We all barely have time to breathe between watching reels and pretending to work on Zoom. Google has stepped in with a solution for one of life’s most annoying tasks, making phone appointments.
How ‘Ask for Me’ Works
Enter Ask for Me, an experimental AI feature designed to handle the grunt work of booking home service massages, food delivery, and whatever else people are too laz..err I mean socially anxious to do themselves.
The feature is part of Google Search Labs, where users who opt in can trigger the AI by searching for a service, at which point Ask for Me jumps in to make the call. Businesses get notified right away that they’re talking to an AI, it’s like catfishing your local pizza guy into thinking a real person is on the other end
Convenience or Peak Laziness?.
This AI magic is powered by Google Duplex, the same eerily human-like voice tech that has previously made dinner reservations and updated business hours on Google Maps.
Ask for Me uses natural pauses, conversational tones, and a touch of hesitation to sound convincingly human, because let’s face it, people are more likely to talk to a robot if they don’t realize they’re talking to a robot.
Right now, the feature is in its early stages, working with a limited range of services, but if it proves successful, it could expand to cover more types of calls.
Of course, Google promises that it’s collecting user data only to improve the service, which is exactly what a massive tech company with a history of hoarding user information would say.
While Ask for Me is undoubtedly convenient, it also raises a serious existential question, nasa last stage na ba tayo ng katamaran? First, we didn’t want to answer calls. Now, we don’t even want to make them. What’s next?
AI to attend family reunions for us so we don’t have to answer “Kailan ka mag-aasawa?” If this trend keeps up, pretty soon we’ll have AI eating for us, working out for us, and breaking up with people for us (“Sorry, it’s not you… it’s the algorithm.”).
But hey, if Ask for Me can book an appointment and talk down that barber who insists my hair is too long, then maybe—just maybe—this is the kind of AI future we need.