Daniel Rausch, Amazon’s vice president of Alexa and Echo, is in the midst of a major transition. More than a decade beyond the launch of Amazon’s Alexa, he’s been tasked with creating a new version of the marquee voice assistant, one that’s powered by large language models. As he put it in my interview with him, this new assistant, dubbed Alexa+, is “a complete rebuild of the architecture.”
Comments (2)
Back to topMITTENS
a month ago
This entire piece peddles Amazon's genai talking points without an technical depth or actual proof points. It simply hammers home there's a ton of genai being used in development (questionable when you speak to people who work there) and then Wired doesn't even get shown Alexa at the end. Just PR fluff.
10
Reply
REECE
WIRED Staff
Replying to
MITTENS
a month ago
Thanks for your feedback. I thought this was fascinating claim from Rausch, and worth a quick blog. But, in hindsight I should have dug deeper and made my skepticism apparent. If anyone who works at Amazon wants to chat and provide an alternative version of how this went down my Signal is: reece_rogers.01
1
Reply
ACHILLES7
a month ago
Yet, it still cannot effectively understand English or consistently turn the lights on and off. How about starting there? Make the standard functions, oh functional maybe? Seems more like they have effectively replicated dementia.
5
Reply
BOZZO
Replying to
ACHILLES7
a month ago
Is ALEXA always listening? If so, is the data forwarded for what purposes?
0
Reply