People are silhouetted
as they pose with mobile devices in front of a screen projected with a
Samsung logo, in this picture illustration taken in Zenica October 29,
2014.
Samsung is reportedly working on a Bixby-powered speaker that will compete with the likes of the already available
Amazon Echo and
Google Home as well as the forthcoming
Apple HomePod. But maybe it should focus on getting full Bixby features to its
Galaxy S8 phones first.
That's proving to be a huge challenge for Samsung,
as the S8 shipped without Bixby Voice controls that let you operate the
phone's features without typing or tapping. And it sounds as if the
company has hit another roadblock on the road to delivering full Bixby
compatibility in the U.S.
The
Korea Herald reports
that Bixby Voice has been delayed — again — and that the culprit
continues to be getting the feature to work smoothly in English. (Bixby
Voice controls are already available in Samsung's home market of South
Korea.) Previous reports suggested that
Samsung was having trouble teach Bixby English syntax and grammar.
The Korea Herald attributes the latest delay to Samsung's lack of big
data accumulation needed to assist deep learning. The paper also sites
geographical and language barriers between Samsung's Korean headquarters
and U.S. researchers.
Bixby Voice may not reach phones in the U.S until the
fall, according to the report. Some Bixby features are already in
place, including Bixby Vision, which can identify objects you point the
S8's camera at, and
voice-activated payments. And Galaxy S8 owners can participate in a trial of
Bixby Voice.
Still, full voice control over the S8 was one of the key features for
the Bixby personal assistant that Samsung touted when it previewed its
new phone this past spring.
Reports of this latest delay come as the Wall Street
Journal says that a Bixby-powered speaker is in the works. Timing for
the speaker's release is up in the air — see the earlier issues with
getting Bixby voice controls to work in the U.S. — but that the product,
code-named Vega, would compete against rival smart speakers that let
you control other smart devices in the home.
And that's really where the biggest impact of
delayed Bixby Voice features will be felt. For Galaxy S8 owners, it's
not much of an issue. That phone already has a voice-powered assistant
in the form of Google Assistant, and people are more likely to buy the
S8 because they're taken with its expanded Infinity Display or
top-performing rear-camera. Missing Bixby features aren't likely to
dampen interest in the phone, even if it means an essentially powerless
dedicated Bixby button on the S8's side.
But Samsung has big plans for Bixby. In addition to
bringing the digital assistant to other phones, the company reportedly
wants to expand it to other products — not just a smart speaker, but its
home appliances as well. And the longer Bixby voice gets delayed, the
more ground Samsung will have to close with rival assistants, chiefly
Amazon's Alexa.
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