
Often, Cortana Microsoft is at the bottom of the list of options available to many people who see the world of technology and PDAs. Much has happened since 2013, when Microsoft began integrating Cortana with Windows Phone, including the death platform. But by 2019, voice aides will benefit from several important revisions, including context-based conversation capabilities, as announced at this week's Developers Conference in Seattle. To find out why conscious contextual intelligence (AI) is a breakthrough and what will happen with Cortana, we found Andrew Shuman, vice president of Cortana Engineering and Daniel Klein, fellow technicians from Microsoft Semantic Machines. and a professor at UC Berkeley, to find out.
Our 30-minute conversations range from skills to natural language processing to problems with intelligent speakers. Our big question concerns the perception that Cortana is a dead platform. Shuman is very strict. "Cortana isn't dead yet," he said. "Basically, this is a basic horizontal part ... like Microsoft Account, Microsoft Store, Microsoft Search."
This can surprise many Cortana users. Since the death of cellphones, Cortana has undergone a change of identity in the past few years, especially relating to the development of the Office team.
A year ago, we wrote an article detailing Microsoft's plans for Cortana. When we said, "Microsoft's ultimate goal is to integrate Cortana into Windows 10 correctly, so users don't even know they are using it." The point is still valid. That was also in May 2018 when Microsoft acquired Semantic Machines, an artificial intelligence company based in Berkeley, Cali, which enabled technology to replace the talk presented this week on Build via Cortana.
Source : Windows Cnetral
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