Showing posts with label Amazon Echo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amazon Echo. Show all posts
Thursday, May 30, 2019
Amazon digital assistant Alexa gets new skill: amnesia
SAN FRANCISCO -- Amazon on Wednesday added the ability to tell its Alexa digital assistant to forget what it has heard in a move that could assuage concerns about Echo devices remembering conversations.
The command "Alexa, delete everything I said today" will get the virtual aide to do just that, the internet colossus said in an online post.
Amazon added it was working on narrowing the command to ordering Alexa to delete what was just said.
Alexa is the brains in voice-controlled Echo smart speakers, which feature microphones.
Concerns have been raised that internet-linked smart speakers with built-in microphones or cameras could snoop on private conversations or moments.
The new feature will be added to an Alexa privacy hub that provides controls for information shared with or by Echo devices, which also allow microphones and cameras to be turned off.
Microphones and cameras on Echo smart speakers can also be turned off.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Monday, February 11, 2019
Side-by-side: Google Home versus Amazon Echo
Thinking of getting a smart speaker for your home? Our resident tech expert makes a point-by-point comparison of the two most popular brands.
The smart home has been one of the great tech dreams for decades. The marketing and media of the 60s and 70s were filled with the promise of kitchen computers, while World’s Fairs and even cartoons like The Jetsons described robots that fulfilled homeowners’ every beck and call.
While we don’t quite yet have metal maids that can cook for us, the rest of the smart home dream is becoming more and more accessible each day. This is highlighted by the affordability and convenience of voice-controlled smart speakers, which offer virtual assistants that can control smart home devices through simple, natural language voice commands.
The top players in this industry are Google and Amazon, whose Home and Echo devices, respectively, have sold over a hundred million devices combined. But which one is the best smart speaker, and the best virtual assistant? Let’s pit them against each other and find out.
For the purposes of this comparison, we’ll only be looking at the standard Google Home and the standard Amazon Echo hardware, ignoring the smaller versions such as the Echo Dot, and display-equipped devices like the Echo Show.
Design
This is a mostly subjective competition. The Google Home has a unique design, and is almost like a modern sculpture. But the Amazon Echo’s simple cylindrical and wide variety of materials, including an optional wood finish, give it a classier, more timeless look that is suitable as an accent piece for any home.
Sound Quality
Google Home has plenty of punch to it, with a lot of bass that feels like it comes from a bigger speaker. But it suffers from a loss in clarity. The Amazon Echo has a more reasonable amount of bass, as well as better volume, clarity, and overall quality.
Digital Assistant
Alexa, Amazon’s voice assistant, has a variety of “skills” that connect to plenty of third-party services and actions. However, Google Home takes the win here, because of Google Assistant’s powerful natural language system, which can recognize more complex questions and provide better answers. Google Assistant also supports chaining multiple commands together in one sentence, though you can have multiple preset actions with Alexa by creating custom routines.
Streaming Services
When you buy one of these devices, pick the one whose ecosystem you have more of an investment in. Choose Google Home for example if you have Play Music as your main deal, or Amazon Echo if you use Prime Music and Audible. Both of these devices support Spotify, though.
Smart Home Support
While both support the most popular smart home brands and systems, Amazon Alexa can control many more third-party devices than Google can. Look up all of your IoT and smart devices and see which virtual assistant they support. However, when in doubt, choose the Echo.
Pricing
The standard Google Home goes for $130, while the Amazon Echo is $100, giving a minor edge to Amazon in pricing.
Conclusion
Overall, the Amazon Echo wins the race by just a smidgen, offering better sound, having more third-party smart home support, and being cheaper than the Google Home. While Alexa isn’t quite as “intelligent” as Google Assistant, she more than makes up for it with a wider range of supported brands.
That said, both are great choices for the majority of people, thanks to cross-platform support for most smart home devices. You can’t go wrong either way. Smart speaker tech has matured enough that they can both be viable parts of everyone’s smart home.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
The smart home has been one of the great tech dreams for decades. The marketing and media of the 60s and 70s were filled with the promise of kitchen computers, while World’s Fairs and even cartoons like The Jetsons described robots that fulfilled homeowners’ every beck and call.
While we don’t quite yet have metal maids that can cook for us, the rest of the smart home dream is becoming more and more accessible each day. This is highlighted by the affordability and convenience of voice-controlled smart speakers, which offer virtual assistants that can control smart home devices through simple, natural language voice commands.
The top players in this industry are Google and Amazon, whose Home and Echo devices, respectively, have sold over a hundred million devices combined. But which one is the best smart speaker, and the best virtual assistant? Let’s pit them against each other and find out.
For the purposes of this comparison, we’ll only be looking at the standard Google Home and the standard Amazon Echo hardware, ignoring the smaller versions such as the Echo Dot, and display-equipped devices like the Echo Show.
Design
This is a mostly subjective competition. The Google Home has a unique design, and is almost like a modern sculpture. But the Amazon Echo’s simple cylindrical and wide variety of materials, including an optional wood finish, give it a classier, more timeless look that is suitable as an accent piece for any home.
Sound Quality
Google Home has plenty of punch to it, with a lot of bass that feels like it comes from a bigger speaker. But it suffers from a loss in clarity. The Amazon Echo has a more reasonable amount of bass, as well as better volume, clarity, and overall quality.
Digital Assistant
Alexa, Amazon’s voice assistant, has a variety of “skills” that connect to plenty of third-party services and actions. However, Google Home takes the win here, because of Google Assistant’s powerful natural language system, which can recognize more complex questions and provide better answers. Google Assistant also supports chaining multiple commands together in one sentence, though you can have multiple preset actions with Alexa by creating custom routines.
Streaming Services
When you buy one of these devices, pick the one whose ecosystem you have more of an investment in. Choose Google Home for example if you have Play Music as your main deal, or Amazon Echo if you use Prime Music and Audible. Both of these devices support Spotify, though.
Smart Home Support
While both support the most popular smart home brands and systems, Amazon Alexa can control many more third-party devices than Google can. Look up all of your IoT and smart devices and see which virtual assistant they support. However, when in doubt, choose the Echo.
Pricing
The standard Google Home goes for $130, while the Amazon Echo is $100, giving a minor edge to Amazon in pricing.
Conclusion
Overall, the Amazon Echo wins the race by just a smidgen, offering better sound, having more third-party smart home support, and being cheaper than the Google Home. While Alexa isn’t quite as “intelligent” as Google Assistant, she more than makes up for it with a wider range of supported brands.
That said, both are great choices for the majority of people, thanks to cross-platform support for most smart home devices. You can’t go wrong either way. Smart speaker tech has matured enough that they can both be viable parts of everyone’s smart home.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Friday, September 21, 2018
Amazon aims to make Alexa assistant bigger part of users' lives
Seattle, UNITED STATES -- From the kitchen to the car, Amazon on Thursday sought to make its Alexa digital assistant and online services a bigger part of people's lives with an array of new products and partnerships.
Updates to the internet giant's Alexa-infused Echo smart speakers will allow them to tend to microwave cooking and even have "hunches" regarding what users may want or have forgotten.
When Alexa is told "corn on the cob," a digital Echo speaker starts an AmazonBasics microwave oven in a faux home demonstration room, setting the preferred time and voicing what it is doing.
But when asked to add 30 seconds, Alexa paused and then started to play songs by the band "Thirty Seconds to Mars."
Such misunderstandings are routine enough with smart speakers that they have become fodder for humor, and even cropped up while Amazon devices and services senior vice president David Limp showed off new devices in a nearby building a short time earlier.
Alexa has gotten smarter, more conversational and even intuitive during the past year as teams at Amazon work hard on getting the digital assistant to better understand people, according to Limp.
Beer, pets and music
Alexa is even developing a personality, complete with a favorite pet or beer.
It has also learned to understand whispers, responding in equally hushed tones in a feature to be rolled out in the coming weeks.
Amazon on Thursday teased a coming feature called Alexa Hunches that is designed to infuse the digital assistant with intuition. For example, when a user bids Alexa a good night, it might respond by mentioning they forgot to lock a door.
Alexa uses artificial intelligence to identify patterns in the lives of users, factoring in habits, weather, time of year and more. To know what is happening with other smart devices in a home, the Echo speaker needs to be connected to them.
Amazon recently passed the 20,000 mark for smart home devices made by the Seattle-based company or partners.
"We are really at a tipping point for the smart home," Limp said while unveiling a cornucopia of new devices.
An overhauled Echo Dot smart speaker boasts much-improved sound and design while keeping the $50 price tag of the original.
Amazon added Echo equivalents of stereo components for home sound systems, along with improvements to its online music service, with partners including Spotify, Pandora, and Deezer.
Limp unveiled a "frustration free setup" platform intended to grow into a framework that any smart device maker can use to make getting gadgets to talk to Alexa as easy as plugging them into an outlet.
"That is not going to happen overnight," Limp said. "As we imagine a future that has thousands of these devices in your home, this is going to become absolutely essential."
And, of course, there was the $60 microwave, which Limp contended was a strong test because of how much microwaves interfere with wireless connectivity used by devices to communicate.
Guarding homes
A freshly announced Alexa Guard service synchronizes with Echo speakers in the home and security cameras from Amazon-owned smart doorbell maker Ring.
When Echo speakers are set to guard mode, they listen for breaking glass or the sound of alarms from smoke or carbon dioxide detectors and send alerts to smartphones or even security companies.
Ring cameras can also be connected to Echo devices with screens, letting people see who has come calling, demonstrations showed.
A new Echo Show device boasted twice the screen display area as its predecessor, and Fire TV Recast that acts as a digital recorder for traditional television broadcasts.
Not satisfied with being built into new cars, Alexa will be able to work in older models with an Echo Auto device that can be affixed to dashboards and reach the internet through smartphones.
"Amazon launched today what I believe is the industry's largest assortment of home automation products and added meaningful improvements to its services," said analyst Patrick Moorhead of Moor Insights and Strategy.
"The company once again separated itself again in the smart home space from both Google and Apple by adding new devices and capabilities."
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Thursday, June 7, 2018
Bonjour, Alexa: Amazon digital assistant heads to France
SAN FRANCISCO - Amazon on Wednesday announced that its digital assistant Alexa is heading for France in Echo voice-commanded speakers as of next week.
Software developers have created an array of "skills" for Alexa-infused devices tailored for French users, according to the US internet giant.
"Tens of millions of customers around the world are already using Alexa, and today we're excited to introduce Alexa to our customers in France," said Amazon Devices International vice president Jorrit Van der Meulen.
"In France, Alexa is French. We had to rethink the concept to honor French language and culture."
Echo devices with Alexa software compete against Google Home smart speakers, which became available in France last year, and with voice-activated devices from other makers including Apple.
Some analysts see the dawn of a "post-smartphone era" in which people take to interacting with computers simply by speaking.
"They're always ready, hands-free, and fast," Amazon said of its smart speakers in a release.
"Alexa is the brain behind Echo -- just ask, and she’ll answer questions, play music, read the news, set timers and alarms, check sports scores, control lights around your home, and much more."
Alexa is available in several countries outside the US, but the assistant has been operating primarily in English. The devices became available in Germany and Austria earlier this year.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Thursday, March 8, 2018
Amazon to quiet Alexa's cackling
SAN FRANCISCO - Amazon on Wednesday promised to keep virtual assistant Alexa from spontaneously cackling, giving people eerie feelings about what the artificial intelligence might be plotting.
Users of smart speakers with Alexa assistant software have comically expressed their fears in recent weeks on Twitter, even posting video snippets of speakers infused with the software laughing menacingly for no apparent reason.
"If Alexa is laughing at you to your face, just imagine what it says about you behind your back," read a quip posted at Twitter by @mattblaze.
Darker posts wondered playfully whether fears about artificial intelligence turning on humans were coming real.
"Every time Alexa laughs, an angel dies," entrepreneur and innovator Elon Musk joked in a Twitter exchange on the development.
Tesla co-founder Musk is among high profile figures who have called for vigilance to ensure artificial intelligence doesn't turn on humans.
Amazon told AFP it looked into what was going on and found that sometimes Alexa mistakenly registers the phrase "Alexa laugh" and obeys.
"We are changing that phrase to be 'Alexa, can you laugh?' which is less likely to have false positives," an Amazon spokesperson told AFP.
And, Alexa is being modified to say "Sure, I can laugh," before cackling.
Streaming television titan Netflix took the opportunity to spotlight a Black Mirror dystopian series known for twisted, unanticipated consequences of new technologies.
"Just brainstorming some @blackmirror titles while Alexa laughs maniacally in the distance," read an @netflix tweet.
The tweet included a picture of a multi-story, modern book shop overlaid with "The Bookstore That Enslaved Humanity."
Amazon began as an online book seller.
One video of a cackling Alexa posted at Twitter on February 23 had logged more than a million views.
"I unplugged Alexa and she's still laughing," one Twitter user quipped.
Launched in 2014 by Amazon, the Alexa digital assistant has spread from the company's Echo voice-commanded speakers to millions of devices, even cars.
Alexa competes in the digital assistant market with offerings from tech titans including Apple, Google, and Microsoft.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Thursday, September 28, 2017
Amazon beefs up Echo line-up and Alexa skills
SAN FRANCISCO - Amazon on Wednesday introduced a handful of new home assistant devices powered by its Alexa voice-commanded artificial intelligence, ramping up its lineup competing against challenges from Google and others.
The US tech giant unveiled upgrades to its Echo speakers which showcase the company's digital assistant.
The freshened line-up of Echo devices included a redesigned model with improved sound, along with an Echo Plus model.
Among the new features was the ability to make free voice calls to home phones as well as to other Echo devices.
Along with fortifying its hardware lineup ahead of the year-end holiday shopping season, the Seattle-based internet titan also announced that Alexa smarts will be built into BMW and Mini automobiles by the middle of next year.
"Voice is a big part of the future, especially in cars," Alex automotive vice president Ned Curic said in a release.
"Using your voice to enjoy content and interact with your car makes a great driving experience even better."
Carmakers Ford and Volkswagen early this year announced plans to infuse models with Alexa virtual assistant technology.
People in BMW or Mini cars will be able to ask Alexa for directions, make call, control smart homes, check news, and more while motoring along, the companies said in a release.
"By making this step and integrating Alexa into our models from 2018, BMW and MINI will form a more intrinsic part of our customers’ digital lifestyles," said BMW senior vice president of digital services Dieter May.
"Voice control first featured in BMW Group cars many years ago, and we are now enhancing its functionality by adding a digital ecosystem."
Alexa is up against digital assistant software fielded by Apple, Google and Microsoft as they internet giants invest in a future where computing power is ubiquitous and voice-commanded.
On the hardware side, Amazon introduced a new small, round Echo Spot with a circular screen for displaying digital content.
"Echo Spot combines the popular small design of Echo Dot, the display of Echo Show, and the features you love about Alexa," senior vice president Tom Taylor said.
"See the weather, watch video news briefings, glance at your alarm clock, check on your kids, and more."
Echo Spot could be ordered at the online retailer's website for $130 and was to begin shipping in December.
Amazon also showed off a new Fire TV device capable of streaming ultra-high definition 4K video from the internet to televisions.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Friday, September 1, 2017
Ask and you shall receive in world of voice shopping
SAN FRANCISCO - Ordering pizza from the sofa without lifting a finger has joined the list of modern-day conveniences thanks to a hot trend in voice-commanded smart speakers.
Amazon, Apple and Google are duking it out with devices designed to sit out of sight in homes, awaiting spoken commands to tend to tasks such as ordering goods, finding information, playing music, mapping routes, or reading email.
According to Gartner, the market for voice-activated speakers equipped with artificial intelligence and synced to the internet will grow to $3.52 billion in 2021 from $360 million in 2015.
While it is difficult to assess how many people use the devices to order online, industry analysts see it as a trend.
"Shopping through speakers is still an early adopter activity," said Creative Strategies analyst Carolina Milanesi.
"It's going to be slow. It's not going to be overnight."
Thanks to bargain prices for Amazon Echo devices in particular, smart speakers are becoming mainstream but consumers are not yet ready to fully trust the technology, Milanesi said.
Voice-controlled shopping, for now, involves mainly straight-forward, repeated buys such as laundry soap or dog treats, with people tending to want to actually see big-ticket items, especially if they involve style or color choices, she said.
MINIMAL EFFORT
Lifestyles revolving around smartphones, with less time spent in front of desktop or laptop computers, were expected to enhance the lure of shopping by voice.
A fan watching a sporting match on television can simply call out for their favorite pizza. Someone cooking can give an oral order to restock olive oil before they forget.
"Convenience is something that drives a lot of behavior," Milanesi said, noting that voice-commands even spare the trouble of tapping a screen to open an app.
"It's human behavior, the least amount of effort for the greatest reward."
Analyst Jack Gold of J. Gold Associated considered voice-shopping a major trend that has been embraced by distributors and technology firms, Amazon foremost among them.
Amazon launched its first Echo device in 2014 and has already sold millions of the smart speakers, according to industry trackers.
Echo devices are built with Alexa artificial intelligence for conversational style interactions.
Amazon dominates the smart speaker industry, with 70 percent of the market in the US while second-place Google Home has about 24 percent, according to eMarketer.
And with the recent acquisition of trendy Whole Foods organic supermarket chain, Amazon will enable Echo users to order groceries from those shops. It will also sell the smart speakers at Whole Foods, giving the online retailer real-world outlets.
Amazon's Alexa and Microsoft's Cortana will start talking to each other in a first of its kind alliance of rival digital assistants, the companies said this week.
Echo device users will be able to ask Alexa to bring in Cortana as a "guest" to tend to tasks such as booking meetings or reading work email.
Meanwhile, those with devices powered by Windows 10 software will be able to have Cortana bring in Alexa for tasks such as controlling smart devices in homes or, of course, ordering items from Amazon.
SPOKEN LOYALTY
Apple this year unveiled a "HomePod" speaker set to begin shipping in December.
Not to be left behind, South Korean consumer electronics colossus Samsung recently announced it was working on a smart speaker.
Wal-Mart, the world's biggest retailer, and Google are teaming up in an attempt to challenge Amazon's growing dominance in online shopping.
The venture marries Google's hands-free voice activated Google Home software to Wal-Mart's vast network of US stores to allow customers to order groceries and other items to be home delivered through Google Express.
Voice-commanded shopping is a good way to enhance customer loyalty, and companies could eventually start pushing ads through smart speakers, according to analyst Gold.
"Attracting customers to their marketplaces is exactly what (companies) want," Gold said, warning that the trend could wind up better for businesses than for consumers as shopping gets concentrated, say at Amazon or Google Express.
"It's a continuous strategy."
Analyst Colin Sebastian of Baird expected voice shopping to bite into Google's revenue over time as voice interactions mean fewer online ads served up by the internet company.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Tuesday, December 27, 2016
Amazon calls 2016 holiday season its best ever; shares rise
NEW YORK - Amazon.com Inc. said it shipped more than 1 billion items worldwide this holiday season, which the top online retailer called its best ever, and its shares rose 1.6 percent in afternoon trade.
The Amazon Echo home assistant and its smaller version, Echo Dot, topped the best-sellers list, said Jeff Wilke, chief executive of Amazon's worldwide consumer division, in a press release.
"Despite our best efforts and ramped-up production, we still had trouble keeping them in stock," he said.
Sales of voice-controlled Echo devices were nine times more than they were during last year's holiday season, the company said. Amazon did not disclose comparable sales figures from a year earlier.
"It's all relative to other numbers that they’ve never told us," said analyst Jan Dawson of Jackdaw Research.
Amazon likely sold between 4 million and 5 million devices this year to date with Alexa, the voice-controlled assistant on the Echo, estimated Morningstar analyst R.J. Hottovy in a research note. Shoppers can command the Echo to perform a host of tasks, from playing music to turning on Christmas lights.
"While Amazon's device sales are still relatively small growth drivers currently, we believe the proliferation of these devices will drive more ubiquitous use of Amazon services over time," said Baird Equity Research analyst Colin Sebastian in a note, pointing to customers ordering more items by speaking to the Echo.
More than 72 percent of Amazon's customers worldwide shopped through mobile devices, the company added, and Dec. 19 was the busiest shopping day this holiday season.
"Prime customers are spending twice as much as other consumers using Amazon and helping to fuel rapid revenue growth that few retailers with only a fraction of Amazon's revenues are able to generate," Retail Metrics President Ken Perkins wrote in a note last week.
Alexa and Amazon Dash, a one-button ordering service, are making it easier for shoppers to "skip the trip," and will put more pressure on rival retailers as they try to garner in-store and web traffic, Perkins said.
Other best sellers on Amazon included 72-pack Keurig K-Cups, the movie "Finding Dory," Samsung Electronics Co Ltd's Gear VR virtual reality headset and Nintendo Co Ltd's Pokémon Sun and Pokémon Moon role-playing video games, the company said.
Amazon shares rose $12.33, or 1.6 percent, trading at $772.92 at 1:58 p.m. EST (18:58 GMT).
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Wednesday, October 12, 2016
Amazon challenges Apple and Spotify with new music streaming service
Amazon.com Inc on Wednesday launched a full-fledged music streaming service with subscriptions as low as $3.99 per month for owners of its Amazon Echo speaker, accelerating the industry trend toward more flexible pricing after years of sticking to $9.99 subscriptions.
The new streaming service, called "Amazon Music Unlimited," lets users access a vast catalog of songs on demand, similar to Spotify and Apple Music. Subscriptions to play music on the Echo cost $3.99 per month; for access beyond that device, subscriptions cost $7.99 a month for members of Amazon's Prime shipping and video service and $9.99 for non-members. Amazon will continue to offer Prime members a limited streaming service for free.
As it plunges deeper into the crowded streaming field, Amazon is counting on the Echo, a smart speaker that responds to voice commands, to set it apart. Released broadly last year, the Echo has become a surprise hit, prompting many to predict that voice will become a key way users interact with technology - and music is central to the device's appeal.
Amazon has built an elaborate system of voice controls for listening on the Echo. The company believes such smart home devices will be a key source of growth for the music industry, said Steve Boom, vice president of Amazon Music.
"The first phase of growth (in music streaming) was driven almost entirely by smartphones," he said in an interview. "We believe pretty strongly that the next phase of growth in streaming is going to come from the home."
Reuters reported details of Amazon's streaming plans in June.
The low price for Amazon's streaming service is consistent with the company's reputation for undercutting the competition and signals the music industry is beginning to accommodate consumers who are unwilling to pay $9.99 per month. Having watched revenues plummet from the CD era, label executives have been reluctant to budge on price, but they have come under pressure as streaming accounts for more of the pie.
Boom said he is optimistic that the new prices will expand the market.
"We're moving music away from a one-size-fits-all approach," Boom said. "We are the ones who have been pushing this the hardest."
Streaming services must pay a majority of their revenues to rights holders, a business model that has left Pandora and Spotify struggling to turn a profit. But Amazon can afford to take a loss on music streaming, and the boost to Prime is well worth it, analysts say.
The premium music service, following the release of a standalone video service, suggests Amazon will increasingly offer basic media options through Prime while selling additional subscriptions for consumers who want to go deeper, said analyst Jan Dawson of Jackdaw Research.
"It's just making Prime that much stickier," he said.
Amazon is also hopeful that artificial intelligence will keep users tuned in. Recommendations based on listening habits have become a staple of streaming services, and Amazon has also woven artificial intelligence into the system so users can request songs that fit a particular mood or search with lyrics.
Data from the Echo has taught Amazon much about the language of music, said Kintan Brahmbhatt, director of Amazon Music.
"You can ask for Michael Jackson by saying, 'Play music by the King of Pop,'" he said. "It's smart enough to know that's what you meant."
Despite the low price for Echo-only subscriptions, Amazon and the labels are likely betting that consumers will be motivated to upgrade so they can listen on more devices, said Ted Cohen, managing partner of TAG Strategic.
"At a certain point you'll get frustrated and go, 'Oh, what the heck,'" he said.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Thursday, April 9, 2015
WATCH: Amazon gives new power to personal assistant Alexa
WASHINGTON - Amazon's personal assistant speaker is taking over more functions for home automation networks.
The device introduced last year as Amazon Echo, which responds to voice commands and answers questions, can now turn compatible lights on and off, control fans, heaters and other devices.
A customer can activate the assistant by saying "Amazon" or "Alexa."
So a customer can say, "Alexa, turn on the hallway light" or "Alexa, dim the living room lights to 20 percent," according to examples provided by Amazon.
The US online giant has added other features since introducing the device in November, including integrating with Pandora's online radio service, getting information on traffic or sports scores and setting schedule reminders.
These features could for example allow consumers to use voice commands to launch a music playlist, or ask Alexa to "add gelato to my shopping list," in another example cited by the company.
Amazon said its agreements with electronics makers Philips and Belkin will allow the speaker to integrate with products from those firms including smart lightbulbs, electric blankets and coffee makers.
Echo became available last year on an invitation-only basis at a price of $199, or $99 for those who pay for the Seattle-based company's Prime subscription service.
"Echo's brain is in the cloud, running on Amazon Web Services so it continually learns and adds more functionality over time," Amazon says on a Web page for the service. "The more you use Echo, the more it adapts to your speech patterns, vocabulary, and personal preferences."
A demonstration video online revealed a female voice responding to questions or commands preceded by the trigger word "Alexa."
A ring of microphones built into can-shaped Echo speakers enable the devices to identify voices even when music is playing, according to Amazon.
Echo accesses news, weather, streaming music and more using wireless Internet connections.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Thursday, November 6, 2014
Amazon launches a speaker you can talk to
Do you want to talk to your speaker? Amazon.com Inc has launched "Amazon Echo", a speaker you leave on all day and give it voice directions, like Siri on an Apple Inc iPhone.
As well as taking commands such as "play music by Bruno Mars" or "add gelato to my shopping list", Amazon said the device accesses the internet to answer questions such as "when is Thanksgiving?" and "what is the weather forecast?"
Amazon said the speaker, which runs on Amazon Web Services, continually learns a user's speech patterns and preferences.
Users start the speaker up saying the wake up word, "Alexa".
They can then feed Amazon Echo commands or questions or, if they want, wirelessly stream music web services such as Spotify, iTunes and Pandora via their mobiles.
Amazon Echo is priced at $199, or $99 for members for the online retail giant's Amazon Prime loyalty scheme. It is available on an invitation-only basis in coming weeks. (http://amzn.to/1x7ijFO)
Amazon has had an unusually busy year, developing a mobile phone, video productions and grocery deliveries.
Last month, the company forecast sales for the crucial holiday quarter that disappointed Wall Street and investors who are eager to see Amazon curtail its ambitions and start delivering sustainable profits.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
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