Google Assistant and Amazon Alexa fought for our attention at CES 2019

Google Assistant and Amazon Alexa fought for our attention at CES 2019

5 years ago
Anonymous $L9wC17otzH

https://www.theverge.com/2019/1/12/18168612/google-assistant-amazon-alexa-smart-home-companies-ces-2019

Amazon’s Alexa has become the household name when it comes to smart assistants, but its ongoing fight with Google Assistant is getting more difficult than expected. Products can support both Alexa and the Google Assistant, and since smart home companies want to sell products to as many customers as possible, Alexa has been getting fewer and fewer exclusive victories.

Google used its massive presence at CES this week to send a message that it has bigger plans for the Assistant, too. Even at other companies’ exhibits, Google deployed employees dressed in white clothes and Assistant-themed hats to talk visitors through the features it could provide on third-party devices. It also launched a new interpreter mode on Google Assistant that’s being piloted at hotels in Las Vegas, New York, and San Francisco.

Google Assistant and Amazon Alexa fought for our attention at CES 2019

Jan 12, 2019, 2:15pm UTC
https://www.theverge.com/2019/1/12/18168612/google-assistant-amazon-alexa-smart-home-companies-ces-2019 > Amazon’s Alexa has become the household name when it comes to smart assistants, but its ongoing fight with Google Assistant is getting more difficult than expected. Products can support both Alexa and the Google Assistant, and since smart home companies want to sell products to as many customers as possible, Alexa has been getting fewer and fewer exclusive victories. > Google used its massive presence at CES this week to send a message that it has bigger plans for the Assistant, too. Even at other companies’ exhibits, Google deployed employees dressed in white clothes and Assistant-themed hats to talk visitors through the features it could provide on third-party devices. It also launched a new interpreter mode on Google Assistant that’s being piloted at hotels in Las Vegas, New York, and San Francisco.