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Facebook debuts smart speaker for Messenger video calls

Facebook Inc (FB.O), on Monday, released a smart speaker designed to ease video calls.

However, the Company’s history of privacy mishaps and the device’s price and limited functionality could slow it from taking on market leaders Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O) and Alphabet Inc’s (GOOGL.O) Google.

The device, known as Portal, comes in 199 dollars and 349 dollars versions and its signature feature is a wide-angle camera that automatically keeps users in focus as they move about a room, Facebook hardware executives told Reuters in a meeting.

They said Portal is available at Amazon and Best Buy stores in addition to Facebook.com and starts shipping to US customers in early November.

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Smart speakers costing less than 100 dollars from Amazon and Google have become best sellers in the nascent industry.

Users issue voice commands to search shop and listen to music, turning the speakers into a major funnel into the technology companies’ competing networks.

Portal could help Facebook stop users from flocking to rival chat and video apps on other speakers and give it a new, wholly controlled environment to sell ads.

About 32 per cent of US consumers own a smart speaker, but another 16 per cent plan to buy one by the end of 2018, according to an Adobe Analytics survey released in September.

Facebook expects to stand apart on the market because of Portal’s touchscreen and the 400 million people who call through its Messenger service each month worldwide.

Rival smart speakers with screens lack a video-chatting app that is as popular.

Still, Amazon has shipped 1 million of its Echo speakers with displays over in 2017, according to research firm Canalys, which expects 4 million such devices across brands to ship globally in 2019.

Portal’s camera, which uses a form of artificial intelligence to recognise body shapes, is a major marketing point, offering users the convenience of staying in the frame without having to adjust the device.

“Our goal is to make you feel present in the same space as the person on the other end,” said Rafa Camargo, the Facebook vice president overseeing Portal.

The launch of the product comes at a tricky time for Facebook.

In September, it announced an attacker gained the ability to take over 50 million user accounts because of software flaws.

Scrutiny this year over Facebook’s privacy and content moderation practices has led some people to abandon the service and the company to warn of thinning profits.

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Portal locks with a passcode, and its microphones and camera shuts off with the tap of a button.

Video and voice calls are encrypted and contents of them are not stored, the company said.

Users can conference with any Messenger user.

Portal integrates Amazon’s Alexa voice assistant to handle search queries, and Amazon collects audio files of requests made to Alexa.

The higher-priced Portal’s screen is 15.6 inches, versus 10 inches. Both display photos and notifications from Facebook and videos from Food Network, but offer few other applications.

Additional features are available during calls, including joint listening on Spotify.

A handful of animated e-books such as “Itsy Bitsy Spider’’ will be included at launch for interactive story time.

Portal runs on the open-source version of Google’s Android mobile operating system, similar to many Amazon devices.

Facebook’s previous hardware, including its Oculus virtual reality headset and a phone developed with HTC, gained little adoption. NAN

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