Voice services are the next generation of technology evolving from person-to-person phone calls. Voice services can solve some of the big problems like having to press buttons or pay attention to what you're doing. That's good for people with vision problems and for road warriors. In the past, people associated automated voice services with the fictional computer of the Starship Enterprise, but these days we're able to use it for mobile Web services like GOOG-411 and 1-800-DIRECTIONS, which showed off their stuff in the last session.
First up was Lypp, which offers a mobile conference-calling platform. Lypp mixes SMS and instant messaging for Blackberry and phones running Windows Mobile. The service has an API, which lets you build in Lypp functionality to other Web applications or services. Their consumer front-end works with an IM bot you can message with the names of the people you want to talk to, and the service will pull them into a conference call by using your phone book. It's also got a scheduling utility that lets you set up a call for a later date.
The company makes its cash on a per-minute model by charging users for the call, although it intends to move to an all-you-can-eat flat rate in the future. Unlike a FreeConferenceCall.com there's no free version. The creators of Lypp don't think that model is stable or sustainable due to its foundation of shaky local law that works by jumping the call through various states with loopholes.
Talkster is a voice-and-text platform. In sum, it lets you call your international buddies by using local numbers to avoid some of those heavy per-minute charges. The service supplements itself with short advertisements. We took a look at the service a few weeks back and came away impressed with their savings over a standard international call, but a little turned off by the amount of advertising that's been integrated to make it so cheap.
Vlingo is a speech-recognition service that lets users talk into a mobile-phone application that turns speech into written words. It offers a free speech-to-text search application on its Web site, running on just a few phones for Sprint and AT&T. The real hope, however, is to make money from the technology platform, which adapts and learns from its users speech. To see if your phone is supported, go here.
Wrapping up the session was Yap which has a handy application that turns your voice into text for IM and SMS conversations and a slew of other mobile applications. The service showed its goods a few months ago at the TechCrunch40 Conference. One of Yap's creators, Igor Jablokov, talked about his company's advertising platform and the potential to pull in contextual ads based on what people are talking about. While the service isn't available yet (they're trying to get a good deal with a carrier), Jablokov did a cool live demo on stage showing the application being able to discern spelling between "serial" and "cereal" based on usage in two different sentences. Creepy.
Still to come: advertising, social networking, and more.
Here's a useful concept: say you're really sick of dealing with your phone's tiny keypad to type in text messages. What if you could simply say what you wanted to write down, and have the tool fill it in for you? Yap is a new service that's trying to fill that need with their new mobile phone client. It's aimed at teens, who the company claims 66% of text while driving. Yap will read off your friend's responses, meaning you don't have to pay attention to what they're writing. The service works both ways, so your friend who has it installed could theoretically have an asynchronous text-only conversation with you too.
In addition to the text app, Yap throws in some integration with popular Web services like Amazon, Digg, Wikipedia, eBay, Facebook, Google News, AOL search, Flickr, Google Photos, Twitter, and Orbitz among others. You can simply say a search term, and it will convert it into a written search query on the correct service right on your phone's browser. The one for Twitter is especially cool since you can just say your status update, and it will convert it into a live Tweet.
The company is planning to support its service through "real time advertisements" which will pull context from your conversation, and serve up relevant ads. Their example showed a conversation about coffee, wherein the app pulled up a link for listings of Starbucks nearby. The service is still in private beta, and launching at this morning's TechCrunch40 conference.
Related: Highly useful: CallWave transcribes your voicemail
Each of these messages came from text-to-speech conversion from Yap. No more typing on your tiny key pad.
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