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 Personal Assistant Systems


Whirlpool plugs Alexa and Google Assistant into its appliances

Engadget

Whirlpool's smart appliances have already had some voice assistant control, but they're about become particularly AI-savvy. The company has unveiled a 2018 lineup where many appliances support both Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant, letting you control most of your home using the smart speaker (or mobile app) you prefer. You can check the time left on the washing machine, start the dishwasher or change the temperature of your fridge without lifting a finger. Certain appliances have extra perks. The Smart Front Control Range and Smart Over the Range Microwave tie into Yummly's recipe app to help you cook -- you can send instructions directly to the appliance, complete with images and video.


Philips' kitchen-friendly TV packs Google Assistant

Engadget

A voice assistant can't help you chop vegetables, but it can talk you through how to get your own to look like they were sliced by a professional. It's one of the reasons that Philips has crammed Google Assistant into its new Android TV for kitchens, the 7703. The 24-inch Android TV comes on a large plinth that is also a 16-watt Bluetooth speaker to fill your kitchen with tunes. The unit also has Chromecast integration, letting you push content from a mobile device to the display with very little fuss. The headline feature here is, of course, the presence of Assistant, which will let you bark instructions at the display when you're otherwise engaged.


Google squares off with Amazon's Alexa at this year's CES

Daily Mail - Science & tech

Competition is heating up between two of the world's largest tech firms in the battle to dominate CES 2018, held annually in Las Vegas. Coverage of last year's trade show detailed the rise of Amazon's smart assistant, which was used to enhance everything from cars to refrigerators. Now Google is hoping to fight back with its own Assistant set to take on its rival and the company's largest presence at the Consumer Electronics Show in a decade. Voice-commanded virtual assistants packed into speakers and other devices will be a'game-changing' trend this year, CES researchers have said. Competition is heating up between two of the world's largest tech firms in the battle to dominate CES 2018, held annually in Las Vegas.


Suitcase uses facial recognition technology to follow you

Daily Mail - Science & tech

Hauling around a heavy suitcase may soon be a thing of the past, thanks to an AI powered suitcase that follows its owner like a well-trained pet. The robotic luggage is fitted with facial recognition technology that lets it lock on to you and stick by you, no matter what gets in its way. It also comes equipped with a smart-connected wristband the features an alarm that sounds if the case starts to go out of range or if someone tries to steal it. Hauling around a heavy suitcase may soon be a thing of the past, thanks to an AI powered smart suitcase that follows its owner like a well-trained pet. The annual technology convention doesn't open until Tuesday, but CES Unveiled is an early chance for attendees to see the trends likely to dominate the show this year.


Amazon, Microsoft's Awkward Partnership Sees Alexa Come To PCs

Forbes Europe

Just as Apple's iOS is forever linked to the iPhone, Alexa has been synonymous with Amazon's Echo speaker. But Amazon's digital assistant is becoming increasingly independent -- integrating into speakers made by Sonos, the Nest thermostat or lights made by Philips. Now it's also finding its way onto computer towers and notebooks made by PC makers, a move that could simultaneously ratchet up tensions between Amazon and Microsoft. PC makers like HP, ASUS and Acer are announcing Alexa integrations at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas this week, and in some cases the partnerships see hardware being upgraded to make Alexa more accessible, according to GeekWire. HP, for instance, plans to add a custom LED to its Pavillion Wave desktop computer tower that can glow when it hears Alexa's name, activating the digital assistant.


Garmin Speak Plus mixes Amazon Alexa with a dash cam

Engadget

Don't think it's enough to have Amazon Alexa in your car? Garmin thinks it has a better proposition: throw in a dash cam. Its new Speak Plus includes the same voice assistant that offers directions, music playback and other hands-free controls, but it also tucks in a camera that can both record "incidents" (read: collisions) and deliver alerts. It'll warn you if you're too close to a car, if you're drifting out of your lane or if that gridlocked traffic has finally started moving. The Plus continues to pair with your smartphone to get online, and can use either Bluetooth or an aux cable to pipe music to your car's audio system.


D-Link adds battery-powered and LTE cameras to its home security line

Engadget

D-Link introduced two new home monitoring cameras at CES that tackle logistics shortfalls of domestic security. One is a wire-free system boasting battery power that lasts up to 11 months, while the other can operate and record over LTE. Additionally, D-Link has refreshed three of its simpler, affordable models. All have sound and motion triggers, can record footage to the cloud and integrate with Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant and IFTTT. The Wire-Free Full HD Indoor/Outdoor Camera operates around a hub and as many cameras as desired, all of which operate on battery life.


CES 2018: Inside the Lab Where Amazon's Alexa Takes Over The World

WIRED

When it first launched in 2014, Amazon's Alexa voice assistant was little more than an experiment. It appeared first inside the Echo, itself a wacky gadget launched without warning or much expectation. As it took off, though, and millions of people began to put a smart speaker in their home, Amazon's ambition exploded. The company saw an opportunity to build a new voice-first computing platform that worked everywhere, all the time, no matter what you were doing. And it began to chase that vision at full speed.


How Big Data and AI Are Set to Transform Online Gaming

#artificialintelligence

If there were two technological advances that were said to have come of age in 2017, they were surely virtual reality and artificial intelligence. While the use of the former is there for all to see – you can hardly miss someone wearing a pair of VR goggles, after all – the application of AI can be much subtler. For example, how many people realize that it's AI that helps to filter out the email messages that seem to spam, despite the spammers' best efforts to always stay a step ahead? Or that it's this technology that helps companies like Uber and Lyft to manage their surge pricing at times of especially high demand? In fact, for the majority people, if you asked them for an example of AI in everyday use today, most would probably cite either Apple's Siri or Amazon's Echo but not be able to go much further than that.


CES 2018: Alexa AR Glasses Features Stock Prices, Weather Updates

International Business Times

A New York-based company is preparing to showcase the first augmented reality (AR) glasses to feature Amazon's Alexa voice assistant at this week's Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Nevada. The device is designed to present wearers with pertinent information directly in their field of view. Over the weekend, Bloomberg learned that Rochester, New York-based company Vuzix is unveiling its Alexa-enabled smart glasses at the largest consumer technology trade show this week. The 75-employee company that specializes in wearable display and virtual reality and augmented reality technologies managed to integrate Alexa into its invention thanks to an Amazon program that enables third-party manufacturers to put the digital assistant into their products. An Amazon spokeswoman has said that they are "excited about the potential of the glasses and the ability to bring Alexa to customers in a new way."