In
the
week's
least
surprising
news,
Amazon’s
reinvention
of
its
Alexa
voice
assistant
has
reportedly
fallen
even
further
behind.
According
to
Bloomberg,
the
launch
of
a
new
Alexa
—
billed
as
a
smarter,
more
capable
AI-powered
voice
assistant
—
has
been
pushed
back.
Again.
“A
person
familiar
with
the
matter
said
Alexa
AI
teams
were
recently
told
that
their
target
deadline
had
been
moved
into
2025,”
writes
Bloomberg.
The
revamped
voice
assistant,
first
announced
last
September,
was
expected
to
arrive
this
year,
toting
ChatGPT-style
intelligence
and
more
natural,
conversational
interactions.
But
earlier
this
summer, Fortune
reported
that
the
new
Alexa
might
never
be
ready. Then,
for
the
first
time
in
half
a
decade,
fall
came
and
went
without
a
big
splashy
Amazon
event,
and
the
rumors
appeared
to
be
true.
It
seems
we
can’t
have
a
smarter Alexa
and a
more
capable
Alexa.
As
further
evidence
that
the
company
is
retrenching,
Amazon
has
cut
off
access
to
the
beta
of
the
new
Alexa.
You
used
to
be
able
to
request
access
by
saying,
“Alexa,
let’s
chat”
to
an
Echo
device.
Now,
the
assistant
responds
with,
“Let's
Chat
is
no
longer
available.
For
now,
you
can
ask
me
questions
or
do
things
like
set
a
timer,
play
music,
turn
on
a
connected
light,
and
more.”
Bloomberg’s
sources
say
those
beta
users
who
did
get
to
chat
have
been
unimpressed
(I
requested
access
several
times
but
with
no
luck).
Responses
were
slow,
sounded
stiff,
and
weren’t
“all
that
useful,”
they
said.
Plus,
the
new
Alexa
messes
up
smart
home
integrations,
hallucinates,
and
apparently
tries
to
show
off.
Bloomberg
reports:
One
tester
says
the
ongoing
hallucinations
aren’t
always
wrong,
just
uncalled
for,
as
if Alexa is
trying
to
show
off
its
newfound
prowess.
For
instance,
before,
if
you
asked Alexa what
halftime
show
Justin
Timberlake
and
Janet
Jackson
performed
at,
it
might
say
the
2004
Super
Bowl.
Now,
it’s
just
as
likely
to
give
a
long-winded
addendum
about
the
infamous
wardrobe
malfunction.
The
challenge
appears
to
lie
in
integrating
large
language
models
with
the
command
and
control
method
of
today’s
voice
assistants.
It
seems
we
can’t
have
a
smarter Alexa
and a
more
capable
Alexa.
According
to
Bloomberg’s
sources,
using
pre-trained
AI
models
allows
Alexa
to
answer
more
complicated
questions
but
makes
it
more
likely
to
fail
at
setting
a
kitchen
timer
or
controlling
smart
lights.
Old
Alexa
may
have
its
issues,
but
it
can
(mostly)
reliably
control
my
smart
lights.
No
one
is
asking
for
a
digital
assistant
they
can
chat
with
at
home,
but
who
won’t
get
off
the
couch
to
turn
out
the
lights.
I
have
my
husband
for
that.
Bloomberg
reports
that
Amazon
CEO
Andy
Jassy
has
yet
to
convey
a
compelling
vision
for
an
AI-powered
Alexa
to
the
company.
While
he’s
said
publicly, “We
continue
to
re-architect
the
brain
of
Alexa
...
”, there’s
been
scant
information
about
what
an
LLM-powered
Alexa
will
bring
to
its
millions
of
users
—
beyond
being
able
to
converse
more
naturally.
More
importantly,
it
seems
Amazon
has
yet
to
prove
it
can
do
this
without
diminishing
the
features
customers
use
the
assistant
for
every
day.
No
one
is
asking
for
a
digital
assistant
they
can
chat
with,
but
who
won’t
get
off
the
couch
to
turn
out
the
lights.
While
the
company
searches
for
its
vision,
Jassy
has
installed
a
new
head
of
the
devices
and
services
division
under
which
Alexa
falls.
Panos
Panay
has
been
at
the
company
for
a
year
now,
and
Bloomberg
reports
the
former
head
of
Microsoft’s
Surface
division
has
“brought
a
focus
on
higher-quality
design
to
a
group
adept
at
utilitarian
gadgets.”
As
I
wrote
this
week,
Amazon's
prior
tact
of
making
copious
amounts
of
cheap
hardware
at
the
expense
of
better
software
is
partly
why
Alexa
hasn’t
gotten
measurably
smarter
over
the
last
decade.
However,
with
better
hardware
and
a
focus
on
building
on
Alexa’s
strength,
rather
than
simply
turning
it
into
a
chatbot,
the
company
could
recapture
Jeff
Bezos’s
original
vision
of
creating
Star
Trek’s
“Computer.”
But
whatever
the
plan
is
for
a
new
Alexa,
it
looks
like
it
won't
be
here
anytime
soon.
(Originally posted by Jennifer Pattison Tuohy)
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