
As the Echo and Alexa from Amazon continue to set the pace for what to expect from voice-based interfaces and home hubs, Amazon is expanding them to Asia for the first time today. Today, the e-commerce giant announced[1] that Echo and Alexa are now on sale in India, and later this year, they will also launch in Japan.
“Millions of customers love Alexa, and we’re thrilled to introduce her to our customers in India today and Japan later this year,” said Tom Taylor, Senior Vice President, Amazon Alexa, in a statement. “We’re also excited to expand the Alexa Skills Kit and the Alexa Voice Service, so developers and hardware makers around the world can create localized Alexa experiences for our Indian and Japanese customers.”
India is launching today[2], with preorders open now for shipments starting later this month on the latest model of the Echo[3] (launched last week), the Echo Plus, and the Echo Dot, all powered by Alexa localised to English as it’s pronounced in India, along with “support for music titles, names, and places in additional non-English languages.”
Prices will be ₹9,999 ($153) for the Echo, ₹14,999 ($230) for the Echo Plus, and ₹4,499 ($69) for the Echo Dot.
The company is also detailing some of the third-party services that will be integrated with Alexa, including The Times of India, NDTV, Reuters, and ESPNcricinfo for news and flash briefings; and local weather. Amazon Music, it notes, will come “soon” but not at launch. Other music services that will be integrated include Saavn (“India’s Spotify”) and TuneIn.
The move to launch first in India in its march into Asia underscores Amazon’s focus on building out its business in that country. The company has said it plans...
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