|
22nd August - Vlingo Corporation launched with a limited
beta version of its voice-powered interface for mobile phones
made possible by breakthrough speech recognition technology
developed by the company. Freeing users from tedious triple-tapping
to text, search or download mobile content from their phones,
vlingo gives consumers control over the mobile Internet with
the power of their voices. Users do not need to change how
they speak or memorize a list of commands. They can say what
they want, how they want, and vlingo delivers the results
-- word for word. For carriers and mobile application providers,
vlingo unlocks the pent up demand for mobile data services
across all applications, delivering unrealized revenue opportunities.
See a demo at www.vlingomobile.com/demo.
Founded by industry-pioneering speech scientist Mike Phillips
(a co- founder of SpeechWorks, now Nuance) and John Nguyen,
and funded by Charles River Ventures and Sigma Partners, vlingo
was created specifically to leverage these latest technical
advancements in the mobile market. In April, the company recruited
mobile industry veteran Dave Grannan, most recently a general
manager at Nokia, the world's largest mobile phone company,
as CEO.
"Consumers haven't completely embraced mobile data services
yet for one simple reason -- they're being held hostage by
12 tiny keys," said Grannan. "Vlingo removes this
obstacle of the past by giving consumers control over their
phones with the power of speech. By opening up the potential
for these mobile data services, vlingo gives carriers and
mobile application providers a quantum leap in usability and
the corresponding revenue opportunities with the only voice
user interface 'plug in' on the market."
Vlingo's voice-powered interface lets users speak or type
into any vlingo- enabled text box on their mobile phones -
giving them access to all the information, entertainment and
communication applications offered through today's mobile
services. Vlingo is easy to use, offering:
-- No limits on what you can say. Until now, even the most
"advanced" speech-enabled applications force the
user to go through specific sets of steps or a series of commands
to accomplish a task (for example, for most 411 services,
the user first must speak the city/state and then the name
of the business). By contrast, vlingo has no application-
specific grammars or scripted interactions. Vlingo lets consumers
say what they want, when they want.
-- The most accurate system on the market. Vlingo gets better
with use. The vlingo approach takes into account what each
user has spoken in the particular text box within a particular
application, and dynamically leverages this knowledge to continually
improve accuracy for that user, and the entire community.
-- The ability to freely mix typing and talking. In situations
where people prefer to enter text using the keypad on the
phone, vlingo allows them to freely move between keypad entry
and speech entry. -- Simple API for application integration.
The vlingo technology makes use of a lightweight library,
which can run on the majority of 3G and multi-media enabled
phones to allow easy integration into a wide range of applications.
Leveraging a new technology called adaptive Hierarchical
Language Models (HLMs), vlingo's one-of-a-kind approach allows
carriers and mobile application providers to quickly and inexpensively
voice-enable any application -- without custom engineering
or in-house speech expertise. Unlike conventional voice recognition
technologies that require individual purpose-built applications
and rely on constrained grammars and scripted interactions,
vlingo's open approach eliminates a traditionally costly and
intensive manual effort. This advancement allows mobile application
providers and carriers to integrate speech into any existing
application with ease and at a low cost. As a result, consumers
get quick, easy and accurate access to mobile applications,
which translates into new revenue streams.
Limited Beta Now Available
The vlingo limited beta is currently available direct to
consumers on the vlingo web site. Simply go to www.vlingomobile.com
and click on the download tab.
Back to News
Reports |