At the Oracle OpenWorld conference in San Francisco today, Larry Ellison, Oracle’s former chief executive and current chief technology officer, showed off a new platform for building and running chatbots.
Not surprisingly, Oracle is positioning its chatbot platform as a simple interface for enterprise applications. But the chatbots made with it can work in modern messaging apps like Facebook Messenger, Slack, and Kik.
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So far this year, Facebook and Microsoft, among others, have already launched services for building chatbots.
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On stage today, Ellison demonstrated a Messenger chatbot running on an iPhone that was built with the Oracle software. One could imagine interacting with it through voice commands, rather than text messages, Ellison said. That wasn’t shown today, though.
Instead, he exchanged text-based messages with the bot, which went by the name Oracle Mobile Procurement, to place an order for a new set of business cards.
When the chatbot showed him his current card, it had his previous title: chief executive officer.
“Hmm… Checked with the HCM system,” the bot said. “It looks like your title has changed since your last order. Would you like your updated title on your new cards?”
Ellison hit yes.
The chatbot asked if it should ship 500 cards to an existing shipping address, if it should update the shipping address, and if it should adjust the quantity. Then it placed the order. Finally, it asked if there was anything else it could help Ellison with. The answer was no — “unless I can change my salary back to what it used to be,” he said.
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Ellison did not talk about when the new service would be available or how much it will cost.
Also today, Ellison unveiled Oracle’s second-generation cloud infrastructure.
Update on September 20: The chatbot builder is part of the existing Oracle Mobile Cloud Service, Oracle said today in a statement.
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