Khaleej Times

Google woos developers to catch Amazon in digital assistant race

- Mark Bergen

san francisco — Here is Google’s vision for the future of computing: As you drive home from work, you tell your car, “Ok, Google,” triggering the company’s Assistant. You order food, the digital helper handles the transactio­n and makes sure it’s ready when you arrive.

Right now, Amazon.com and its Alexa digital assistant are closer to realising that goal, having cut a deal this year with Ford Motor Co to let drivers search, shop and control other devices by voice from their vehicles.

“Amazon kind of fell into this lead in 2014 because it wanted to sell more things to people in new ways,” said Brian Roemmele, founder of ReadMultip­lex.com, a website about voice-based commerce and computing. “Google is trying to evolve its online search experience into devices that have a voice. That philosophy limits its ability to really go after Amazon.”

Central to Alexa’s appeal: Amazon has thousands of voice-based apps up and running, far out-numbering Google’s tally. The Alphabet unit used its I/O developer conference this week to try to narrow Amazon’s lead by wooing skilled programmer­s capable of building tools and services that can make the Google Assistant more useful.

The company stressed experience with mobile software and the millions of things it already understand­s on the web and in the real world. Vehicle and payment functions were rolled out to expand the Assistant beyond the more simple ways people use it now, such as setting alarms and playing music.

“A lot of what you need to get done is transactio­nal,” said Gummi Hafsteinss­on, product director for the Assistant. “We take care of all the nitty-gritty hard parts.”

Technology giants think voicebased computing could be the next big platform, after mobile. The company that wins will have the most users talking to devices and the most developers creating new experience­s. Google’s Assistant has only been active for six months. That’s a major disadvanta­ge when it comes to creating that virtuous circle of users and developers.

It tried to get that circle spinning faster at I/O. About 7,000 conference attendees were offered a free Google Home speaker and $700 worth of credits for its cloud-computing service. The company is hoping these developers will use both to build and test new voice-based apps (known as Actions on Google) for the company’s Assistant.

It needs to fire up these developers, many of whom have already been building for Amazon’s Alexa system. By February, there were 10,000 Alexa Skills — the equivalent of an app for Amazon’s voice-based system — up from 1,000 in June 2016. Bloomberg News counted fewer than 300 Actions for Google’s Assistant built by outside developers on Friday afternoon. Last June, the

Google is trying to evolve its online search experience into devices that have a voice. That philosophy limits its ability to really go after Amazon Brian Roemmele, Founder of ReadMultip­lex.com

voice-based technology wasn’t available publicly yet.

Neither company is anywhere close to the dream of a naturally conversant machine. But Google is leaning on its expertise in artificial intelligen­ce fields like voice recognitio­n and automated language understand­ing to push it ahead if or when this form of human-computer interactio­n takes off. It also hopes long experience collecting and organizing informatio­n from the web will provide a useful fallback solution when the company’s Assistant lacks a specific Action to address user questions.

Take cooking recipes, an early use for hands-free speakers. By November, Alexa could talk budding home chefs through more than 60,000 recipes. That came from a Skills integratio­n with the cooking app Allrecipes. The latest Echo Look device, with a screen, is particular­ly well suited to voice-based kitchen use because it can show people recipes, as well as tell them about ingredient­s and cooking steps.

Bloomberg News asked Google’s Assistant to talk to Allrecipes on Friday afternoon, and the digital helper sent web links rather than an integrated voice-based Action. However, the Assistant has access to 45,000 recipe websites that have already been marked up with special code that lets Google’s software read out ingredient­s and other related informatio­n, Hafsteinss­on said.

“Google has better understand­ing. It has been working on AI much longer,”said Patricia Carando, a mobile developer attending the I/O conference. She’s been working on an Alexa Skill, but she was learning how to create an Action for Google’s Assistant during coding classes at the event on Thursday. Eventually, consumers will pick one digital assistant “and stick with it,” pushing developers to mostly build on that platform, she added.

A deep concern for Google is that more people will stick with Amazon or a potential device from other competitor­s like Apple.

That’s behind Google’s rush to integrate its Assistant with any and all connected devices. At I/O, Google executives unveiled Home Graph, a system for connecting and controllin­g smart home devices by speaking to the Assistant. There are about 70 outside companies working with Google to sync things like dishwasher­s, fridges and light bulbs to the voice-based platform, including GE Appliances, Osram Lighting and Leviton, the internet giant said.

Even so, Amazon is making the most of its earlier start. The day before I/O began, a new Amazon program emerged for outside developers working with the company’s Alexa digital assistant, which controls its Echo devices and a rising number of other gadgets. If users talk a lot to a developer’s Alexa Skill, then Amazon will send a reward of cold hard cash, according to note posted Amazon’s Alexa developer website.

On Amazon’s website, there are hundreds of home devices already for sale that work with Alexa, made by roughly 30 companies such as Samsung Electronic­s Co, Philips and Wink. — Bloomberg

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? Google’s AI-based voice assistant is on more than 100 million devices now, and the company is leveraging a longtime competitor to expand the technology to even more people.
— Bloomberg Google’s AI-based voice assistant is on more than 100 million devices now, and the company is leveraging a longtime competitor to expand the technology to even more people.

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