❌

Reading view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.

Home Assistant’s Voice Preview Edition is a little box with big privacy powers

Home Assistant announced today the availability of the Voice Preview Edition, its own design of a living-room-friendly box to offer voice assistance with home automation. Having used it for a few weeks, it seems like a great start, at least for those comfortable with digging into the settings. That's why Home Assistant is calling it a "Preview Edition."

Using its privacy-minded Nabu Casa cloudβ€”or your own capable computerβ€”to handle the processing, the Voice Preview Edition (VPE) ($60/60 euros, available today) has the rough footprint of a modern Apple TV but is thinner. It works similarly to an Amazon Echo, Google Assistant, or Apple Siri device, but with a more focused goal. Start with a wake wordβ€”the default, and most well-trained version, is "Okay, Nabu," but "Hey, Jarvis" and "Hey, Mycroft" are available. Follow that with a command, typically something that targets a smart home device: "Turn on living room lights," "Set thermostat to 68," "Activate TV time." And then, that thing usually happens.

Home Assistant's Voice Preview Edition, doing what it does best. I had to set a weather service to an alias of "the weather outside" to get that response worked out.

"That thing" is primarily controlling devices, scenes, and automations around your home, set up in Home Assistant. That means you have to have assigned them a name or alias that you can remember. Coming up with naming schemes is something you end up doing in big-tech smart home systems, too, but it's a bit more important with the VPE.

Read full article

Comments

Β© Home Assistant Foundation

OpenAI brings ChatGPT to your landline

ChatGPT is coming to phones. No, not smartphones β€” landlines. Call 1-800-242-8478 (1-800-CHATGPT), and OpenAI’s AI-powered assistant will respond as of Wednesday afternoon. β€œ[Our mission at] OpenAI is to make artificial general intelligence beneficial to all of humanity, and part of that is making it as accessible as possible to as many people as we […]

Β© 2024 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.

The Holding Companies Have Lost Their High Groundβ€”Here Are Some Reasons Why

As much as the story has generated a lot of buzz, I find the news of Omnicom's acquisition of IPG to be unsurprising and part of the natural order. I am sad for the great agency legacies that will be mothballed. I am sad for the jobs that will be cut. I am sad that...

Omnicom-IPG’s Strong AI Front Could Protect Against a Big Tech Takeover

On December 13, 1996, Miller Beer pulled all its business out of Leo Burnett, literally overnight. Officially, it was about lackluster sales, but rumors abounded that Miller discovered a subsidiary of Burnett had taken a small project from Anheuser-Busch, and Miller was livid. Now that holding companies own a huge part of the advertising landscape,...

What the Omnicom-IPG Mega-Merger Could Mean for Agency Talent and Clients

The recent announcement of Omnicom's acquisition of IPG got me thinking about my early days working for both holding companies. I started my career in media at BBDO, buying television. Back then, media and creative worked together under one roof, and holding companies were only beginning to consolidate their power. It was a simpler time...

Omnicom and IPG Fight a Perfect Storm on the β€˜4 Cs’

In what is without a doubt one of the top five episodes of Seinfeld, George is regaling his moment as a "marine biologist" with Jerry, Kramer, and Elaine: "The sea was angry that day, my friends, like an old man trying to send back soup at a deli!" George's "perfect storm" also perfectly captures what...

Preparing for the Era of β€˜Big’ and β€˜Small’

In light of THE news (do we treat this like the Super Bowl without saying exactly what it is?)--for me, as the CEO of an independent agency, it's an interesting time to reflect. As a former employee of both holding companies, Omnicom and IPG, and truly growing up a child of "Big Advertising," I'm fascinated...

Why Isn’t Firearms Marketing Regulated Like Tobacco?

Throughout my career in media, I have observed many industries in which responsible marketers practice self-regulation or strictly adhere to government regulation. Why? Because marketers and the media understand well that, for better and for worse, what they do powerfully influences consumer behavior. Pulitzer Prize-winning author Walt Hickey authored a book last year with a...

Why AI Design Needs Metaphors to Bridge the Gap With Consumers

On the day of the release of ChatGPT 4.0, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman tweeted "her"--a reference to the 2013 science fiction film in which an AI chatbot named Samantha, voiced by Scarlett Johansson, develops an intimate relationship with her human user. The tweet called attention to a new feature for the product: voice mode, allowing...

​​The Q5 Advantage: How Smart Marketers Are Turning Post-Holiday Silence Into Revenue

While the marketing world fixates on Q4's holiday rush, a golden opportunity lurks in plain sight: Q5, the "invisible quarter." Forget the myth that consumers hibernate after the holidays. With 45% of consumers actively hunting for post-holiday deals, this overlooked period isn't just a marketing lull--it's your launchpad into Q1. While competitors wind down their...

How Wicked Avoided Consumer Fatigue To Create Box Office Magic

In recent years, the marketing landscape has been dominated by large-scale, expensive campaigns designed to capture consumer attention. From the ubiquitous pink of the Barbie movie to the pervasive green of Wicked, these mega-marketing efforts raise a critical question: When does a campaign cross the line from excitement to exhaustion? Since debuting in theaters last...

Why Black Culture-Focused Tentpole Events Should Be on Your Brand’s Radar

For years--especially in the last four--we've watched brands expand marketing efforts holistically and prioritize voices of color through organic and paid media placements. However, a continuously overlooked medium for major brands and advertisers is Black culture-focused tentpole events. As a regular attendee at such events as Essence Festival, CurlyCon, or CultureCon, to name a few,...

Sweetgreen’s Newest Product Is Indicative of a Larger Problem in Our Industry

Last week, Sweetgreen's newly unveiled Kale Camo Hoodie hit my social feed. My first reaction was: "What a clever way to super-serve mega fans." The company proudly heralded the idea in a press release and touted the new merch on social media just before the holidays. An hour later, another post hit my feed. Apparel...

Brands Must Lead the Way in Protecting Children’s Privacy

As a typical millennial, I was an early adopter of Facebook--back when it required a college email. I uploaded every photo from the previous night's shenanigans with captions like "CrAzI NiGhTz In SF!" At that time, I had little regard for privacy--my own or others'. This level of oversharing felt normal, even integral to my...

❌