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Voice computing
#1

It's really part of AI, but a separate thread nevertheless..

Amazon has by far the best voice-based consumer operating system platform on the market. Siri and Microsoft’s Cortana both pale in comparison. The Echo is, however, not without limitations. Many questions can’t be answered by the Echo at this point. We have learned how to ask questions in different ways, though. For example, if Alexa can’t help us with a question, just rephrase it as “Alexa Wikipedia Jay Z” and the Echo will read you a few lines from Wikipedia.com on the aforementioned topic.  Many Echo users are starting to control their Hue light bulbs and other IoT devices in their homes by speaking commands to Alexa. What Photoshop is to Windows or the Mac O/S, these current and future household IoT devices are to Echo, which is emerging as the de facto audible operating system / server of choice to these client IoT devices. CTOs and CIOs will likely soon look into audible-based API calls to Echo or competing Echo products as another way to reach their customers.

The Next Operating System Platform that Matters | Sandhill

ANY sufficiently advanced technology, noted Arthur C. Clarke, a British science-fiction writer, is indistinguishable from magic. The fast-emerging technology of voice computing proves his point. Using it is just like casting a spell: say a few words into the air, and a nearby device can grant your wish. The Amazon Echo, a voice-driven cylindrical computer that sits on a table top and answers to the name Alexa, can call up music tracks and radio stations, tell jokes, answer trivia questions and control smart appliances; even before Christmas it was already resident in about 4% of American households. Voice assistants are proliferating in smartphones, too: Apple’s Siri handles over 2bn commands a week, and 20% of Google searches on Android-powered handsets in America are input by voice. Dictating e-mails and text messages now works reliably enough to be useful. Why type when you can talk?

How voice technology is transforming computing | The Economist

To further complicate matters, many voice-driven devices are always listening, waiting to be activated. Some people are already concerned about the implications of internet-connected microphones listening in every room and from every smartphone. Not all audio is sent to the cloud—devices wait for a trigger phrase (“Alexa”, “OK, Google”, “Hey, Cortana”, or “Hey, Siri”) before they start relaying the user’s voice to the servers that actually handle the requests—but when it comes to storing audio, it is unclear who keeps what and when.

How voice technology is transforming computing | The Economist

Voice will not wholly replace other forms of input and output. Sometimes it will remain more convenient to converse with a machine by typing rather than talking (Amazon is said to be working on an Echo device with a built-in screen). But voice is destined to account for a growing share of people’s interactions with the technology around them, from washing machines that tell you how much of the cycle they have left to virtual assistants in corporate call-centres. However, to reach its full potential, the technology requires further breakthroughs—and a resolution of the tricky questions it raises around the trade-off between convenience and privacy.

How voice technology is transforming computing | The Economist

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#2
Amazon has emerged as the central player in this movement after it released its voice-controlled home assistant Echo. And the tech giant made another very smart strategic move: It made the brains behind Echo—the natural-language AI Alexa— available to other companies to build into their products. At this year's CES, those devices and gadgets are everywhere. Here’s the full list of Alexa-powered products announced at CES 2017 so far, by category.

At CES, New Alexa-Powered Products Are Everywhere: Here's The Full List | Fast Company | Business + Innovation

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#3
This is going to be the year of Amazon Echo and its Alexa personal assistant, if last week's Consumer Electronics Show is any indication. But Microsoft, that other Washington-based tech titan, has its own master plan to conquer the coming market for voice-based assistants and applications. Much of that strategy hinges on Windows 10's Cortana personal assistant. Back in December, Microsoft announced a new set of tools for programmers to start building Cortana into their own apps and hardware, with Harman Kardon announcing a Cortana-powered smart speaker to take on the dominant Amazon Echo.

Microsoft explains the Cortana master plan - Business Insider

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#4
Microsoft's Cortana isn't the trendiest voice-activated personal assistant — that title goes to Amazon's Alexa — and its Azure public cloud plays second fiddle to Amazon Web Services. On Tuesday at the company's annual Build conference in Seattle, Microsoft executives spent hours showing how they plan to change that. CEO Satya Nadella also pointed out one edge that Microsoft still has over Amazon: its massive reach in enterprises. People who use Windows machines and Cortana are "the most valuable set of users in the core of the enterprise," Nadella said. People are using Windows 10 on more than 500 million devices every month, while Cortana now has 140 million monthly active users.

Microsoft Build recap: catching up with Amazon

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