Goodbye screens, Hello voice: Tech's biggest platform shift since the smartphone is happening. Here's what it means.

shift to voice computing 2x1
shift to voice computing 2x1

Samantha Lee/Business Insider

  • Smart speakers are one of the top-selling gifts this Black Friday and holiday season.

  • Devices like the Amazon Echo and Google Home are at the frontlines of a new platform shift in tech: voice computing.

  • Business Insider Prime takes a look at the opportunities, challenges and implications of the shift to voice in this special series of stories.

Smart speakers like the Amazon Echo and the Google Home are some of the hottest tech products this holiday season.

The compact gadgets have no keyboards or mice, and usually no screens. Just talk to one of the devices and it responds, serving up news, recipes and other info, playing your favorite music and even controlling the lights and thermostat in your house.

But Smart speakers are just the most visible manifestation of a broader shift happening in tech: the rise of voice computing.

Thanks to advances in speech recognition, artificial intelligence and processing power, it's now possible to step away from the screens of PCs and phones, and tap into the internet simply by speaking. The virtual assistants that make this possible, like Apple's Siri, Amazon's Alexa and Google's Assistant, can live inside all sorts of products beyond smart speakers — from wristwatches to microwave ovens and eyeglasses.

The age of voice computing promises to open up exciting new opportunities that once seemed possible only in science-fiction movies (Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos has even credited "Star Trek" as the inspiration for the Echo device). But it also brings new challenges and implications for privacy, security as well as accessibility and diversity.

Who are the startups leading the voice revolution? What are the different ways businesses can adapt to the emerging voice platform? And what are risks to prepare for?

In this special report on Business Insider Prime, we take a close look the tech industry's next big platform shift: voice.

These 10 'voice-first' startups are building apps for smart speakers, cars and watches that will completely change how we use computers

Maslo

A Google engineer's rare health condition made it excruciatingly painful to type. Here's how he saved his career by inventing a way to code with his voice and eyes.

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2 Amazon execs discuss plans to make a smarter Alexa that can anticipate your needs and stay ahead of Google in the voice wars

NurPhoto

Hackers are inventing clever ways to trick the microphones in smart speakers, and it's opening a 'new world of dangers'

voice computing hackers 4x3
voice computing hackers 4x3

Samantha Lee/Business Insider

In-house venture funds at Amazon and Google are leading the charge into the voice-first revolution and pouring millions of dollars into startups

Paul Bernard
Paul Bernard

Amazon

Smart speakers have been been reluctant to bombard users with ads, but that could be about to change

amazon echo
amazon echo

Amazon

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