There’s one other chatbot on the town. Amazon’s AI chatbot Rufus is now live for all US customers, albeit in a beta model. This follows a testing part that began back in February. Rufus appears to be like to at the moment be tied to the app and never the online model of Amazon.
So what does it do? It’s an Amazon chatbot so it helps with purchasing. You possibly can ask for lists of really useful merchandise and ask what particular merchandise do and stuff like that.
I’ve tooled round with it a bit this morning and it appears nice, although a bit boring. I’ll say that I cross-referenced a few of the really useful merchandise with the online model and Rufus doesn’t robotically listing promoted objects, no less than for now.
It spit out a seemingly random listing of well-reviewed merchandise on a number of events. That’s nice by me, although I’m not about to purchase one thing based mostly on the phrase of a one-day previous chatbot. You may as well ask particular questions on merchandise, however the solutions appear to be pulled straight from the descriptions. As any common Amazon buyer is aware of, a few of these descriptions are correct and others aren’t. The chatbot is tied to your private account, so it could possibly reply questions on upcoming deliveries and the like.
Amazon says that the bot has been educated on its product catalog, together with buyer evaluations, group Q&As and public info discovered all through the online. Nonetheless, it hasn’t disclosed what web sites it pulled that public info from and to what finish. It didn’t even verify that these have been retail-adjacent web sites.
If you wish to strive it out, replace to the newest model of the app and search for the colourful icon on the bottom-right. Possibly, if all of us work exhausting sufficient at asking ridiculous questions, we are able to break it simply in time for Amazon Prime Day.
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