A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Oct 10, 2016

Why Samsung Is Buying the Siri Team's New Startup, Called Viv

Well yes, they need to compete with Apple's Siri and Google's Assistant and Amazon's Echo.

But the advantage of the new system that Samsung is acquiring lies in its open source approach. Given Samsung's interest in volume and achieving its goals by partnering this makes great strategic sense - and could be decisive as more consumers switch phones, carriers and plans. JL

Ina Fried reports in Re/code:

The Korean phone maker wants to compete against Apple’s Siri and Google’s Assistant. Viv’s approach, Kittlaus said, focuses on the idea that the best artificial intelligence systems will need to work in an open way with thousands of partners, operating more like Wikipedia than today’s more closed automated assistants.
With personal assistants all the rage, Samsung has decided it needs to get in on the act.
The Korean electronics giant said Wednesday it is buying Viv, a San Jose-based startup created by Siri co-founder Dag Kittlaus.
Neither company would talk about the financial terms, but all 30 or so Viv employees will be joining Samsung.
Samsung said it isn’t approaching artificial intelligence as broadly as Google or Apple.
“Our focus is really more device-centric,” Samsung mobile unit CTO Injong Rhee said in an interview. “How do we revolutionize how users interact with our devices and our appliances?”
Rhee said it is an area that Samsung is investing more in and said the first fruits should show up in next year’s flagship Galaxy phones, with future plans to integrate the technology into televisions and other Internet-connected gear.
Viv’s approach, Kittlaus said, focuses on the idea that the best artificial intelligence systems will need to work in an open way with thousands of partners, operating more like Wikipedia than today’s more closed automated assistants.
While Samsung doesn’t have the best historical track record of integrating software and service companies, Rhee pointed to the recent purchases of LoopPay and SmartThings as showing that the company can successfully bring outside services into the company.
Kittlaus said he became satisfied in recent months that Samsung was the right partner.
“We, of course, did our own independent inquiries about this issue,” he said. “Samsung has drastically changed in terms of how they handle acquisitions and integrations over the last three years and really gotten good.”
The deal was led by Samsung’s Global Innovation Center, the unit run by former Google executive David Eun and also the group behind the $200 million SmartThings deal.

0 comments:

Post a Comment