Go ahead and date your digital assistant
TOKYO: When Siri is asked whether she has a boyfriend, the iPhone's digital assistant is usually quick to deflect the question with a quip about drones always trying to pick her up.
For Minori Takechi, founder of Vinclu Inc, that’s a missed opportunity.
Takechi is the creator of Hikari Azuma, a miniskirt-wearing avatar. She can hold a basic conversation and wake you up in the morning by turning on the lights. Hikari will message you at work and greet you when you return home. She’ll also set you back about US$2,700 (RM11,550).
While Amazon.com Inc and Google are barrelling ahead with efforts to get voice-operated speaker assistants into consumers’ homes, Takechi says these products are too focused on delivering utility. Instead, his startup, based here, is betting that people will want to forge an emotional relationship with a digital assistant.
“My vision is a world where people can share their daily lives with their favourite fictional characters,” said Takechi, 29. “We live in a time when all kinds of robots start making their way into our homes. But much of what you see now is inorganic and mechanical and I doubt people will want to communicate with something like that.”
Hikari lives in a coffee maker-sized glass cylinder called Gatebox, as a hologram-like projection on a screen. She doe sn’t mind flirting. Say that you like her and Hikari will chirp back with “today, tomorrow and the day after!”
In its current form, Gatebox’s apmay peal be limited to Japan, which has earned a (somewhat over-hyped) reputation for being a place where unmarried men would rather develop a relationship with a virtual girlfriend. The good news is that the company plans to offer a variety of avatars, which could be anything from cartoon characters to sports heroes.
When Takechi set out to raise money in 2015, before Amazon’s Echo started to gain traction and Google Home debuted, most
investors weren’t keen on backing a hardware prosaid. ject, he Still, he was able to raise an initial 20 million yen (RM776,000) based on conceptual sketches.
One early fan was Taizo Son, the younger brother of SoftBank Group Corp founder Masayoshi Son. So far, Vinclu has raised about 200 million yen from investors including Primal Capital and Incubate Fund.
Line Corp, Japan’s biggest instant messaging company, bought a majority stake in the startup in March as part of its push into AI.
“Combining Gatebox knowhow
and technology with our own Clova AI platform will allow us to develop a new kind of post-display, post-touch agent capable of making the lives of the users richer and more fun,” said Jun Masuda, Line’s chief strategy and marketing officer.
Gatebox is still a long way from offering real companionship, and its repertoire is limited to just a handful of scripted interactions. But Line’s backing will give Takechi access to richer AI capabilities and an ecosystem of services that go far beyond messaging. More than 171 million subscribers in Japan, Thailand, Taiwan and Indonesia use Line to read the news, hail taxi rides and find part-time jobs.
Not everyone is sold on the tech industry’s rush toward voice assistants. Although Amazon’s Echo and Apple’s Siri give the
impression they can answer anything, in reality that kind of general AI is still years away, according to Benedict Evans, a partner at Andreessen Horowitz.
He warned in March that there was a limit to how many voice commands people could memorise and that some might end up having negative emotional responses to things that seem almost human, but weren’t quite.
Vinclu’s answer to the limitations of voice is kawaii, the Japanese word for cute.
Takechi said the company was developing behaviour patterns that would let their characters make mistakes without getting on your nerves. The bet is that when a virtual girlfriend fails to order an Uber, you’re more likely to forgive her than a disembodied voice from a cylinder. Bloomberg