Vlingo for Android Gets Foursquare Check-Ins
A new Vlingo feature lets users check in to Foursquare by speaking into a smartphone running Android 2.0 or later.
Vlingo
is finding new ways to differentiate its software for smartphones based on
Google's voice search application.
The company Sept. 2 released a new feature for its Vlingo for Android application
that lets users check in to Foursquare simply by speaking into their smartphone
running Android 2.0 or later.
Vlingo for Android lets users call friends, family and colleagues listed in the
smartphone's personal address book. Users can send text messages, e-mail
messages and other content simply by speaking into the phone using voice
commands.
The company in July added
a SuperDialer feature that let users quickly contact businesses, see maps
and read reviews. Google followed Vlingo a month later by offering a similar
tool, Google
Voice Actions for Android, as a free feature of its existing Voice Search
app.
Vlingo countered by making its own app free. Moreover, Vlingo CEO
Dave Grannan noted that while Google's service focuses on surfacing Google content
for users, Vlingo is at least casually supporting if not partnering with
popular Web service providers to enable voice search services.
Hence the new deal with Foursquare, which has a modest 3 million users but is
the hottest location-based social service going.
Grannan told eWEEK Vlingo for Android will let users check in to a location,
see what friends are nearby and provide updates on Foursquare from an Android
handset.
"You can say things like 'Where are my friends?' to find friends on
Foursquare, 'check in to Starbucks' and 'shout' out other commands,"
Grannan said. "Strategically, it's important for us to enable a voice-enabled
social network on Android" to differentiate Vlingo from Google's Voice
Actions.
He believes Google Voice Actions is likely awhile away from routing users to
other Web services such as Foursquare and Facebook.
The refreshed Vlingo for Android app also spruces up the social connection
quotient with a new "Share Vlingo" button that lets users update
status on Facebook, Twitter and Foursquare by saying "social update"
into their phone.
Cozying up to popular Web services is smart on Vlingo's part as it seeks to
fight extinction from Google's Voice Actions, which accompanies the Voice
Search widget now omnipresent on Droid devices from Verizon Wireless.
While Vlingo freed up its Vlingo for Android (it was $9.99), the company makes
money from advertising for the voice searches it connects users to, using
Google's AdSense program.








