Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Amazon Alexa to talk to you in impeccable Hindi soon

Darpan News Desk IANS, 07 Jun, 2019 06:41 PM

    India is a key growth market for Alexa's global team at Amazon and witnessing the potential, the team is working on to introduce more regional language capabilities in the voice-based assistant that has stormed the living rooms in the country.

    Though the smart speaker is a relatively young product in India, voice assistants like Alexa in smart devices are gaining immense popularity in the country.

    According to the International Data Corporation (IDC), Amazon Echo led the Indian smart speakers market with 59 per cent share in 2018, followed by Google Home with 39 per cent unit share.

    "Yes, we are working on infusing regional languages capabilities in Alexa for the Indian market but these are early days,a said Rohit Prasad, Vice President and Head Scientist for Alexa.

    Right now, Alexa can understand some Hinglish commands but these are few and far between.

    "For us, it is a contextual, cultural as well as content-related challenge as the question is not that Alexa just needs to understand Hindi. This part we can do relatively easily but Alexa needs to be Indian when it speaks in Hindi as there are several dialects and accents out there which Alexa has to understand and react accordingly," Prasad told IANS on the sidelines of Amazon's flagship "re: Mars" event here.

    According to him, even jokes that are appropriate in the US may not be sound appropriate in the Indian languages.

    "These are challenges which are not language dependent but more culture dependent. We believe in introducing a wholesome experience to delight our customers and not something that is half-baked. We are working on to solve these issues in the Indian context," Prasad added.

    Amazon last year launched a new category of skill called "Cleo" that enables customers in India help Alexa learn Hindi and other languages. The idea was to improve Alexa's language model and help her gradually speak in local languages.

    Apart from Hindi, users can respond to Alexa's English statements in Tamil, Marathi, Kannada, Bengali, Telugu, Gujarati and other regional languages.

    "We want Alexa to be everywhere. The whole idea is to make it more natural and conversational with humans with new Machine Learning (ML) capabilities that we are applying now," said Prasad who has various teams working on Alexa and the Bengaluru team is fairly big among them.

    In India, there are nearly eight third-party brands with 13 different devices that have Alexa built-in.

    "Alexa is a personal assistant, a companion, a friend, a family member. That's how I think of Alexa because our customers think of it that way. We are very transparent from day one on the privacy of your conversations and beyond the awake' word, nothing is being recorded," Prasad noted.

    Alexa is currently available in over 80 countries and speaks more than 14 language variants. The main driver of the early adoption so far is the novelty factor around this technology.

    The company has invested big in India from the perspective of developing skills for Alexa, hiring scientists to engineers.

    "Alexa is not just to facilitate entertainment but can help in sectors like education and health. For those who are differently-abled, Alexa can help plan daily schedules apart from reading news or playing songs," said Prasad.

     

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Why Melania Trump Covers Her Head One Day And Not The Next

    Why Melania Trump Covers Her Head One Day And Not The Next
    Melania Trump wore a veil to the Vatican on Wednesday to meet the pope, but no head covering a few days earlier to meet the king of Saudi Arabia, a religiously conservative country where most women cover themselves up from head to toe.

    Why Melania Trump Covers Her Head One Day And Not The Next

    Heartbreaking Video Shows Toddler Desperately Trying To Wake Dead Mum Before Sucking At Her Milk

    Heartbreaking Video Shows Toddler Desperately Trying To Wake Dead Mum Before Sucking At Her Milk
    According to a Hindustan Times report, the painful scene unfolded on the morning of May 24 at Damoh in Madhya Pradesh. The woman lay lifeless along the railway tracks while her one year-old son lay clinging on to her chest, probably hungry. 

    Heartbreaking Video Shows Toddler Desperately Trying To Wake Dead Mum Before Sucking At Her Milk

    No Arrests As Woman Dies Following Targeted Shooting In East Vancouver

    No Arrests As Woman Dies Following Targeted Shooting In East Vancouver
     33-year-old Janice Nicole Bryant died following a targeted shooting early Tuesday evening.

    No Arrests As Woman Dies Following Targeted Shooting In East Vancouver

    Video: Indian Student Touches American Dean's Feet, Leaves Him Puzzled, Internet Cracks Up

    Video: Indian Student Touches American Dean's Feet, Leaves Him Puzzled, Internet Cracks Up
    During the Commencement Ceremony at the Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, US, an Indian student, Gaurav Jhaveri, bowed down to touch his dean's feet after receiving his graduation degree. Watch the video below

    Video: Indian Student Touches American Dean's Feet, Leaves Him Puzzled, Internet Cracks Up

    PM Trudeau: Many Innocent Victims Of U.K. Concert Attack 'Far Too Young'

    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Canadians "are shocked by the news of the horrific attack in Manchester" and that federal officials are "still in the process of determining whether any Canadians have been impacted by this event."

    PM Trudeau: Many Innocent Victims Of U.K. Concert Attack 'Far Too Young'

    WATCH: Chinese Student Draws Criticism On Social Media For Speech On 'Fresh Air' In US

    WATCH: Chinese Student Draws Criticism On Social Media For Speech On 'Fresh Air' In US
    Yang Shuping, a Chinese graduate from University of Maryland was criticised for comparing her homeland's air and politics to those in the US in her Graduation speech.

    WATCH: Chinese Student Draws Criticism On Social Media For Speech On 'Fresh Air' In US