Essential Install July 2017 | Page 60

Essential Install | Voice Recognition WyreStorm says it was at the forefront of Echo and Alex integration – showing its Enado solution at ISE in 2015 “There is no doubt that those with the hardware platforms available today Amazon, Google and Apple will dominate – much like the Mac vs Windows battle of the 80’s & 90’s. The platform most easily accessible to users will win out. If Alexa is built into your car then you will use her at home; if Google voice is in your phone and TV then that will be your choice. Apple may struggle to catch up when the price point of its Siri-capable HomePod is six times that of an Echo Dot.” Habitech says that its been working with Alexa to explore the potential of voice control to change the nature of home automation. Justin Martin-Lawrence, Habitech’s technical manager, says: “CES this year showed the extent to which consumer tech manufacturers are stampeding to implement the convenience of voice control. In everything from cleaning bots to cars it’s becoming the tech achievement they want to shout about. Habitech says that voice will be a big game changer for home control “Auto manufacturers such as Ford, BMW, Hyundai and VW were demonstrating the obvious benefi ts of hands- free control functionality in the driving environment, the latter claiming to be the fi rst to have directly integrated the feature with the car’s own system without an intermediary interface. VW had a dedicated Alexa Booth at CES.” Martin adds: “We have already tight-knitted Alexa integration with the near universal control capability of Simple Control, and we’re also exploring the features of rival techs such as Google Assistant. Its ‘smart reply’ feature is particularly natural and effective and I’d be surprised if the big brands were not already beavering away behind the scenes to integrate with it. “When it’s stable and reliable I think voice is going to be a big game changer for home control and I think that day is fast approaching.” HDANYWHERE says that the equation of adding Amazon’s voice control user interface Alexa to macro sequences results in end-user approval. Chris Pinder, managing director of HDAnywhere, says that from the outset you need to understand there are two Alexa control types; smart home skills and custom skills. He explains: “Smart home skills are ones made by Amazon, which are fairly limited and standard across all compatible devices. Custom skills are unique to brands and their devices. “Custom skills allow for much greater leveraging of a device’s full functionality. In HDAnywhere’s case, this is the IP-to-IR engine and the power of macros! Just like the convenience of a single button press. Macrosequences delivered because of our on-board technology, plus our custom skill, mean that with a single voice command you can achieve brilliant end-results utilising a mix of AV devices.” Explaining the difference between custom skill and smart home skills, Chris says: “Using HDAnywhere’s custom skills, once could ask: ‘Alexa, tell my TV to watch BBC News’; but through Amazon Smarthome Skill that would be ‘Alexa, turn on BBC News on TV in living room’. “The HDAnywhere custom skills of instructing Alexa to switch the TV to CCTV or to pause the TV are not supported by Amazon Smarthome Skill.” Chris adds: “If you want to experience the HDA difference in voice control, simply download the latest MHUB operating system (OS7) to your MHUB via the top left corner on the settings page. “Post installation, simply ask Alexa to discover devices (or download the MHUB 4K PRO Control Custom Skill) and it should fi nd and add your MHUB. From that moment you will be able to voice control your whole-home AV system.” Setup as simple as Alexa, discover devices “ Find out more at www.pulse-eight.com 58 | July 2017 ”