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BotCube
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Bots, messaging apps, conversational interfaces, AI & ML — hot reviews & insights from industry experts. Questions: @andreibandarenka

Awesome Bots: https://github.com/BotCube/awesome-bots
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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
Will Facebook kill Snapchat from the social media game in 5 years? (vote below by clicking 👍👎)

If you want to discuss this topic - feel free to join our public chat
The bot ecosystem is maturing, and larger organizations are starting to adopt communication platforms that let bots take part in enterprise workflows. There is a growing opportunity for bot builders to move their user bases from early adopters to big enterprises. But the opportunity to capture big clients comes with complexity: From stringent policies and security requirements to longer procurement processes and larger scale workflows. In the article below Amir Shevat shares some things to consider if you want to build bots or apps for some of the world’s biggest companies.

https://goo.gl/G8zVkV
Let me share with you guys an article we’ve just posted in our company’s blog. Basically it’s our CEO thoughts about why businesses need chatbots and messenger apps.

First hype about chatbots is over and now we have to estimate how market is changing and where it goes. What are chatbots? A revolution? A necessity? Or a trendy toy? Let's discuss!

Article: https://goo.gl/gSxfeb

Any feedback about the article is highly appreciated in our public chat. And also, thanks for sharing!
Recently (about 2 months ago), chat app Viber stepped into the field of bots and released their own bot platform to connect businesses with customers on their platform. And while we’ve already started to build a very first Viber bot for one of our clients they are going further and announcing a new in-chat “Instant shopping” feature that lets users search for goods without leaving Viber.

The launch will include Rakuten.com — the ecommerce marketplace formerly known as Buy.com, which was acquired by Japanese tech titan Rakuten in 2010. You may remember that Rakuten has been the owner of Viber since its $900 million acquisition in 2014, so this sheds some light on how Rakuten is looking to cross-pollinate its services.

Great move into a growing push to connect companies with consumers. Now, with in-chat shopping, another piece of Viber’s monetization puzzle is in place.

https://goo.gl/wUVVDe
Last November there was a murder case in Arkansas. What is interesting about it: there was one more “intellect” except people in the house - Amazon Echo. So, police obtained a search warrant for it in the hopes the device would cough up voice evidence to suggest the man had strangled his friend in a hot tub. But Amazon is doubling down on its refusal to turn over voice records from an Echo.

In a new filing in Arkansas state court, Amazon claimed records from the Echo should receive special protection under the First Amendment since what owners say to the device—and the answers its assistant “Alexa” provides—are a form of free expression and these records could reveal information about a person’s health or political views.

https://goo.gl/3ZbxIi
Should Amazon provide these records to police to help find the murder (👍) or not and it's a private information that could not be revealed under any circumstances (👎) ?

Vote below by clicking 👍👎

Discussion is also open in our private chat.
Do you remember Visabot, which helps individuals fill out visa applications and parse immigration law? They are launching a free service to help young undocumented people who are eligible for protection under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, also known as “dreamers.” The Trump administration has pledged to preserve the DACA program that began under President Obama.

CEO Artem Goldman told that Visabot will provide free services to dreamers to help them legally remain in the United States.

“We’re going to provide some types of visas for free that we believe are important for society, because people who need those visas, like dreamers, usually don’t have money. So we want to help them, especially with this Trump situation. We think it’s important”.

https://goo.gl/wK5PSD
Software developers use a lot of integrated development environments (IDEs) — such as Xcode, Eclipse, or Visual Studio — to develop applications. There are also specialized IDEs for certain fields, such as Unity, Unreal, or Blender for game and VR development.

Guys from PullString think a similar capability is equally important for the evolution of the field of conversational AI: to make it easier to create, debug, and maintain the combination of code and content that’s needed to make conversational agents, or chatbots. So, except from building really amazing and complex bots for their clients, Pullstring also contributes really a lot to the community by writing articles, books, etc. And here is the article about one more thing they’ve built: Conversational IDE called PullString Author. It provides a general conversational editing tool for everyone in the field; one that can be useful to both content creators and software developers alike.

I can’t tell you here about all the features it has, because “we’ve invested more than 50 engineer years of effort to build just such a conversational IDE”, so worth reading the article, these guys are really rocking the bots world 🔥

https://goo.gl/6Hqj5q
Do robots deserve rights?

What shall we do once machines become conscious?

Do we need to grant them rights?

That's really tough questions I can't answer right now, so I don’t want to put a long discussion here even the topic is very interesting though. Here is a nice video discussing all these questions, just watch and think.

https://goo.gl/p6ppUu
Folks from the company which products I genuinely love (Intercom) think a lot about the future of conversations in terms of UI/UX. As you remember I’ve already posted their thoughts about voice interfaces before. And here is one more article from their director of design with 7 reasons why messaging should mirror real conversations. I found a couple of interesting points there and one of them was a thing I deeply believe in - bots in public chats/conversations. I really think it’s the future and the way people will communicate and arrange meetings/order taxi/book tickets together - by inviting different bots into their chat, so they can both control the process and see the message history afterwards.

https://goo.gl/yX40WH

Previous post about Intercom is here.
Super interesting article about the current state of conversational AI and a tendency for people to be disappointed by its capabilities — the expectation of “intelligence” is not being met. Article features a bunch of problems NLP engineers try to solve these days. Have you heard about the Winograd Schema Challenge? If your answer is “no” - it definitely worth reading the article below.

Understanding what’s possible and what isn’t with today’s AI and machine learning capabilities is key for anyone looking to use such technology to build or enhance applications. If you’re not skeptical enough about claims being made about current capabilities, you could waste enormous amounts of time and money trying to do something that can’t (yet) be done.

https://goo.gl/9XDmCe
If after reading yesterday article you’ve decided to learn more about NLP and want to start with basics - here is a tutorial I’ve recently wrote about NLP engine as a service called api.ai. It was recently acquired by Google and provides a conversational platform for natural language processing and allows us to create bots easily. In the tutorial I’ll show you how to create a simple chatbot which understands basic natural language requests and works inside the Facebook Messenger.

https://goo.gl/Yd2Tiv

Any feedback/questions about the article are highly appreciated in our public chat. And also, thanks for sharing!
Popular voice assistants like Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant have a major drawback: they can only be connected to a single user account at a time. It’s a big problem, just imagine that you can’t prevent your children from streaming audio and video content that may not be age-appropriate. Also, all searches and recommendations through their interactions will be tied to your account and later you can start to receive some Peppa Pig ads after your children searching for a new episode 🐷

But it looks like Amazon is inching closer to a solution because since 2015, it has been working on Voice ID, a way to distinguish between Alexa users’ voices and correctly identify which member of a household is issuing commands. To achieve this, Alexa will attempt to match the voice it hears with a sample called a ‘voice print’. The feature could potentially make it easier to switch between users’ profiles on the fly and also to set certain functions – like placing orders on Amazon or running home appliances – to require authorization from a specific user.

It’s likely that this feature will gain a huge advantage in the game, as they’ll not only be able to promise more convenience, but also enhanced privacy controls for things like banking, as well as more personalized responses.

https://goo.gl/OfVK9P
In addition to the last post about Voice ID: Amazon debuted a Door Lock API that gives the makers of locks connected to the internet the power to lock or unlock doors with Alexa. The API is part of the Alexa Skills Kit.

“We’re currently working on a variety of security and safety tools within the Door Lock API in order to support unlock controls in a secure manner. We will not launch unlock support until those security requirements and options are in place,” said an Amazon spokesperson.

And again: ability to combine this feature with the Voice ID (distinguish between voices) could improve security for devices that use the Door Lock API to work like a charm🔥

https://goo.gl/OWiZwK
2016 showed us that your bot doesn’t work out if the conversation UX of your bot is bad. That’s why I want to post more about the good examples of conversational UX.

One more great article which was born after analyzing a plenty of user’s conversations with bot. It reveals 2 specific problems users face when they, let’s say want to book a room for 3 nights in San Francisco on Monday:
1. The first mistake developers or product people make is to process each input as a command to trigger an action from the bot. Usually users don’t write one big sentence like “I want to book a room for 3 nights in San Francisco on Monday”, their mind flow produces 3 messages: “I want to book a room”, “I’m in San Francisco, btw”, “I’m thinking about 3 nights on Monday”.
2. The second mistake is not to process typos. Users often do something like: “I want to book on Dec 28”, then “oh shit I meant Dec 27, sorry”. We need to care about it too.

Elegant ways to solve these problems is in the article below.

https://goo.gl/1o1z9J
Facebook Messenger has just released a HUUUGE update! I cannot wait to share it with you. Ton of cool new features like persistent menu localization and programmatic way to retrieve Messenger code. Awesome! 🚀 🤖

Messenger Platform Changelog — https://goo.gl/XTibZv

P.S. As you noticed, I found a nice way to share the content I generate here to Facebook & Twitter, with nice preview and link to the post. Hope you like that!
Interesting point of view in the article from TechCrunch reviewing the latest Facebook Messenger update which was released yesterday. The biggest update was done for the thing called “persistent menu” - it’s a navigation menu you can always access from any point of your interaction with a bot. So, this menu was rebuilt - you can now add categories/subcategories to it. It was also brought upfront - so it’ll most likely be a starting point of user bot journey. And the most important thing here - they have even allowed to hide the text input field in order to turn off all the text conversations. And I like it the most - right now you can decide which one bot to build: smart chatty assistant with great NLP capabilities or lightweight buttons/menus app inside messenger. One more step into a WeChat story.

https://goo.gl/W2dgFu
Yesterday, while surfing through the internet I came across an article from Typeform about the rise of the conversational commerce. I started reading it and after the first paragraph some weird thing has happened on the web page. A couple of seconds of frustration. But then, when I understood the concept of a reading process, my mind was blown. It’s so simple and so engaging at the same time. I don’t want to spoiler, so just go and try to read this article. I promise you won’t regret.

https://goo.gl/9m2vG9
Hey folks, I’ve finished my 5-days work on a huge compilation of different resources related to bots. It’s kinda big and includes everything from tools for development, marketing, analytics for bots to the events, books, influencers and newsletters. I hope it will be helpful for many newcomers and can bring a lot of value to the community :)

I’ve decided to put it on Github so feel free to share it with your friends by clicking ‘star’ button and also create new pull requests if you think that something is missing. I really appreciate your help, thanks! 💪

https://github.com/BotCube/awesome-bots
What does Sunday mean for you? For us it’s the #botoftheweek nomination at BotCube of course 😍

How do you have better meetings? Create an agenda. Share it before the meeting. Ask better questions. Take notes. Write down clear next steps. None of this is rocket science. The hard part is finding the time to actually do it. That’s why I want to show you a GoodTalk. GoodTalk is a a slack bot that helps make your 1 on 1s more productive, fun, and engaging 🎉

GoodTalk provides managers with curated questions and best practices so you can be more prepared in less time. GoodTalk prompts managers and employees to add things to the agenda between meetings. No more awkward silences. GoodTalk creates a dedicated space to build stronger relationships with your employees by showing progress. Staying on top of the little things makes a big difference.

https://goo.gl/jT0EBR