Developers can now start creating actions for Google Home. as Google Sets To Challange Amazon
Google is ready to step up the fight
with Amazon’s Alexa, announcing that it’s opening the doors for developers to start bringing their
applications and services to its Google Home speaker. These integrations will
be done through what the company touts as "conversation actions”, and
won’t require the user to enable a certain skill or install an app. Instead,
Google itself is going to approve all the keywords that developers want to use
to invoke their actions and make them all available to everybody.
The reason it
works this way is because whenever you request a third-party action, for
example an Uber ride, Google won’t see you through the end of your request but
rather connect you with a conversational bot from said service. The company has
teamed up with a number of partners, including API.AI, GupShup, DashBot and
VoiceLabs, Assist, Notify.IO, Witlingo and Spoken Layer to help companies craft
these bots.
Since actions
will be curated by Google, developers will need to adhere to app store-like
policies, which will prohibit things like keyword camping — using a rival
company’s name to invoke another service’s actions — and anything that falls
outside of “general policies around acceptable behavior.” Google plans to share
more about this early next year along along with details on how it will handle
discoverability and promotion — i.e. how will users even know what actions are
available.
The company says
it will continue to add more platform capabilities over time, including the
ability to make integrations available across the various Assistant surfaces
beyond Home, like Pixel phones and Google Allo. It will also enable more
complicated actions like buying and booking stuff in upcoming releases.
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