Few days ago the Russian Orthodox Church released a new social network build on top of Telegram.
In this dedicated social network users can join the official channels of over 16 000 churches as well as connect to people within the same church. They can receive news, Bible readings and organise volunteer help.
Within the social network users can also use different chatbots available on Telegram. For example a chatbot which searches for a nearest pharmacy ect.
You can try the Telegram Social Network yourself here (available in 8 languages)
I think that Paypal integration to receive donations from volunteers will look interesting here:
/Paypal send @priest_michael 200 rubles for Tuesday’s candle
In this dedicated social network users can join the official channels of over 16 000 churches as well as connect to people within the same church. They can receive news, Bible readings and organise volunteer help.
Within the social network users can also use different chatbots available on Telegram. For example a chatbot which searches for a nearest pharmacy ect.
You can try the Telegram Social Network yourself here (available in 8 languages)
I think that Paypal integration to receive donations from volunteers will look interesting here:
/Paypal send @priest_michael 200 rubles for Tuesday’s candle
America new President really likes to use Twitter. He uses it to express strong opinions about all sorts of things. Occasionally, those opinions are targeted at publicly traded companies. After Trump negative tweets about some company their stock price abruptly drops.
So, one guy decided to write a bot that constantly monitors Trump’s feed and analyzes each tweet for mentions of publicly traded companies. So, after that you can immediately trade the affected stocks based on the detected sentiment: buy if positive and short if negative. Sounds like a big piece of fun, right?
Article about the experiment: https://goo.gl/LDa6a8
Also bot posts tweets out a summary each time it springs into action here on Twitter: https://goo.gl/J8ol7H
And even more - the bot is completely open source and available on Github: https://goo.gl/8kze2U
So, one guy decided to write a bot that constantly monitors Trump’s feed and analyzes each tweet for mentions of publicly traded companies. So, after that you can immediately trade the affected stocks based on the detected sentiment: buy if positive and short if negative. Sounds like a big piece of fun, right?
Article about the experiment: https://goo.gl/LDa6a8
Also bot posts tweets out a summary each time it springs into action here on Twitter: https://goo.gl/J8ol7H
And even more - the bot is completely open source and available on Github: https://goo.gl/8kze2U
Medium
This Machine Turns Trump Tweets into Planned Parenthood Donations
And it’s open source so you can help make it better
If you’ve ever been building a bot, you must have thought about ways to generate revenue from it. Here is a great article from Amir Shevat @ Slack about different revenue models for chatbots.
Actually, there are a lot of them:
1. Subnoscription model (Statsbot)
2. Ad serving (works not for all platforms, Slack doesn’t allow)
3. In-content ads (instant articles from Facebook)
4. Data analytics and market research (Swelly has a loooot of data about user choices)
5. Selling goods and services (Amazon Alexa to order products for kitchen by “Alexa, add to shopping list”)
6. Referral fees (different shopping assistants)
7. Brand promotion (H&M, Zara, BMW)
8. In-bot virtual goods (virtual coins in games)
And many more in the article below.
I hope it will help you choose the monetization model.
https://goo.gl/GDvKWl
Actually, there are a lot of them:
1. Subnoscription model (Statsbot)
2. Ad serving (works not for all platforms, Slack doesn’t allow)
3. In-content ads (instant articles from Facebook)
4. Data analytics and market research (Swelly has a loooot of data about user choices)
5. Selling goods and services (Amazon Alexa to order products for kitchen by “Alexa, add to shopping list”)
6. Referral fees (different shopping assistants)
7. Brand promotion (H&M, Zara, BMW)
8. In-bot virtual goods (virtual coins in games)
And many more in the article below.
I hope it will help you choose the monetization model.
https://goo.gl/GDvKWl
Chatbot’s Life
Revenue models for bots and chatbots
“A wise person should have money in their head, but not in their heart” Jonathan Swift
Chris Messina (inventor of the hashtag, Lead Developer Experience at Uber) and Amir Shevat (Head of Developer Relations at Slack) are the two the most powerful influencers in the space of bots I suppose. And it’s always interesting to hear their thoughts and listen to their discussions about future of bots.
And if you’re tired of reading, here is a recent podcast with Chris Messina where they discuss MessinaBot and personal bots, "bot skeuomorphism", the role of Product Hunt in the bot ecosystem, and a bunch of other topics.
I’ve also attached the file with the podcast in the message below to listen directly in Telegram.
Happy listening :)
https://goo.gl/54SPXU
And if you’re tired of reading, here is a recent podcast with Chris Messina where they discuss MessinaBot and personal bots, "bot skeuomorphism", the role of Product Hunt in the bot ecosystem, and a bunch of other topics.
I’ve also attached the file with the podcast in the message below to listen directly in Telegram.
Happy listening :)
https://goo.gl/54SPXU
O'Reilly Media
Chris Messina on conversational commerce
The O’Reilly Bots Podcast: The 2017 bot outlook with one of the field’s early adopters.
It’s Sunday evening here, so it’s time for #botoftheweek nomination.
This week I’ve found an interesting bot that can tell you a name of a plant. Just take a photo of any plant and send it to the bot, it will identify the plant for you in just one second. It is backed by a customized deep learning algorithm with tons of data and tuning for plants. And I can say it’s pretty accurate.
Screenshot: https://goo.gl/vyhnRM
Bot is here to check: https://goo.gl/uAhKVx
This week I’ve found an interesting bot that can tell you a name of a plant. Just take a photo of any plant and send it to the bot, it will identify the plant for you in just one second. It is backed by a customized deep learning algorithm with tons of data and tuning for plants. And I can say it’s pretty accurate.
Screenshot: https://goo.gl/vyhnRM
Bot is here to check: https://goo.gl/uAhKVx
Hey folks, I think that one way connection with you is too boring, because I don’t get feedback from you, so I decided to create a public chat where we can discuss a huge amount of bot stuff, like messaging apps, conversational interfaces, AI, ML and much more! Chat language is English, so feel free to join and share it with your friends if they are interested in bots!
https://news.1rj.ru/str/joinchat/AAAAAEIJ70FNIceDnr0WIg - JOIN HERE
https://news.1rj.ru/str/joinchat/AAAAAEIJ70FNIceDnr0WIg - JOIN HERE
https://news.1rj.ru/str/joinchat/AAAAAEIJ70FNIceDnr0WIg - JOIN HERE
Chat cover photo
https://news.1rj.ru/str/joinchat/AAAAAEIJ70FNIceDnr0WIg - JOIN HERE
https://news.1rj.ru/str/joinchat/AAAAAEIJ70FNIceDnr0WIg - JOIN HERE
https://news.1rj.ru/str/joinchat/AAAAAEIJ70FNIceDnr0WIg - JOIN HERE
Chat cover photo
While working on our last bot, we were kinda surprised that users don’t always click buttons when they see buttons, don’t always respond in text when they see a question, but they tend to interact more with visual content like stickers, images, gifs etc.
Here is an interesting from Dashbot, they’ve processed almost 700 million messages through their platform and analyzed them to find a percentage of text, images, stickers and other types of messages. They’ve also processed all the images through the Amazon’s Rekognition API to find out what was pictured on them. Very interesting statistics to look through.
https://goo.gl/A4Vc32
Here is an interesting from Dashbot, they’ve processed almost 700 million messages through their platform and analyzed them to find a percentage of text, images, stickers and other types of messages. They’ve also processed all the images through the Amazon’s Rekognition API to find out what was pictured on them. Very interesting statistics to look through.
https://goo.gl/A4Vc32
VentureBeat
Users love these chatbot images, stickers, and animated GIFs
At Dashbot, we’ve processed almost 700 million messages through our platform.One of the interesting aspects of conversational interfaces is the unstructured data users send in the form of bots -
News from the messengers side: Amazon unveils Chime, looks to reinvent the conference call with new Skype and GoToMeeting competitor. Pricing starts at $2.50 per user per month on the lowest end, with a higher tier plan of $15 per user which includes video and screen-sharing among other features. There is a basic option available for free but that is limited to video calls and chat rooms between two users.
Maxim keeps fingers crossed while dreaming about death of Skype 🙏🏻
https://goo.gl/GFGGwS
Maxim keeps fingers crossed while dreaming about death of Skype 🙏🏻
https://goo.gl/GFGGwS
TechCrunch
Amazon launches Chime, a video conferencing and communications service for business
Amazon has taken the wraps off of its own Skype competitor. Chime is a new video conferencing and communications from AWS that's focused on business..
When designing a product for the web or mobile world, we usually operate within certain types of interactions and user interface elements — text fields, forms, buttons, checkboxes, or switches, for example. In the chatbot world, the interface elements are different.
I found a very interesting article, especially for bot novices, about all Facebook chatbot interactions. It has a very comprehensive and huge pdf with a visual summary of all the interaction elements that are now available for the Facebook Messenger bot. It’ll save you at least a couple of hours.
Article: https://goo.gl/G1MYQ2
Link to the pdf directly: https://goo.gl/GlngeY
I found a very interesting article, especially for bot novices, about all Facebook chatbot interactions. It has a very comprehensive and huge pdf with a visual summary of all the interaction elements that are now available for the Facebook Messenger bot. It’ll save you at least a couple of hours.
Article: https://goo.gl/G1MYQ2
Link to the pdf directly: https://goo.gl/GlngeY
Chatbots Magazine
Cheat Sheet: All Facebook Chatbot Interactions
When designing a product for the web or mobile world, we usually operate within certain types of interactions and user interface elements …
Long read about AI today (it's not new, but worth sharing): Apple gave Steven Levy an inside look at some of its deep learning and artificial intelligence work. Apple is said to have many people working on AI across various company initiatives. Of course much of the work is highly secretive, but some of it is already reflected in current iOS features—and not just Siri.
If you're not available to read it today, just add to the Pocket to come back to it later at weekend ;)
https://goo.gl/75agTq
If you're not available to read it today, just add to the Pocket to come back to it later at weekend ;)
https://goo.gl/75agTq
Backchannel
An Exclusive Look at How AI and Machine Learning Work at Apple
The iBrain is here — and it’s already inside your phone.
Have you even been dreaming about your chatbot getting featured on Facebook? It could be a total disaster if you’re not prepared!
Here is an article from team behind Nerdify bot about their experience in being featured which costed them a couple of sleepless nights :)
https://goo.gl/uJgNcR
Have your bot ever been featured? Tell us here.
Here is an article from team behind Nerdify bot about their experience in being featured which costed them a couple of sleepless nights :)
https://goo.gl/uJgNcR
Have your bot ever been featured? Tell us here.
Chatbots Magazine
What Happens When Facebook Features Your Bot?
Learnings from being featured on Messenger for a week.
It’s always been obvious for most of people that robots will take over different routine tasks of our daily lives, freeing us to work on more creative stuff. But, surprisingly, some of the easiest tasks to automate turn out to be creative ones (art, science/research, legal, policing/security) and many of the monotonous jobs we’d really like to automate are proving very tricky (cleaning, clothing, farming). Have you ever been thinking about this?
https://goo.gl/a6Tltr
https://goo.gl/a6Tltr
VentureBeat
Robots aren’t automating the jobs we want them to
We've heard many predictions of how robots will take over the monotonous functions of our daily lives, freeing us to work on highly-skilled or creative tasks. But in fact the opposite may be happening
Do you remember my post about decision trees vs web views? But what if there’s a much better way?
Here is a concept of building conversational experience called Random Access Navigation. It’s main idea to give people the ability to navigate without a defined path, while also being able to change their mind at any time. R.A.N. offers more than one solution for the most common bot criticism: fixed decision trees (everybody hates them).
Very interesting concept for bot builders.
Article: https://goo.gl/J7aRyp
Decision trees vs web views
Here is a concept of building conversational experience called Random Access Navigation. It’s main idea to give people the ability to navigate without a defined path, while also being able to change their mind at any time. R.A.N. offers more than one solution for the most common bot criticism: fixed decision trees (everybody hates them).
Very interesting concept for bot builders.
Article: https://goo.gl/J7aRyp
Decision trees vs web views
Medium
There are a dozen ways to order a coffee. Why do dumb bots only allow one?
If bots are going to live up to their hype, we have to move beyond the fixed decision trees and pre-defined noscripts.
Seattle-based company ReplyYes announced a $6.5 million round of funding focused on building a platform for mobile commerce via messaging services. Previously they were selling vinyl records through messengers and now they are going to expand because they keep seeing “a lot of interest” from lifestyle brands, tickets and events, apps/games, and some categories of consumables.
The company has enabled commerce over Facebook Messenger and SMS right now, and will be looking to enable more platforms in the future. Payment is built into the platform, as is shipping.
https://goo.gl/haoqRu
The company has enabled commerce over Facebook Messenger and SMS right now, and will be looking to enable more platforms in the future. Payment is built into the platform, as is shipping.
https://goo.gl/haoqRu
VentureBeat
ReplyYes raises $6.5 million to sell stuff via bots and AI, with human help
Today you can buy flowers, get reservations, and order toilet paper via bots. Tomorrow, you might be able to buy just about anything via Messenger, SMS, or any other messaging protocol.Seattle-bas
When we use Google to search for a movie to watch or for a product to buy we are presented with a whole bunch of ads. And it seems normal to us. But when we ask Amazon Alexa of Google Home to search the same thing for you, no such ads exist. Yet.
And it’s a great opportunity and a big challenge for advertisers at the same time. Because ads on these devices can’t be such dumb and straightforward as we see across the web. Your personal home assistant knows much more about you than your browser does. So, it must offer much more native and smart ads. And it already can. There is a plenty of use cases: knowing that it’s raining in the morning, perhaps it will offer to call you an Uber; 30 minutes before the Super Bowl starts, it may play an ad for Budweiser; when you ask when a movie is playing, it will not only tell you the time, but also offer a discount from the closest theater on the next showing.
As for me, I think that in future manufacturers of voice-enabled devices such as Amazon and Google will start to offer ad-supported versions of Echo and Home for free. A premium, ad-free version would certainly be possible. It’s pretty similar to the monetization model of big China brand LeEco which sells TVs with 90% discount but gains revenue from included TV services subnoscriptions and ads.
What do you think about future of voice assistants? I’m always ready to discuss with you in our public chat.
https://goo.gl/nxrglk
And it’s a great opportunity and a big challenge for advertisers at the same time. Because ads on these devices can’t be such dumb and straightforward as we see across the web. Your personal home assistant knows much more about you than your browser does. So, it must offer much more native and smart ads. And it already can. There is a plenty of use cases: knowing that it’s raining in the morning, perhaps it will offer to call you an Uber; 30 minutes before the Super Bowl starts, it may play an ad for Budweiser; when you ask when a movie is playing, it will not only tell you the time, but also offer a discount from the closest theater on the next showing.
As for me, I think that in future manufacturers of voice-enabled devices such as Amazon and Google will start to offer ad-supported versions of Echo and Home for free. A premium, ad-free version would certainly be possible. It’s pretty similar to the monetization model of big China brand LeEco which sells TVs with 90% discount but gains revenue from included TV services subnoscriptions and ads.
What do you think about future of voice assistants? I’m always ready to discuss with you in our public chat.
https://goo.gl/nxrglk
VentureBeat
Ready for ads on Alexa and Google Home?
Guest When I search for a movie time on my phone or computer, I am presented with ads (for example, from Google AdWords). When I ask Alexa, no such ads exist. Yet. The growing proliferation of voice-enabled devices like Amazon’s Echo and Google’s Home raises…
We have a very special bot for today’s #botoftheweek nomination. It is made by a 14-year old kid. Yep. His name is Alec by the way.
It’s a Facebook Messenger bot that keeps track of your homework. Alec was tired of trying to remember to write down his homework or enter it in a task app, so he wanted someone to keep track of it all for him. So, he created a Christopher Bot.
Christopher Bot asks you what homework you were assigned at the end of every class. Then at the end of the day, he texts you a list of all the homework from your day (and displays it on a webpage for the entire week). He texts you Monday to Friday at whatever time your classes end. He can send you a list of commands. He pauses when you're on vacation, and then he resumes when you get back.
It’s super awesome that nowadays more and more kids start coding early and as a result launch great products. Basically, when I was 14, my main activity was to chase that dog in a street or to climb to the top of that tree to throw apples into my neighbour’s yard 😫
Check the bot here: https://goo.gl/jIMbnc
It’s a Facebook Messenger bot that keeps track of your homework. Alec was tired of trying to remember to write down his homework or enter it in a task app, so he wanted someone to keep track of it all for him. So, he created a Christopher Bot.
Christopher Bot asks you what homework you were assigned at the end of every class. Then at the end of the day, he texts you a list of all the homework from your day (and displays it on a webpage for the entire week). He texts you Monday to Friday at whatever time your classes end. He can send you a list of commands. He pauses when you're on vacation, and then he resumes when you get back.
It’s super awesome that nowadays more and more kids start coding early and as a result launch great products. Basically, when I was 14, my main activity was to chase that dog in a street or to climb to the top of that tree to throw apples into my neighbour’s yard 😫
Check the bot here: https://goo.gl/jIMbnc
Robots are taking human jobs. But Bill Gates believes that governments should tax companies’ use of them, as a way to at least temporarily slow the spread of automation and to fund other types of employment.
It’s a striking position from the world’s richest man and a self-described techno-optimist who co-founded Microsoft, one of the leading players in artificial-intelligence technology.
Gates argues that these taxes, paid by a robot’s owners or makers, would be used to help fund labor force retraining. Former factory workers, drivers, and cashiers would be transitioned to health services, education, or other fields where human workers will remain vital.
Watch Gates explain why and how we should tax robots in the video below: https://goo.gl/Gyt1K1
Read the whole interview: https://goo.gl/x01L32
It’s a striking position from the world’s richest man and a self-described techno-optimist who co-founded Microsoft, one of the leading players in artificial-intelligence technology.
Gates argues that these taxes, paid by a robot’s owners or makers, would be used to help fund labor force retraining. Former factory workers, drivers, and cashiers would be transitioned to health services, education, or other fields where human workers will remain vital.
Watch Gates explain why and how we should tax robots in the video below: https://goo.gl/Gyt1K1
Read the whole interview: https://goo.gl/x01L32
YouTube
Bill Gates: We should tax the robot that takes your job
In an interview with Quartz editor-in-chief Kevin Delaney, Bill Gates explains why robots that take jobs away from people shouldn't get a free pass when it c...
There was a long time here without news about messengers though, but here it is: after long tests Facebook introduces an encrypted Snapchat Stories clone into WhatsApp. Let me remind you that previously the same feature was introduced in Instagram. And I also saw a lot of screenshots with Facebook Stories also (yep, in the main app), this feature is in test right now. Pretty interesting things are going on here between Facebook and Snap.
I’ve been listening to a couple of podcasts lately about all this “story with Stories” and Snap’s IPO. What I’ve understood from there is that basically a lot of people from industry are starting to think that Snapchat can follow Twitter’s fate. If you’re interested - link to the podcast is below.
But let’s just forget about all these discussions, predictions and “expert thoughts”, better take some popcorn and watch this exciting show :)
https://goo.gl/7waJxm
Podcast: https://goo.gl/A5r6h1
I’ve been listening to a couple of podcasts lately about all this “story with Stories” and Snap’s IPO. What I’ve understood from there is that basically a lot of people from industry are starting to think that Snapchat can follow Twitter’s fate. If you’re interested - link to the podcast is below.
But let’s just forget about all these discussions, predictions and “expert thoughts”, better take some popcorn and watch this exciting show :)
https://goo.gl/7waJxm
Podcast: https://goo.gl/A5r6h1
TechCrunch
WhatsApp launches Status, an encrypted Snapchat Stories clone
WhatsApp could put the brakes on Snapchat’s international growth with today’s launch of WhatsApp Status, a new tab for sharing decorated photos, videos and GIFs that disappear after 24…
