Samsung’s new virtual assistant will make using your phone easier
Google, Apple, Amazon, and Microsoft are all known for
having smart, artificial intelligence-equipped digital assistants, and
now you can add Samsung into that mix. Today, the company has officially
announced its own spin on the virtual assistant, and it’s calling it
Bixby.
Samsung’s approach to an AI assistant (or “agent,” as the
company likes to call them) is a bit different than what you or I might
be used to from Siri or Cortana. Instead of being a database that you
fire questions at or tell to do specific things, Bixby is meant to be a
helper on your device, to make it easier to access to accomplish the
litany of tasks that modern gadgets such as smartphones are capable of. A
less charitable interpretation might be that Bixby exists to solve one
of the most difficult challenges in all of tech: make Samsung’s own
poorly designed software and interfaces easier to use.
Bixby will first appear on the Galaxy S8, expected to be announced later this month.
The phone will have a dedicated button to launch the assistant, but
Samsung says that its initial capabilities will be limited to a handful
of preinstalled apps, with others added over time. It will also be
limited to just English and Korean at first, though there are plans to
add other languages such as Chinese and US Spanish shortly after launch.
How much you’ll get out of Bixby, should you buy an S8,
will vary depending on your own needs, and it won’t be super powerful at
first. Samsung isn’t providing specifics on how exactly it will work on
the phone, but in a blog post announcing the service,
it says, “When using a Bixby-enabled application, users will be able to
call upon Bixby at any time and it will understand the current context
and state of the application and will allow users to carry out the
current work-in-progress continuously.” That’s a lot of words to say
that Bixby will know what you’re looking at on your screen and provide
options to take action on what’s there.
It’s admittedly hard to wrap your head around how exactly
Bixby is different from Google Assistant, Siri, Cortana, and others
without using it. Dr. Injong Rhee, Samsung’s head of research and
development for software and services, says it’s “philosophically
different from other agents,” and its purpose is to “change user
behavior from just using touch commands.” Bixby is not what you’ll use
when you want to check the weather, convert 48 ounces to cups, or find
out how old Jake Gyllenhaal is, but it can help you send the picture
you’re looking at in your phone’s gallery app to your mom without having
to switch apps or type her contact info in.
“Bixby is an intelligent user interface, emphasis on
interface,” says Rhee. “A lot of other agents are focused on being
knowledgeable, providing answers to fact-based questions, glorified
extensions of search. Bixby is capable of developing a new interface to
our devices, or devices that are going to host Bixby.” It’s designed to
let you seamlessly switch between voice commands and touch interfaces,
and help you along various steps of your task. Samsung says this is
different from other assistants, which try to complete every task from
start to finish and fail completely if they are unable to. “Bixby will
be smart enough to understand commands with incomplete information and
execute the commanded task to the best of its knowledge, and then will
prompt users to provide more information and take the execution of the
task in piecemeal,” explains the company in its blog post. Bixby may not
be able to do everything at first, but it will get you as far along as
it can in the task before you have to intervene.
Samsung knows it can’t compete with Google, Microsoft,
Amazon, and others when it comes to raw machine learning power and
putting vast amounts of information at your fingertips, so it’s using
Bixby to solve a simpler task that those companies have largely ignored.
It’s not hugely different from Google’s efforts with Now on Tap, but
Samsung argues that its deeper integration of Bixby within apps will
make it more useful and more reliable than prior efforts.
The overarching goal, according to Rhee, is “to make the
interface of the phone simpler and more natural to use.” He claims that
out of the box, our smartphones can perform over 10,000 tasks, while
current digital assistants — he contends — can only do about 100.
Samsung’s goal is to have Bixby be able to perform every task that you
can do with touch via voice. “Everything you can do with a touch
command, you can do with a voice command when using a Bixby-enabled
application,” boasts Rhee.
The article was published on : theverge
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