Skip to main content

Amazon debuts Alexa Routines for customizable and scheduled tasks

Amazon’s Alexa is getting the ability to respond to custom phrases, schedule actions by smart home appliances, and give you a rundown of the weather, traffic, or news. Routines first began to roll out to Echo device users a few days ago, an Amazon spokesperson told VentureBeat. Customizable voice commands and routines can be made […]


Amazon’s Alexa is getting the ability to respond to custom phrases, schedule actions by smart home appliances, and give you a rundown of the weather, traffic, or news. Routines first began to roll out to Echo device users a few days ago, an Amazon spokesperson told VentureBeat. Customizable voice commands and routines can be made with the new Routines tab in the Alexa app for Android and iOS.

At launch, Routines associated with a specific phrase or scheduled action are only able to interact with smart home appliances or deliver news, traffic, or weather updates.

If you want to spy on someones imo messages you will need an imo hack that really works. You can use a spy application to read someones imo messages.


In addition to making Alexa respond to customizable phrases, Routines can also be used to schedule actions to occur daily, weekly, or on weekends. This is the first time Alexa is able to take scheduled actions, an Amazon spokesperson told VentureBeat.

You create a new routine by picking a phrase that begins with Alexa, then you choose an action you want to happen anytime you say that phrase. The most obvious routines to establish are “Alexa, I’m home” or “Alexa, I’m heading out” but integrations with smart home devices like plugs, remote controls, locks, and lightbulbs from companies like Philips, August, TP Link, and Belkin. Routines that tap devices like Logitech Harmony Hub and its accompanying remote control will be able to turn on music or specific programming on a TV through Harmony activities, an Amazon spokesperson told VentureBeat.

Routines can be carried out through multiple devices like the Echo or Echo Show, as well as pre-existing groups of smart home devices configurable in the Alexa app.

With the exception of smart home integrations, at launch Routines available today are a lot like the My Day feature that has been available for Google Assistant for more than a year. Tell Google Assistant “Tell me about My Day” and it will read you news, weather, reminders, your next meeting, or your commute.

At an event to debut Pixel 2 smartphones and other hardware earlier this month, Google said its Assistant will soon be able to carry out multiple tasks at once. For example, saying “OK Google, let’s go home” will be able to give you directions, reminders, and resume your podcast.

An Amazon spokesperson declined to respond to questions about new features that may be added for more powerful Alexa Routines in the future or how Routines will interact with more than 20,000 third-party Alexa skills.

It’s easy to gather that Routines may someday come to include things like reminders, your calendar, your shopping list, latest messages, subscription Alexa skills, and other things Alexa can connect you to today.

Preset phrases that achieve multiple tasks are relatively new for many intelligent assistants, but some intelligent assistants are able to accomplish similar tasks. Apple’s HomeKit allows Siri users to group smart home devices for commands like “Good morning” or “I’m home,” but does not (yet) offer options for Siri interaction. Customizable settings have been part of Samsung’s Bixby since it first became available in the United States this summer.

Though Alexa Routines can really change the way you interact with an Echo device, there are limitations. Routines related to traffic updates do not appear capable of taking your current location into account. Google’s “I’m heading home” is expected to take location into account, as are reminders from Microsoft’s AI assistant Cortana.

Routines currently only work with a handful of smart home products, which does not include a broad variety of devices such as sprinkler systems, iRobot vacuums, and others that can be controlled with Alexa voice commands. Routines also cannot be used to unlock doors.

This isn’t the first time Alexa is able to incorporate custom commands.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

How To Analysis If Your Apps Are Targeting Oreo

Starting November 1, 2018, Google will crave that all new apps and updates to absolute apps ambition Android 8.0 Oreo or higher. This move agency the developers abaft abounding of your admired apps are now scrambling to get their software modernized, while others are because abandoning anachronous apps altogether. Many apps accept already been adapted to ambition Oreo, so they'll booty advantage of all the new accoutrement offered on accessories active Android 8.0 or higher. To be clear, this doesn't beggarly your apps won't assignment on earlier Android versions, aloof that they'll assignment bigger if you're active a newer... more

How Google and Amazon are hooking kids from an early age

ANALYSIS: Google announced a notable update to YouTube Kids this week, one that gives parents a range of tools to tailor the app for their kids. Among the new features is one that lets parents create individual profiles for each of their offspring. They can set each kid up with their own passcode to keep siblings […]

Why The Lg G7's New Mlcd+ Affectation Is Absolutely A Game-changer

The LG G7 ThinQ will acceptable be lambasted for its cleft and awkward name, but one affair they assume to accept gotten appropriate is the new display. The G7 will accord abounding a aboriginal attending at a new blazon of console with lots of promise. While it was ahead bound to TVs, from what we know, it should absolutely flash on a abate screen. Unlike aftermost year's reintroduction to POLED, MLCD is added than a business term. This console is altered from acceptable LCDs and it brings a cardinal of allowances that will advice abstracted the G7 ThinQ from the assemblage of flagship devices. While the cleft will apparently be the most... more