‘Cortana, Open Alexa,’ Amazon Says. And Microsoft Agrees.

In an unusual partnership, Amazon and Microsoft are working together to extend 
the abilities of their voice-controlled digital assistants.

Article Link: 
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/30/technology/amazon-alexa-microsoft-cortana.html
 
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SEATTLE — The crowded pack of voice-controlled digital assistants — Apple’s 
Siri, Google Assistant, Amazon’s Alexa and Microsoft’s Cortana — are good at 
numerous things. They can help people play music, set up calendar appointments 
and check the weather.

They can even get two rival tech executives, Jeff Bezos of Amazon and Satya 
Nadella of Microsoft, to join hands in a rare partnership.

For the past year, the two companies have been coordinating behind the scenes 
to make Alexa and Cortana communicate with each other. The partnership, which 
the companies plan to announce early Wednesday, will allow people to summon 
Cortana using Alexa, and vice versa, by the end of the year.

It is unusual for big tech companies to cooperate on important new technologies 
that they want to stand out from the competition. Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, 
Google and nearly every other big tech company is pouring huge amounts of money 
into making digital assistants that are smarter and can do more, seeing them as 
a new way for people to interact naturally with devices and online services.

But Mr. Bezos and Mr. Nadella are concerned that keeping assistants from 
working together could hold them back. The way they see it, each assistant has 
unique strengths that could benefit the other assistants.

In an interview last Friday at one of Amazon’s Seattle high-rises, Mr. Bezos 
predicted that over time people would turn to different digital assistants — 
also called “A.I.s,” for artificial intelligence — the same way they turn to 
one friend for advice about hiking and another for restaurant recommendations.

“I want them to have access to as many of those A.I.s as possible.” Mr. Bezos 
said.

As an example, Mr. Bezos cited Cortana's superior integration with Outlook, the 
popular calendar and email application that is part of the Microsoft Office 
suite of software. Because Microsoft controls both products, Outlook is 
integrated more deeply with Cortana than with other voice assistants. Through 
its collaboration with Microsoft, Amazon said, Alexa users will get answers to 
some of the same questions that Cortana can now answer — for instance, when is 
the next budget review with the boss?

Initially, getting the two systems to work together is going to be a little 
awkward. Someone working with an Alexa device will have to say “Alexa, Open 
Cortana” followed by their command, while someone starting with a Cortana 
machine will have to say “Cortana, Open Alexa.”

The Amazon-Microsoft partnership started in May 2016, when Mr. Bezos raised the 
idea with Mr. Nadella at Microsoft’s CEO Summit, an annual event for business 
leaders in the Seattle area. Mr. Nadella was receptive to the idea, so a short 
while later Mr. Bezos emailed a draft of a brief news release that described 
how their assistants would work together, both men said.

It is standard at Amazon to create such news releases for internal consumption 
as part of what Mr. Bezos calls the company’s “working backward process.” 
Through that exercise, Amazon’s teams depict in writing how a new product or 
service will look to its customers before engineers write a line of code.

In a phone interview, Mr. Nadella compared digital assistants like Cortana and 
Alexa to competing web browsers that provide access to the same pools of online 
information. “The personality and expertise of each one will be such that if 
they interoperated, the user will get more out of it,” he said. “That resonated 
for me and for him, and then that’s what led to the teams working.”

Mr. Bezos said he had not reached out to Apple or Google to invite them to join 
in the effort and does not know if they would want to.

“I’d welcome it,” he said.

“Hopefully, they’ll be inspired by it,” Mr. Nadella said. “At least that would 
be my hope.”

An Apple spokeswoman declined to comment, while a Google spokeswoman did not 
return a request for comment.

Apple and Google may see competitive advantages in keeping their A.I.s separate 
from rival assistants, partly as a way to protect a selling point of their 
mobile software, iOS and Android. Apple is especially finnicky about wanting to 
control as much as it can of people’s experiences with its iPhones and iPads.

“There’s no reason Google or Apple would offer it because they’re trying to 
drive their own ecosystems,” said Jan Dawson, an analyst with Jackdaw Research, 
a technology research firm.

By contrast, Alexa is mostly used on Echo speakers that sit around a home, and 
Cortana is largely used on PCs. Amazon says it has sold millions of Echo 
devices, accounting for around 70 percent of the market for smart speakers, 
according eMarketer, a market research firm. Microsoft says there are 145 
million active monthly users of Cortana through Windows 10.

The two companies have struggled in the smartphone business, which makes it 
hard to get people using Alexa and Cortana outside homes and offices. Amazon 
and Microsoft are cutting deals with carmakers to integrate their assistants 
directly into vehicles. While Amazon and Microsoft have released digital 
assistant apps for mobile devices running Google and Apple software, the apps 
are not as widespread and using them is usually not as effortless as the ones 
Apple and Google build into their devices.

Eventually, Mr. Bezos predicted, the primary assistant on a device will be 
smart enough to automatically route a person’s request to whichever assistant 
is best equipped to answer, without needing a verbal introduction between the 
two.

“In my view of the world, because that would be best for the customer, that’s 
probably what eventually happens,” he said.

 

  
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ATI (Adaptive Technology Inc.)
A special interest affiliate of the Missouri Council of the Blind
http://moblind.org/membership/affiliates/adaptive_technology

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