CES (Consumer Electronics Show) 2019 started today with its biggest days starting tomorrow and continuing through Wednesday. Word on the street is that Google has tripled it’s presence compared to last year, when it showed off Google Assistant and really kicked its smart home efforts into high gear. Amazon will no doubt be out in force as well.
The focus in many of these places are on the integration between the assistant (Alexa or Google Assistant) and new devices. While that is nice, I’m not sure I need a million Alexa/Google devices responding to me when I say Alexa or Hey, Google. Imagine if my fridge, microwave and stove started responding along with my speaker. It would seem a little funny (and a little superfluous) to have my microwave tricked out with an awesome subwoofer.
More interesting to me is how we continue to refine and simplify the main scenarios even as the companies’ expand the footprint to new appliances and new types of uses. I’m also interested in how these products can utilize machine learning and AI to take some of the guesswork out of creating routines or creating or adjusting schedules for some of the smart home devices. While I love that IFTTT serves as the glue of the internet, we are kidding ourselves if we think that is the mainstream method for tying external services into the smart assistants.
So I am looking to get an idea about the next 6-9 month roadmap for the smart assistants and what they will be able to do. Ultimately it is the software, not the hardware, here that is driving the innovation. Yes, it’s nice to make the appliances so they can be interacted with, but the magic is in the software that ties them into something that can be used by all.
In particular, will Google Assistant’s integrations with other productivity systems (email, calendar) ever appear? Will Amazon fix Alexa’s multi-user problem (their voice profile situation is a complete joke compared to Google’s for example)? Can Google expand the basic capabilities of the Assistant and it’s smart home devices so that things like making broadcasts and whispering at night work as well as what Amazon has already implemented?
Bring on CES!

