The podcast about Python and the people who make it great
Building A Privacy Preserving Voice Assistant
Summary
Being able to control a computer with your voice has rapidly moved from science fiction to science fact. Unfortunately, the majority of platforms that have been made available to consumers are controlled by large organizations with little incentive to respect users’ privacy. The team at Snips are building a platform that runs entirely off-line and on-device so that your information is always in your control. In this episode Adrien Ball explains how the Snips architecture works, the challenges of building a speech recognition and natural language understanding toolchain that works on limited resources, and how they are tackling issues around usability for casual consumers. If you have been interested in taking advantage of personal voice assistants, but wary of using commercially available options, this is definitely worth a listen.
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- Your host as usual is Tobias Macey and today I’m interviewing Adrien Ball about SNIPS, a set of technologies to make voice controlled systems that respect user’s privacy
Interview
- Introductions
- How did you get introduced to Python?
- Can you start by explaining what the Snips is and how it got started?
- For someone who wants to use Snips can you talk through the onboarding proces?
- One of the interesting features of your platform is the option for automated training data generation. Can you explain how that works?
- Can you describe the overall architecture of the Snips platform and how it has evolved since you first began working on it?
- Two of the main components that can be used independently are the ASR (Automated Speech Recognition) and NLU (Natural Language Understanding) engines. Each of those have a number of competitors in the market, both open source and commercial. How would you describe your overall position in the market for each of those projects?
- I know that one of the biggest challenges in conversational interfaces is maintaining context for multi-step interactions. How is that handled in Snips?
- For the NLU engine, you recently ported it from Python to Rust. What was your motivation for doing so and how would you characterize your experience between the two languages?
- Are you continuing to maintain both implementations and if so how are you maintaining feature parity?
- How do you approach the overall usability and user experience, particularly for non-technical end users?
- How is discoverability handled (e.g. finding out what capabilities/skills are available)
- One of the compelling aspects of Snips is the ability to deploy to a wide variety of devices, including offline support. Can you talk through that deployment process, both from a user perspective and how it is implemented under the covers?
- What is involved in updating deployed models and keeping track of which versions are deployed to which devices?
- What is involved in adding new capabilities or integrations to the Snips platform?
- What are the limitations of running everything offline and on-device?
- When is Snips the wrong choice?
- In the process of building and maintaining the various components of Snips, what have been some of the most useful/interesting/unexpected lessons that you have learned?
- What have been the most challenging aspects?
- What are some of the most interesting/innovative/unexpected ways that you have seen the Snips technologies used?
- What is in store for the future of Snips?
Keep In Touch
- adrienball on GitHub
- @adrien_ball on Medium
- @adrien_ball on Twitter
Picks
- Tobias
- Adrien
Links
- Snips
- 2048 Game
- Smart Cities
- Raspberry Pi
- WikiData
- MQTT
- Google Assistant
- Amazon Alexa
- Microsoft Cortana
- Mozilla Common Voice
- Rust Language
- Snips Hermes messaging library
The intro and outro music is from Requiem for a Fish The Freak Fandango Orchestra / CC BY-SA