Google Assistant Released For NVIDIA's SHIELD TV; Other Vendors To Follow Shortly
by Anton Shilov on October 2, 2017 8:30 AM EST- Posted in
- Consoles
- Media Player
- Shield
- NVIDIA
- Android TV
- Google Assistant
Google has finally started to roll out its Google Assistant to its Android TV platform, where it is going to compete against Amazon’s Alexa and Apple’s Siri on respective platforms. The Google Assistant will first be available on NVIDIA’s SHIELD TV console, next on Sony’s Bravia TVs and then on other hardware running Android TV.
Google launched its Assistant for smartphones about a year ago and since then expanded its reach to hundreds of millions of smartphones as well as its Google Home smart appliance. In both cases, Google tried to tailor the Assistant experienace for usage model of the appropriate devices: smartphones have relatively screens, whereas Home only has a speaker and a microphone (it can use TV as a display, but this is not a media streamer). The company has been promoting the planned launch of Assistant support for Android TV devices alongside NVIDIA for almost a year now – ever since the refreshed 2017 edition console was announced all the way back at CES – and now the company is beginning to roll out that software.
When it comes to NVIDIA’s SHIELD TV, the Google Assistant will be able to control media playback by browsing movies and TV shows as well as present additional information relevant to the context (if asked). In addition, the Google Assistant on Android TV can display Google Calendar to let owners view their appointments and upcoming events at a glance, or Google Photos to watch them on a big screen. NVIDIA does not say whether the Google Assistant on the SHIELD TV actually recognizes voices of different people (like the Google Home) or only accesses calendar or photos of only one account. Likewise, the Google Assistant on Android TV can be used for shopping, but again, it is not clear using whose credit card.
The next important thing about the NVIDIA SHIELD TV is that it can be used to control various smart home devices when paired with the SmartThings Link USB appliance using Zigbee and Z-Wave communication protocols. With the arrival of the Google Assistant, compatible smart home devices (such as Nest) can now be controlled using voice (after the device will become available, of course). So, when you are watching a movie, you can tell the remote of the SHIELD TV to dim the lights or make it warmer in the room.
Meanwhile, NVIDIA says that it will start selling the SmartThings Link shortly at a promotional price of $14.99 (down from $39.99) for a limited amount of time. On a related note, however, NVIDIA still has not announced anything further on their companion "Spot" device; so the range of the SHIELD TV as an Assistant host is limited to wherever a SHIELD remote is available.
Finally, to mark arrival of the Google Assistant to the SHIELD TV, new and existing SHIELD TV owners will receive three months of YouTube Red for free ($9.99 per month).
Related Reading:
- Google I/O 2017: Google Assistant Gets Smarter, Google Home Gets Free Calling & More
- The Google I/O 2017 Keynote Live Blog
- NVIDIA and Baidu Sign Multi-Facet AI Tech Partnership for Tesla, DRIVE PX2, & SHIELD TV
- NVIDIA Releases Android 7.0 Update for 2015 SHIELD TV, Adds Amazon Video App
- NVIDIA Launches SHIELD TV: Smart Home Functionality, More 4K HDR Streaming Services
- NVIDIA SHIELD Android TV Console Adds Support for Vudu, HDR and 4Kp60 Content
- Google Announces Chromecast Ultra: 4K & HDR for Chromecast
- Live Blog: Made By Google October Phone Event
Source: https://blogs.nvidia.com/blog/2017/09/28/shield-tv-google-assistant/
6 Comments
View All Comments
nathanddrews - Monday, October 2, 2017 - link
From the perspective of feature advancement, I'm really loving the competition between all these smart home vendors. From the perspective of someone that just wants stuff to work right now, it all feels slightly unfinished. That said, the fact that the new Echo Plus contains a central hub compatible with Hue, ZigBee, Kwikset, and tons more seems to be the right way to go. Forcing these big players to open their platforms to as many smaller players as possible - and even being compatible with stuff like OpenHAB - makes for very compelling products.I am overall disappointed that we can't just have PLC/PLN-enabled devices instead of wireless.
usama_ah - Monday, October 2, 2017 - link
I bought a SHIELD last month and this is an immensely welcome upgrade. Although I have a Google Home and an Echo, I don't mind having an assistant built into SHIELD as well, since it has a visual component the prior two devices lack. It's also made browsing Netflix much faster. "Play Star Trek Voyager on Netflix" is faster than clicking with the (simple to use) remote. My son (who is 3) has been using Google Assistant on Home to activate our living room lights or ask about the weather, and he isn't speaking very clearly at times yet she is able to understand him. I think it's only a matter of time before he tells SHIELD "play Daniel Tiger" or something.imaheadcase - Monday, October 2, 2017 - link
I don't really find assist stuff useful. More often than not it does not understand what you want, or is annoying than usefulimaheadcase - Monday, October 2, 2017 - link
I would rather get a girlfriend and get sex out of it...ZING MYSELFMadManMark - Tuesday, October 3, 2017 - link
I can't imagine why you're still searching for one imaheadcase ;)thomasdille - Thursday, April 5, 2018 - link
google assistance grabbing all the attention of the world. https://nbalivemobilecheatshub.com