Alexa and Google Assistant should tell you when the next bus is coming |
VentureBeat

Alexa and Google Assistant should tell you when the next bus is coming
Khari Johnson@kharijohnson November 22, 2017 8:12 AM
Rarely a week goes by without news of a new feature for AI assistants like
Alexa, Bixby, or Siri. It's a fast-moving competition between tech giants
like Amazon, Samsung, and Apple, but despite billions of investment in AI
and everyone from Softbank to Will.I.Am entering this space, sometimes
critical or easily accomplishable tasks for the uberbots aren't immediately
addressed.
For example, for a long time, Google Home and Alexa-enabled devices were
unable to add events to popular calendar services, and Alexa has only been
able to create reminders since June. But one low-hanging piece of fruit yet
to be plucked is the ability to tell users about when the next bus or train
is due to arrive.
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Today both of the popular assistants can send directions to your phone and
help you get virtually anywhere on the planet, but neither can tell you a
quick answer about the schedule of a bus or train line near your home that
you ride everyday.
Since the answer to the question "When does the next 5 bus inbound arrive?"
requires no visuals or a response that's longer than two words, this use
case seems like an ideal fit for the voice interface.
To be clear, both Alexa and Google Assistant today have voice apps from
third-party developers that serve up bus or train times in major cities
around the world like London, San Francisco, and New York, but access to
these apps is sparse today, requires a user to search through an app
directory, remember the name of the app, or deal with a series of different
conversational experiences.
Fortunately, this may be getting easier. Last week, Google Assistant
introduced Implicit Discovery, a feature that will turn the AI assistant
into a recommendation engine for voice apps, so anytime a person says "I
need a ride" or "I need to order food for delivery," you may receive some
particular suggestions. Alexa is already able to make some skills
recommendations.
That means it may someday be possible to say "Hey Google, I need to catch
the bus" and you will be connected to an app that can answer that question -
but that's not the way to go. If people are required to say "I need to catch
the bus," pick a recommended app, then chat with the app to get an answer,
then few may turn to their AI assistant for the answer to this question.
They'll just grab their smartphone and search an appropriate app instead.
Bus and train times should be a native, not third-party, feature for all AI
assistants. Given the decline in word error rates for voice computing and
the increase in adoption of AI assistants across hundreds of millions of
devices, doing so could make a lot of people's lives easier, and even reduce
climate change.
I know that I'll need this information between 7 and 9 a.m. every day, so
this could feasibly be a programmable alert that speaks up every time I have
five minutes before a 5R bus arrives.
If you're particularly awesome with being on time, Alexa users could someday
use Routines to schedule bus and train time alerts to speak up at a certain
time each day. If you're particularly awful at being on time, Routines can
be scheduled to share the next bus time every 10 minutes or so every
morning.
As I've written in the past, I don't really want an all-knowing AI assistant
that can do all things so much as I want an assistant that can help me do
the 20 things I have to accomplish daily in an efficient, frictionless way.
Catching the bus is one of my 20 things, and the same is true for the
millions of Americans who take 35 million trips on public transportation
every weekday, according to the American Public Transportation Association.
Public ridership is up 34 percent since 1995, and that's not likely to
change anytime soon.
We know that today more people live in cities than any other time in human
history, a trend only forecast to continue, and before autonomous vehicles
are able to ferry us everywhere we want to go while you take a nap, the bus
and train are there and growing in usage.
Last year public transportation agencies in cities like Dallas and Los
Angeles began to work with ride-sharing apps like Lyft and Uber to exchange
data in hopes of resolving the last-mile challenge. In public
transportation, "last mile" signifies the short distance the average person
lives from a bus stop in a metropolitan area. Solving the last-mile problem
could help more people choose the bus or train over a car. In one year, one
person who takes the bus instead of driving saves 4,800 pounds of carbon
emission from entering the atmosphere, according to the APTA.
Sharing data between these government agencies and businesses could help
more people get to where they need to go, but so too can incorporating bus
and train times into the voice interface.
Imagine asking your assistant for the bus time, then, based on previously
shown preference or preset configuration of your assistant, the train time
is followed up with "Would you like a ride from Lyft to the train station?"
That's easier to do in the morning than trying to accomplish this with your
smartphone.
Bus and train times aren't as sexy as controlling your movies and music with
your voice, but making them available through Alexa, Google Assistant, and
other AI assistants could help more people ditch their cars, save money,
reduce carbon emissions, and just make life easier.

Original Article at:
https://venturebeat.com/2017/11/22/alexa-and-google-assistant-should-tell-yo
u-when-the-next-bus-is-coming/

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