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AI Technology

Amazon Wants Alexa To Read Blog Posts and Broadcast Church Sermons (cnet.com) 60

Amazon's Alexa Skills Blueprints are free online templates that let you create custom Alexa tricks without needing to code. Now, the online retailer is giving those blueprints some new tricks of their own. From a report: Announced in a blog post Wednesday morning, the newest Skill Blueprints are "built specifically for content creators, bloggers, and organizations so they can reach anyone with an Alexa-enabled device." Skills created with any of Amazon's blueprints can now be submitted to Amazon for certification and publication in the Alexa app's Skills Store in the US. "Keep your skill personal to Alexa-enabled devices associated with your Amazon account, share it with friends and family, or publish it so anyone can discover, use and review your skill," Amazon says. That open approach might help bolster the number of Alexa skills available in the Alexa app.
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Amazon Wants Alexa To Read Blog Posts and Broadcast Church Sermons

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  • "Sorry, Dave, I cannot open heaven's gate bay doors."

    • Alexa, please play the hymn, In the Garden of Eden by I. Ron Butterfly.

      Also add tittychips and bloody tampon boogers to my shopping list.

  • by the_skywise ( 189793 ) on Wednesday February 13, 2019 @11:13AM (#58115918)
    "oh Yes. Baby. you are getting me so hot. Baby. Yes. Just like that."
  • by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Wednesday February 13, 2019 @11:15AM (#58115930)

    The word of God through the mouth of the Beast.

  • by Drethon ( 1445051 ) on Wednesday February 13, 2019 @11:37AM (#58116058)

    At first I read this to mean "read blog posts and then broadcast church sermons". I want to see what kind of sermons an AI comes up with after reading random blog posts.

  • How ironic... (Score:2, Insightful)

    An artificial intelligence, built from science and technology, sharing messages of religion?

    • So... a real thing built with a fake intelligence talking about imaginary beings?

    • What's more ironic is messages of morality and personal holiness from the American tech industry.

      The notion of religion being anti-science is only about 100 years old and largely an American invention.

  • Gated Podcasts (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    > Amazon AI plug-in for WordPress and provide the blueprint with an RSS feed.

    Everything I see on this is literally just using RSS to do the equivalent of a podcast to the Alexa device, then later converting this on Alexa's servers via text-to-speech.

    They could literally just do podcast support and achieve not only the same goals, but START OUT with hundreds of thousands of "broadcasts". Wordpress also comes RSS enabled by default.

    This plugin I cannot see what it does at all except make the process more

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      then later converting this on Alexa's servers via text-to-speech.

      That won't work so well.

      Background: I like to listen to shortwave radio. Unfortunately, most of it has been taken over by preachers. When I tune across a band, looking for new sources, I turn on the BFO (beat frequency oscillator) so I hear the whistle of a nearby carrier. On-frequency, that makes the voice unintelligible, like Donald Duck. But I have developed an ear for listening to the cadence and other speech patterns still evident. And I can easily spot the difference between a Christian station and o

    • It's a "gated" version of podcasting in the same sense that Medium is the gated version of blogging, yes.

      BigCo (Spotify/Amazon/Patreon/etc) have only just twigged about the huge untapped potential for podcasting. I guess YouTube/Twitch caught fire in the video sphere, but podcasts were kind of overlooked as a second-rate citizen.

      It definitely feels like a huge number of people listen to podcasts while travelling/doing housework/exercising - i.e. when you're not directly in front of a screen. If Amazon
  • The events are predictable even this far in advance. Churches will use it. Most will use it without problem. The mega-churches will especially like it, as their focus is on sheer member count (and donor pool) rather than an active relationship with each individual member. All will be well - because most church sermons are safe, bland lectures about doing good and charity. No problem.

    Then, somewhere, a preacher will use it to broadcast a sermon of more difficult content. Most likely, though not certain to b

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