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New Apps Predict, Provide Information That Users 'Want'


A user learns to build code using an iPad at the Apple store in Stanford, California, Dec. 11, 2013.
A user learns to build code using an iPad at the Apple store in Stanford, California, Dec. 11, 2013.
New apps that listen to conversations or scan emails and calendars can predict and provide information such as websites, videos and maps to users before they ask for them or realize they want them.

MindMeld for the iPad is a voice conferencing assistant that understands conversations, and depending on what people are talking about, will find a map of a city and tourist information if the chat is about a trip, or restaurants if it is about eating out.

“Imagine a situation where you're on the phone or talking with a friend,” Timothy Tuttle, founder of San Francisco-based Expect Labs, which created the app, said in an interview. “Wouldn't it be great if your phone could automatically find the information you're talking about and display it at the right time?”

To use MindMeld, which costs $3.99, users log on to the app with Facebook. The app detects words and phrases related to current events and local businesses, and searches the Internet while people are speaking to each other to gather more information related to the conversation.

Up to eight people can join in on a chat. The app also summarizes key concepts of the discussion. To protect privacy, conversations are not recorded or stored.

Tuttle predicts that during the next few years computing devices will move from laptops, smartphones and tablets to everyday objects like a table or wearable technologies such as Google Glass. He believes the new devices will not have keyboards, which was the motivation for creating MindMeld app.

“Tomorrow, our computing devices will pay attention continuously, anticipate what information might be relevant, and be ready at a moment's notice to give you the exact information you need,” Tuttle explained.

The devices and apps will listen to what people are saying, or watch what they are reading and writing, as well as the places they visit. The company also plans to release iPhone and Android apps.

“By interpreting these contextual signals, our apps and devices will become much better at finding the information we need, in some cases, before we even need to ask,” he added.

Google Now, available in the free Google Search app for iPhone and Android, and EasilyDo, for iPhone and Android, also predicts what a user might want or do based on data such as emails, search histories and calendars. That app, though, does not listen to conversations.

If the app detects a user has an appointment, for example, it provides a map to get there and traffic conditions.
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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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