(Bloomberg) — Amazon.com. Inc will release companion devices in the fall for the artificially intelligent version of the Alexa voice assistant, Chief Executive Officer Andy Jassy said in an interview with Bloomberg Television.
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The devices will go beyond answering trivia questions and help consumers complete tasks, such as hiring someone to fix an oven, he said on Thursday. Jassy was in New York this week for a press event to unveil the new Alexa.
Alexa has been eclipsed in recent years by a wave of AI chatbots, including the pioneering ChatGPT from OpenAI. The reboot of Amazonâs voice assistant is an attempt to rekindle consumersâ enthusiasm and generate revenue from subscriptions, online shopping and other businesses.
âI think thereâs a sustainable business model,â Jassy said of Amazonâs renewed focus on the Alexa platform.
The overhaul of Alexa, Amazonâs most important consumer electronics franchise, took longer than the company initially hoped as the engineers worked to infuse artificial intelligence into software not initially designed to generate answers on the fly.
Amazon will start charging Alexa customers for the first time when the new Alexa+ starts rolling out next month. Users who want the latest capabilities will have to pay $19.99 a month. Members of Amazonâs $139-a-year Prime program get the update for free.
In a wide-ranging interview, Jassy said a proposed Biden-era rule that would curb the export of artificial intelligence chips to nations like Israel and the United Arab Emirates could have unintended consequences.
Without changes to the proposed rule, he said, âweâre going to basically give up that business and relationships to other countries who can provide those chips.â His comments echoed a Microsoft Corp. blog about the policy on Thursday.
Jassy said power constraints and chip shortages continue to restrict the growth of Amazonâs cloud-computing division. He said the Trump administration is committed to helping solve the issue. âThey understand the constraints itâs having on the economy,â he said.
The Amazon CEO also said heâs encouraged that the Trump team âcares about what business thinksâ and is aware of challenges constricting the development of artificial intelligence.
Jassy said he had spoken with Trump but didnât divulge what they discussed.
–With assistance from Matt Day.
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