Hi Access Indians,
Tech Update:
Foursquare is releasing an audio-only virtual assistant platform
called Marsbot for AirPods that will play snippets into your earbuds
based on your location and let you record your own for others to hear.
The idea is to add an audio guide to wherever you happen to be. If you
walk in front of a restaurant, you might hear Marsbot recommend the
daily special, as described by the chef, or you might reach a scenic
view on a trail and hear congratulations from someone who was there
earlier.
What is Marsbot for AirPods?
 Marsbot for AirPods acts as a kind of invisible tour guide, only
piping up when you walk into precise locations. When you have your
earbuds in and the app running in the background, Marsbot will share
information about a business, local art, or anything else put on the
platform. When stepping into the right spot, the app will share some
audio tied to that location. It could be spoken by the artificial
voice of Marsbot or by a user who recorded something to play for
others who go by.
“There’s an invisible X outside of the front door of [a location], and
the audio starts to play when you step into where we draw the X,”
Foursquare co-founder and chairman Dennis Crowley said. “We’re
designing for a world where people have one AirPod in all day long.
You unlock the content by walking around.”
Is Marsbot for AirPods available for both iPhone and Android? ?
Marsbot for AirPods is available as an iOS app and works with any
headphones or earbuds. It will even activate if the iPhone is
connected to a car and drives through the right spot. When you pass
the tagged spot, the app will lower the volume of any music playing in
the earbuds, and any podcast will pause until the clip is over. The
app won’t interrupt an audio or video phone call, however.
An Android version of the app is in the works for the near future.
Crowley said the app is on iOS first mainly because they didn’t have
an Android engineer to spare, and “for AirPods” sounded better to the
team than a more generic term.
What was the inspiration for Marsbot?
 Marsbot refers to an earlier version of a similar idea except the
information was shared in text form; the decision to make it an audio
app was inspired by the very human-like voice assistant in the movie
Her, voiced by Scarlett Johansson. Crowley demonstrated an early
version of the app over a year ago at Betaworks, but the release was
delayed for a while this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Marsbot for AirPods last year focused heavily on cities and having
the audio provided by officials from businesses and organizations
spoken by the Marsbot voice. The version debuting takes that concept
and expands it beyond cities while giving people the option to record
their own voices to upload to the platform.
Foursquare has already added official audio snippets in ten U.S.
cities, but audio can be added to any location.
“We made tweaks, so it’s not so city-focused, but the content is still
tied to places you go,” Crowley said. “You could go on a hiking trail
and leave a piece of audio content, and someone walking there would
unlock it.”
Location-aware audio
Location-aware audio that activates without prompting from a user is
still an experimental idea. The proactive aspect of Marsbot sets it
apart from Siri, Alexa, or Google Assistant, though. Any voice
assistant can answer questions about a location, but none of them
alert you when you pass by it without being aware.
Right now, the emphasis is on making the audio interesting without
overwhelming users with too much information. As Crowley pointed out,
too many notifications from any app will make people turn off all
notifications or just delete the app. What people hear could include
historical trivia, an alert that someone you know who also uses the
app has been by recently, or even advertisements for nearby
businesses. That’s before considering what another person might choose
to record.
“Marsbot is the MC of the Foursquare ecosystem, but we decided to let
people record their own snippets too. It feels more like a content
platform than just an app,” Crowley said. “I have mixed expectations
for it. It could be a thousand or ten thousand people who get it, but
it’s meant to be an R&D project. It feels really new and interesting.”
source:
https://mail.google.com/--



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Best Regards,
Ronald Jason Escrader
| SR Associate. Accessibility Test Engineer, (SME).
Certified Digital  Web & Document Accessibility Professional from
"National Association For The Blind"
Delhi Branch.
Magic Software Pvt. Ltd.
C :-  + 91 9871591548
Email:- [email protected]
http://www.magicsw.com
8th Floor, Tower C, Tech Boulevard, Plot No 6, Sec- 127, Noida- 201301
bringing learning to life!

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