Google Assistant for PC App Archives

Google Assistant for PC App Archives

Google Assistant for PC App Archives

Google Assistant for PC App Archives

Google: Google Assistant




Google Assistant is both the name of a consumer-facing assistant baked into consumer products as well as a platform designed to allow the Google search engine to interact with users in a conversational manner.

Google Assistant was announced in May 2016. It first appeared integrated into Google’s communication app Allo in September 2016. In October 2016, it was made part of the Google Pixel phone. In November 2016, it was put into the Google Home device. In February 2017, it came to Android Wear watches. In March 2017, it was widely released for Android phones running Android 6 and 7.

Google plans to add Google Assistant into more products and applications, but it hasn’t said what those will be.

For more about Google Assistant, see our stories below.

Usage of voice has plateaued — for now

Compared with past growth, 2020 survey data show flat-to-declining usage....

Greg Sterling | Jun 30, 2020 at 3:07 pm ET
Greg Sterling | Jun 22, 2020 at 4:37 pm ET
Greg Sterling | May 26, 2020 at 11:55 am ET
Barry Schwartz | Feb 27, 2020 at 10:35 am ET

Nine voice search stats to close out 2019

A look back at some of the year's key voice search and virtual assistant metrics. ...

Greg Sterling | Dec 23, 2019 at 3:18 pm ET
Greg Sterling | Dec 12, 2019 at 12:18 pm ET
Greg Sterling | Nov 21, 2019 at 3:01 am ET

Preview your recipe results on Google Home Hub devices

Google has updated the rich results testing tool to preview recipes on smart displays using Google...

Barry Schwartz | Nov 20, 2019 at 9:09 am ET
Greg Sterling | Nov 13, 2019 at 1:31 pm ET
Greg Sterling | Nov 1, 2019 at 10:16 am ET

Voice assistant study: Microsoft’s Cortana offers most answers, Google Assistant proves most accurate

Perficient Digital ran 5,000 queries on seven devices including Alexa, Cortana, Google Assistant (Home, smartphones) and Siri....

Greg Sterling | Oct 25, 2019 at 2:22 pm ET

Google begins testing Duplex internationally

Duplex will be powering automated calls to confirm holiday business hours in New...

George Nguyen | Oct 22, 2019 at 11:50 am ET
George Nguyen | Oct 1, 2019 at 12:38 pm ET

Google’s Assistant-everywhere strategy reminiscent of old site search playbook

Google Assistant "syndication" is a way to battle Amazon Alexa and expand its reach for later...

Greg Sterling | Sep 5, 2019 at 5:30 pm ET

Voice assistant usage now at ‘critical mass’ as Google Assistant crowned smartest

Google Assistant scored 93%, Siri 83% and Alexa got 80% of answers right in a recent study....

Greg Sterling | Aug 19, 2019 at 11:38 am ET

Google Search Console doesn’t show data for featured snippets read by Google Assistant

In the second episode of #AskGoogleWebmasters, John Mueller explained some voice search nuances in...

George Nguyen | Aug 1, 2019 at 3:04 pm ET

Google swaps ‘voice search’ on Android for Google Assistant

Goodbye voice search, hello Google Assistant. The company is swapping out the familiar blue and red mic in favor of its Assistant on the home...

Greg Sterling | Jul 29, 2019 at 2:45 pm ET

Study: 48% of consumers use voice assistants for general web search

Despite concerns about accuracy and privacy, the Adobe survey presents a mostly positive outlook for voice and virtual...

Greg Sterling | Jul 23, 2019 at 10:17 am ET
Greg Sterling | Jul 11, 2019 at 5:51 pm ET

Bullish forecast predicts 31 million Americans will ‘shop’ on their smart speakers in 2019

In this case, "shopping" doesn't include purchasing; however, digital goods and product re-ordering are also poised for growth....

Greg Sterling | Jul 10, 2019 at 8:00 am ET
Источник: [https://torrent-igruha.org/3551-portal.html]
, Google Assistant for PC App Archives

Android’s Ambient Mode will soon come to ‘select devices’

Google today is launching a major visual redesign of its Assistant experience on phones. While the original vision of the Assistant focused mostly on voice, half of all interactions with the Assistant actually include touch. So with this redesign, Google acknowledges that and brings more and larger visuals to the Assistant experience.

If you’ve used one of the recent crop of Assistant-enabled smart displays, then some of what’s new here may look familiar. You now get controls and sliders to manage your smart home devices, for example. Those include sliders to dim your lights and buttons to turn them on or off. There also are controls for managing the volume of your speakers. Update: Google tells me that update will roll out over the course of the next few weeks, with the iOS release depending on Apple’s app store review process.Even in cases where the Assistant already offered visual feedback — say when you ask for the weather — the team has now also redesigned those results and brought them more in line with what users are already seeing on smart displays from the likes of Lenovo and LG. On the phone, though, that experience still feels a bit more pared down than on those larger displays.

With this redesign, which is going live on both Android and in the iOS app today, Google is also bringing a little bit more of the much-missed Google Now experience back to the phone. While you could already bring up a list of upcoming appointments, commute info, recent orders and other information about your day from the Assistant, that feature was hidden behind a rather odd icon that many users surely ignored. Now, after you’ve long-pressed the home button on your Android phone, you can swipe up to get that same experience. I’m not sure that’s more discoverable than previously, but Google is saving you a tap.

In addition to the visual redesign of the Assistant, Google also today announced a number of new features for developers. Unsurprisingly, one part of this announcement focuses on allowing developers to build their own visual Assistant experiences. Google calls these “rich responses” and provides developers with a set of pre-made visual components that they can easily use to extend their Assistant actions. And because nothing is complete with GIFs, they can now use GIFs in their Assistant apps, too.

But in addition to these new options for creating more visual experiences, Google is also making it a bit easier for developers to take their users money.

While they could already sell physical goods through their Assistant actions, starting today, they’ll also be able to sell digital goods. Those can be one-time purchases for a new level in a game or recurring subscriptions. Headspace, which has long offered a very basic Assistant experience, now lets you sign up for subscriptions right from the Assistant on your phone, for example.

Selling digital goods directly in the Assistant is one thing, but that sale has to sync across different applications, too, so Google today is also launching a new sign-in service for the Assistant that allows developers to log in and link their accounts.

“In the past, account linking could be a frustrating experience for your users; having to manually type a username and password — or worse, create a new account — breaks the natural conversational flow,” the company explains. “With Google Sign-In, users can now create a new account with just a tap or confirmation through their voice. Most users can even link to their existing accounts with your service using their verified email address.”

Starbucks has already integrated this feature into its Assistant experience to give users access to their rewards account. Adding the new Sign-In for the Assistant has almost doubled its conversion rate.

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Источник: [https://torrent-igruha.org/3551-portal.html]
Google Assistant for PC App Archives

How to download a copy of everything Google knows about you

You can download your own archive of everything you have stored in Google's services. Here's how:

  • Go tohttp://takeout.google.com/settings/takeout
  • Select the products that you want to back up. I decided to select everything.
  • Click 'Next' at the bottom of the page.
  • Choose the file format - you can pick a .ZIP file and choose a maximum size. I recommend going with the full 50GB file to avoid having your data split into multiple files. If you choose 2GB and have a lot of information on Google, for example, you're going to have a lot of ZIP files. Choose 2GB if you're on an older computer, since ZIP files larger than 2GB require newer operating systems.
  • Choose your delivery method. You can get a link via email or have the archive sent to Dropbox, Google Drive or Microsoft OneDrive.
  • Tap "Create Archive."
  • Be patient. Google warns the archive may take hours or days to create. It took about 20 hours for me — and I then had about 148GB of content to sort through, which is a lot.

Google will gather all of the information you've stored across its products and will send you an email with an alert including a link or notification that it's now in one of the cloud storage services mentioned above. You'll then be able to open that file to see all of your data, photos, calendar files and more.

Источник: [https://torrent-igruha.org/3551-portal.html]
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