRESEN­T COMPUTER

In a video presentati­on by LG, one consumer cooks while reading a recipe from the smart screen of the company’s voice- activated robot CLOi. Another prepares to embark on a vacation and shuts off her lights by saying, “Hey, Google, I’m leaving.”

General Electric is showing off a suite of smart kitchen gizmos that connect its “Geneva” voice assistant to those of Amazon and Google. For example, you can preheat your oven by saying, “Alexa, tell Geneva to preheat the upper oven to 350.” China’s Baidu on Monday announced it was integratin­g its voice assistant into a lamp speaker and the dome ceiling lights.

Whether people will truly pay more for the ability not to walk over and flip a switch themselves is unclear. But manufactur­ers aren’t taking the chance that they’ll be left behind if one or the other assistant becomes dominant.

THE RUNNERS UP

For the moment, voice competitor­s to Amazon and Google remain largely in the wings.

Microsoft’s Cortana voice assistant, which is available on PCs running Windows 10, allows hundreds of millions of users to search the web using Bing. But it hasn’t been a huge factor in gadget announceme­nts leading up to CES. In fact, Alexa is even starting to encroach on Cortana’s turf by making its way onto some PCs. Apple hasn’t been prominent this year, either. But many manufactur­ers have adopted its HomeKit software in order to ensure they’ll work easily with iPhones and Siri. Apple, however, had to push back the release of the HomePod, its almost-$ 350 smart speakers, until “early” this year; it was originally scheduled for December 2017.

 ?? PHOTO: AP ??
PHOTO: AP

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