IBM Testing Voice-based Web

John Ribeiro, IDG News Service

IBM is testing a voice-based web to make information accessible to users who 
may not be able to read or write, or who do not have access to the Internet.

A "Spoken Web" project, currently being piloted by IBM's India Research 
Laboratory (IRL), aims to take advantage of the rapid proliferation of mobile 
phones in emerging countries like India. "The penetration of the PC and the 
Internet is not as high as that of the mobile phone, so we want to ensure that 
everything that is done on a web browser on a PC can be done with a mobile 
phone," said Guruduth Banavar, director of IRL, in a telephone interview on 
Thursday.

The Spoken Web technology will enable local communities to create and 
disseminate locally relevant content, and interact with e-commerce sites using 
the spoken word over the telephone instead of the written word, Banavar said.

Using technologies such as VoiceXML (Voice eXtensible Markup Language) and HSTP 
(hyper speech transfer protocol), Spoken Web mirrors the World Wide Web in a 
telecom network where people can create and browse "VoiceSites" that have their 
own URLs (uniform resource locator), traverse "VoiceLinks", and conduct 
business transactions, according to IBM.

The technology is about a world-wide telecom web of VoiceSites, which can be 
thought of as websites accessible over voice, and which are situated on a 
telephony network rather than the Internet, Banavar said.

Users can access the voice-based web using a toll-free number, through a 
variety of ways including a voice recognition system or a tone phone. 
VoiceSites can be also created over the phone, using a set of templates on the 
server side, he added.

The web of VoiceSites can potentially link to the World Wide Web, but the sites 
on the Web would have to be converted to support spoken interfaces, both via 
VoiceXML, and in how the content is designed and laid out, Banavar said.

The research lab expects its technology to be relevant to a variety of users 
looking for information and wanting to engage in transactions. These would 
include farmers who need to look up commodity prices, fishermen in need of 
weather information before heading out to sea, plumbers offering their 
services, and retail businesses like grocery shops that can list products, 
offer order placement, have personalized targeted advertisements, or set up 
reminders, IBM said.

Getting a Spoken Web up and running will however require the participation of a 
number of businesses and agencies including those offering financial services, 
Banavar said.

The researchers at IRL decided to focus on a voice-based web to address the 
information requirements of local communities because of the rapid 
proliferation of mobile communications in developing countries like India. 
Using PCs was also not practical because PCs cost more, and Internet 
penetration to most local communities is low, Banavar said. Most users are also 
not at ease with PCs and very often cannot read or write, Banavar said.

IBM is already doing pilots of the Spoken Web with some undisclosed mobile 
service providers in India, including one with associations working with 
visually impaired users. The strategy for the commercialization of the 
technology in India and other markets will be worked out by IBM's business 
groups, Banavar said.


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