Voice-enabled smart speakers to reach 55% of U.S. households by 2022, says report
Adoption of voice-powered smart speakers is taking off. According to a new report from Juniper Research out this morning, smart devices like the Amazon Echo, Google Home and Sonos One will be installed in a majority – that is, 55 percent – of U.S. households by the year 2022. By that time, over 70 million households will have at least one of these smart speakers in their home, and the total number of installed devices will top 175 million.
The new forecast follows other reports pointing to growth in the voice-enabled speaker market, including one from eMarketer this spring which said that 35.6 million U.S. consumers would use a voice-activated device at least once per month in 2017, representing 128.9 percent growth over last year.
Despite the increased adoption of smart speakers with voice control capabilities, the new report points out that the majority of voice assistant usage won't be through these in-home devices. Instead, the most usage will occur on smartphones, with over 5 billion assistants installed on smartphones worldwide by 2022.
Amazon teaches Alexa Japanese for Echo's next destination
Amazon's Echo, Plus and Dot speakers will finally be available in Japan starting next week. To prepare for the devices' arrival in the island nation, the e-retail giant taught the voice assistant how to understand and respond in the Japanese language. Alexa SVP Tom Taylor said the company designed an all-new experience "from the ground up for Japanese customers, including a new Japanese voice, local knowledge and over 250 skills from Japanese developers."
Related: Amazon Dominates Voice-Controlled Speaker Market
Amazon is Working on Smart Glasses to House Alexa AI, Says FT
Google Pulls YouTube off of the Amazon Echo Show
Amazon's Alexa Adds Ability to Order from Best Buy
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 12 2017, @12:34AM
I have a different view. Most people buy things and then throw them away. We live in a disposable society. That is the way of the world right now. I personally do not want these things because they are hooked up to the cloud. Not because I care about privacy or anything like that. It is because I know how businesses act. Once the service on the other end is no longer profitable it will be turned off. You and *MANY* others now have a hunk of junk. I may or may not hack it to use for something else. But at that point I may as well have started with something kinda hackable in the first place. It would just piss me off and I know I personally would toss the expensive junk. As that is exactly what it would be at that point.
No doubt about it these things are cool. But every last one is hooked 'to the cloud' with no real way to undo that and maintain a workable item without a decent amount of work. Then in some cases if you turn around and make it workable again and share with others the original company gets pissed off and starts sending out lawyer letters to scare you off.
Web 2.0 has been a neat thing to watch but it has sucked the soul out of what the internet used to be about connecting people and ideas. Now it is about sucking personal information away from you to sell you useless junk from china.