DocumentCode :
1287555
Title :
Voice browsing
Author :
White, Jim
Author_Institution :
Nuance Commun., USA
Volume :
4
Issue :
1
fYear :
2000
Firstpage :
55
Lastpage :
56
Abstract :
The Web provides universal access to information of staggering quantity and diversity. The universality results from the choice of a single means for representing information (HTML) and a single means for delivering it (HTTP). The end-user value produced by this choice is unrivaled in the history of data communications. As great as it is today, the Web´s value continues to increase as the number of suppliers and consumers of information increases (Metcalfe´s law). No new technology is needed to sustain this growth, except at the transport level, where bandwidth must increase to meet our user demand. What important limitations does the Web have that new technology could remove? One limitation involves access. While the Web (thanks to the geographical reach of the Internet beneath it) has many points of access, it supports just one type of access: visual, from a PC. As our reliance on the Web increases, so does our need to access it. Especially valuable and natural, would be voice access from a phone, especially a mobile phone. The next five years (2000-2005) will see the widespread deployment of voice browsers: digital personae who converse with their users by phone, retrieve Web information (for example, flight schedules) at their user´s request, and carry out transactions (for example, changing a travel itinerary) according to their user´s instructions. While the most familiar visual browsers today are lightweight PC applications, voice browsers will run in 24/7 network operations centers with the required telephony hardware and speech recognition software
Keywords :
Internet telephony; information resources; information retrieval; online front-ends; speech recognition; voice communication; voice equipment; HTML; HTTP; Internet; Web information retrieval; World Wide Web; bandwidth increase; data communications; digital personae; end-user value; information access; lightweight PC applications; mobile phone; network operations centers; speech recognition software; telephony hardware; universal access; user demand; visual browsers; voice access; voice browsers; voice browsing; Application software; Bandwidth; Data communication; HTML; Hardware; History; Information retrieval; Internet; Mobile handsets; Telephony;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Internet Computing, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1089-7801
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/4236.815855
Filename :
815855
Link To Document :
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