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
“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
VentureBeat
Your Amazon Echo will soon unlock doors
Amazon debuted a Door Lock API today 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.As part of the l
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
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
Medium
Looking at how people text
How can we make the bot experience feel more natural
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!
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!
Facebook for Developers
Changelog - Messenger Platform - Documentation - Facebook for Developers
This changelog covers what's changed in the Messenger Platform APIs. These changes include server-side APIs, web plugins, mobile apps and other services.
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
https://goo.gl/W2dgFu
TechCrunch
As Messenger’s bots lose steam, Facebook pushes menus over chat
Facebook’s Messenger bots may not be having the impact the social network desired. Just yesterday, online retailer Everlane, one of the launch partners for the bot platform, announced it was…
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
https://goo.gl/9m2vG9
Typeform blog
Experience our first conversational article
A conversational interface placed within an article about conversational interfaces. Could we get more meta? Try it out today.
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
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
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
Facebook is testing a new reactions feature in Messenger, which would allow users to add reaction emojis next to text in conversations. Users would do this by clicking on a button next to text, which would bring up a series of reactions. The reactions are similar to the current six reaction buttons for posts, but also includes a thumbs down button 👎 (yep, dislike).
The feature also includes a reaction counter, which would list the number of reactions on any given line. The feature doesn’t appear for all users, but the company has conducted tests on small groups of users before rolling it out to the larger population. I hope this feature will also be accessible through Bots API, will be a great replacement of a custom implementation with quick reply buttons.
http://www.theverge.com/2017/3/5/14821874/facebook-testing-reactions-feature-messenger-dislike-button
The feature also includes a reaction counter, which would list the number of reactions on any given line. The feature doesn’t appear for all users, but the company has conducted tests on small groups of users before rolling it out to the larger population. I hope this feature will also be accessible through Bots API, will be a great replacement of a custom implementation with quick reply buttons.
http://www.theverge.com/2017/3/5/14821874/facebook-testing-reactions-feature-messenger-dislike-button
Do you remember my post how it’s going with AI in Apple? Here is a new one from the same author (Steven Levy) called “Inside Facebook’s AI Machine”.
Facebook is relying a lot on AI. It cannot exist without AI today. Every time you use Facebook or Instagram or Messenger, you may not realize it, but your experiences are being powered by AI. Even Zuckerberg’s 5700-word manifesto invoked the words ‘artificial intelligence’ or ‘AI’ seven times.
If it’s too long for you to read - don’t skip, just add it to your Pocket to read later. By the way, thanks @flreln for this article.
https://backchannel.com/inside-facebooks-ai-machine-7a869b922ea7
About AI in Apple: https://news.1rj.ru/str/botcube/48
Facebook is relying a lot on AI. It cannot exist without AI today. Every time you use Facebook or Instagram or Messenger, you may not realize it, but your experiences are being powered by AI. Even Zuckerberg’s 5700-word manifesto invoked the words ‘artificial intelligence’ or ‘AI’ seven times.
If it’s too long for you to read - don’t skip, just add it to your Pocket to read later. By the way, thanks @flreln for this article.
https://backchannel.com/inside-facebooks-ai-machine-7a869b922ea7
About AI in Apple: https://news.1rj.ru/str/botcube/48
Wired
Inside Facebook’s AI Machine | Backchannel
The Applied Machine Learning group helps Facebook see, talk, and understand. It may even root out fake news.
Do you remember that story about Amazon Echo and a murder case? If not - the link is below.
Finally, Amazon has agreed to hand over data from an Amazon Echo that may have been operating as an alleged murder took place, after the defendant consented.
A hearing is scheduled for Wednesday.
http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-39191056
More about the case is here: https://news.1rj.ru/str/botcube/62
Finally, Amazon has agreed to hand over data from an Amazon Echo that may have been operating as an alleged murder took place, after the defendant consented.
A hearing is scheduled for Wednesday.
http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-39191056
More about the case is here: https://news.1rj.ru/str/botcube/62
BBC News
Amazon hands over Echo 'murder' data
The suspect in a murder case consents to Amazon sharing audio fragments possibly recorded on an Echo device.
This is an early stage of the moment we have all been waiting for: WhatsApp reportedly started testing system that would let businesses talk directly to WhatsApp users. Seems like we’ll see such a desired bot platform API inside WhatsApp soon (in half of year 😂). I’m happy because our clients have always asked us to build a bot inside WhatsApp but it wasn’t possible in a native way.
Also, it’s an important signal of how WhatsApp plans to make money from its massively popular service since it has not developed a business model in the three years since Facebook Inc bought it for a hefty $19 billion.
http://venturebeat.com/2017/03/08/whatsapp-reportedly-testing-business-chat-tools/
Also, it’s an important signal of how WhatsApp plans to make money from its massively popular service since it has not developed a business model in the three years since Facebook Inc bought it for a hefty $19 billion.
http://venturebeat.com/2017/03/08/whatsapp-reportedly-testing-business-chat-tools/
VentureBeat
WhatsApp reportedly testing business chat tools
(Reuters) -- WhatsApp, the Facebook-owned messaging service used by more than 1 billion people worldwide, is testing a system that would let businesses talk directly to WhatsApp users for the first time, according to communications about the project seen…
I’ve just finished reading a very long article about one interesting experiment which was done with a Kik messenger chatbot named Kokobot. But the main story here is not about chatbots at all, it’s about people.
Koko is ushering in a new era of emotional well-being, providing emotional support as a service to any product. With KokoBot, users have access to a peer-to-peer network that helps them deal with symptoms related to stress, anxiety and depression. For people who are suffering, knowing that others are in pain, and that they can do something about it, is one way of healing themselves.
I highly encourage you to find some time to read an article below about the story how chatbots can help people with mental diseases.
http://www.theverge.com/2017/3/2/14764620/koko-social-network-mental-health-depression-app-kik
Try KokoBot on Telegram: @thekokobot
Koko is ushering in a new era of emotional well-being, providing emotional support as a service to any product. With KokoBot, users have access to a peer-to-peer network that helps them deal with symptoms related to stress, anxiety and depression. For people who are suffering, knowing that others are in pain, and that they can do something about it, is one way of healing themselves.
I highly encourage you to find some time to read an article below about the story how chatbots can help people with mental diseases.
http://www.theverge.com/2017/3/2/14764620/koko-social-network-mental-health-depression-app-kik
Try KokoBot on Telegram: @thekokobot
The Verge
The empathy layer
"Everyone wants to be the Uber of mental health."
Nowadays kids adore their new robot siblings which help them turn off the lights, answer homework questions and entertain friends at sleepover parties. While helping kids and bringing value to them these assistants can also be harmful in many ways.
Some parents think that Alexa tolerates poor manners. To ask her a question, all you need to do is say her name, followed by the query. No “please.” And no “thank you” before asking a follow-up.
Also, it creates patterns and reinforcement that so long as your diction is good, you can get what you want without niceties.
Parents have noticed that queries previously made to adults are shifting to assistants, particularly for homework — spelling words, simple math, historical facts. Kids will go to their parents less, with both sides losing out on timeworn interactions.
It’s a very hard question though to discuss in a couple of paragraphs, so I encourage you to read the article below to understand all the implications behind kids interacting with the robots.
https://goo.gl/4FWIEe
Some parents think that Alexa tolerates poor manners. To ask her a question, all you need to do is say her name, followed by the query. No “please.” And no “thank you” before asking a follow-up.
Also, it creates patterns and reinforcement that so long as your diction is good, you can get what you want without niceties.
Parents have noticed that queries previously made to adults are shifting to assistants, particularly for homework — spelling words, simple math, historical facts. Kids will go to their parents less, with both sides losing out on timeworn interactions.
It’s a very hard question though to discuss in a couple of paragraphs, so I encourage you to read the article below to understand all the implications behind kids interacting with the robots.
https://goo.gl/4FWIEe
Washington Post
How millions of kids are being shaped by know-it-all voice assistants
Parents are startled by the way artificial intelligence gadgets — Amazon’s Alexa, Google Home, Microsoft’s Cortana — impact their children’s behavior
I think that those of you who use Facebook Messenger on a daily basis have probably noticed that not long time ago it was sufficiently redesigned to add more camera features upfront. And as I’ve noticed most of my friends are completely annoyed by this change. So, what’s the implication behind this? How Facebook Messenger transformed from a chat app to a chat camera? Here is a great article from TechCrunch explaining the historical part of this phenomenon.
https://techcrunch.com/2017/03/08/the-camera-is-the-keyboard/
https://techcrunch.com/2017/03/08/the-camera-is-the-keyboard/
TechCrunch
How Facebook Messenger evolved into a chat camera
A picture is worth a thousand words… that no one wants to type on a tiny screen. And even if you did mash in all that text, it’d still lose the subtleties of sarcasm or sincerity. To…
It’s Sunday, so #botoftheweek is here, guys. Today we have a very interesting and useful one. How many times have you been suffering trying to come up with a new project name and then checking all the domains and social account availability? For me it was a real problem though.
So, here is a bot called Namely. It’s a Facebook Messenger bot to help you decide your next projects’ name. You send it a name proposal and then it checks all the domains and social accounts availability for this name. Sounds like a huge time saver, right? 🙏🏻
https://www.messenger.com/t/416101528740470
So, here is a bot called Namely. It’s a Facebook Messenger bot to help you decide your next projects’ name. You send it a name proposal and then it checks all the domains and social accounts availability for this name. Sounds like a huge time saver, right? 🙏🏻
https://www.messenger.com/t/416101528740470
We have an article from a non-technical source today (Wall Street Journal) about AI. Basically it’s an interview with one of the most popular influencers in the world of AI nowadays - Andrew Ng. He is a chief scientist at Chinese internet giant Baidu Inc. and co-founder of Coursera. And yep, he’s also a teacher at the super popular “Machine Learning” course at Coursera. They talked about speech recognition, singularity, automated jobs and plenty other hot topics. The main idea of the discussion though is that the hype about artificial intelligence is real this time.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/how-artificial-intelligence-will-change-everything-1488856320
https://www.wsj.com/articles/how-artificial-intelligence-will-change-everything-1488856320
WSJ
How Artificial Intelligence Will Change Everything
Baidu’s Andrew Ng and Singularity’s Neil Jacobstein say this time, the hype about artificial intelligence is real.
It’s always a pleasure for me to post here articles about Slack team and their updates. I think that’s because these guys are awesome and doing really well on constantly improving and engaging a communication inside teams.
And here is a new update - now they’ve improved a way we’re sharing and previewing links. Basically right now with a new SDK you can show some authenticated content at the link preview and also add some buttons to it to bring interactivity. More info is inside the article, these guys are rocking 🤘🏻
https://medium.com/slack-developer-blog/all-will-be-revealed-ebcad7c531f0
And here is a new update - now they’ve improved a way we’re sharing and previewing links. Basically right now with a new SDK you can show some authenticated content at the link preview and also add some buttons to it to bring interactivity. More info is inside the article, these guys are rocking 🤘🏻
https://medium.com/slack-developer-blog/all-will-be-revealed-ebcad7c531f0
Capital One has announced Eno - the first natural language SMS chatbot from a U.S. bank, allowing customers to ask questions using natural language. Customers can ask Eno questions about their checking and savings accounts using a text interface. Examples might include “What’s my balance?” or “How much credit do I have?” 🤑
The idea of this chatbot came up when the bank found that when it sent out automated fraud alerts through SMS, customers thought that the sender was human and started interacting with it.
This is remarkably different than other brands chatbots on platforms like Facebook Messenger and Skype. Capital One believed Facebook has too much access to peoples’ private information, any Facebook Page admin can view the personal banking information of customers.
https://www.macobserver.com/analysis/capital-one-natural-language-chatbot-eno/
The idea of this chatbot came up when the bank found that when it sent out automated fraud alerts through SMS, customers thought that the sender was human and started interacting with it.
This is remarkably different than other brands chatbots on platforms like Facebook Messenger and Skype. Capital One believed Facebook has too much access to peoples’ private information, any Facebook Page admin can view the personal banking information of customers.
https://www.macobserver.com/analysis/capital-one-natural-language-chatbot-eno/
Do you remember my long post about ads for voice assistants? According to the poll I’ve made - about 70% of this channel readers were against taking an ads-supported Google Home/Amazon Echo for free. But I have a very interesting piece of news for you: some Google Home owners reported hearing something extra when they asked for a summary of the day ahead from the smart speaker: an advertisement for the opening of Beauty and the Beast.
But Google denied that the audio snippet was actually an ad, initially providing this rather strange statement: “This isn't an ad; the beauty in the Assistant is that it invites our partners to be our guest and share their tales.”
So, while ads on connected speakers feel like a deal breaker right now, they’re probably going to become the norm pretty soon.
http://www.theverge.com/circuitbreaker/2017/3/16/14948696/google-home-assistant-advertising-beauty-and-the-beast
But Google denied that the audio snippet was actually an ad, initially providing this rather strange statement: “This isn't an ad; the beauty in the Assistant is that it invites our partners to be our guest and share their tales.”
So, while ads on connected speakers feel like a deal breaker right now, they’re probably going to become the norm pretty soon.
http://www.theverge.com/circuitbreaker/2017/3/16/14948696/google-home-assistant-advertising-beauty-and-the-beast
The Verge
Google Home is playing audio ads for Beauty and the Beast
You might hear an advertisement if you ask Google about the day ahead.
It's Sunday, so it's time for our #botoftheweek nomination!
And today it goes to @meet bot by Google!. They've just released a new app called Hangouts Chat, basically it's just a new chat app on top of current Google infrastructure for business (which is actually pretty cool).
Straight to the point: on top of it they have a bot called @meet, that understands natural language and can make appointments right in the chat. So let's say you and your team are talking about a brainstorm session next week to get some shit done. Usually, everyone starts looking at their calendars trying to find good time for a meeting, and it's kinda suck. With this new bot, you can tag @meet right in the conversation, and the bot will look at everyone's schedule and pick the best time and arrange the meeting. Sounds extremely cool! 🤖 ❤️
http://www.inc.com/john-brandon/how-this-simple-little-bot-in-googles-new-slack-killer-will-change-your-work-lif.html
And today it goes to @meet bot by Google!. They've just released a new app called Hangouts Chat, basically it's just a new chat app on top of current Google infrastructure for business (which is actually pretty cool).
Straight to the point: on top of it they have a bot called @meet, that understands natural language and can make appointments right in the chat. So let's say you and your team are talking about a brainstorm session next week to get some shit done. Usually, everyone starts looking at their calendars trying to find good time for a meeting, and it's kinda suck. With this new bot, you can tag @meet right in the conversation, and the bot will look at everyone's schedule and pick the best time and arrange the meeting. Sounds extremely cool! 🤖 ❤️
http://www.inc.com/john-brandon/how-this-simple-little-bot-in-googles-new-slack-killer-will-change-your-work-lif.html
Inc.com
How Google's New Slack Killer Will Change Your (Work) Life
Google Hangouts Chat has a new bot called @meet and it saves a ton of time.
I’ve recently found some interesting statistics data about people using a bot. But it’s not just a simple bot, it’s a Hipster Cat Bot and it has recently surpassed 100 thousands users 😳
There is a couple of interesting metrics inside: from different time graphs showing how people chat to a bot (for example only a few people chat during work hours) to that fact that Telegram users don’t really use this bot, they are more into dogs 🐶
https://medium.com/@electrobabe/5-fun-facts-about-100-000-users-chatting-with-a-cat-bd767b9a4d16
By the way this bot was built using Microsoft Bot Framework. It’s interesting that I start seeing more and more bots been built using this tool, it makes me start thinking about giving it a try. Have you used Microsoft Bot Framework or BotKit? Any obstacles? I’m curious - tell me here please.
There is a couple of interesting metrics inside: from different time graphs showing how people chat to a bot (for example only a few people chat during work hours) to that fact that Telegram users don’t really use this bot, they are more into dogs 🐶
https://medium.com/@electrobabe/5-fun-facts-about-100-000-users-chatting-with-a-cat-bd767b9a4d16
By the way this bot was built using Microsoft Bot Framework. It’s interesting that I start seeing more and more bots been built using this tool, it makes me start thinking about giving it a try. Have you used Microsoft Bot Framework or BotKit? Any obstacles? I’m curious - tell me here please.
Medium
5 Fun facts about 100.000 users chatting with a cat
After a tough and exciting 10 months creating and developing a cross-platform chatbot (chatcat :) ) we finally reached one spectacular goal…