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There has been way more products announced at CES that have Alexa integration than any other assistant, including Google Assistant.
You're right that Google has superior data .....
"Way more products .....with Alexa integration?"
Get a grip. Perhaps you might like to consider some facts to mix into your assumptions.
Fact: Activate, the management consultants, recently looked at heavy users of virtual assistants, defined as people who use one more than three times a day (like you and me). The firm found that the majority of these users turned to virtual assistants to play music, get the weather, set a timer or ask questions.
Activate also found that the majority of Alexa users had never used more than the basic apps that come with the device. So much for your "way more product integration." Simply put, Amazon brought out Alexa almost two years before Google introduced Google Assistant so its early lead is hardly surprising. Your predictions put you too far over your skiis.
But if what Activate says is true, the lead is likely built on weak foundations.
So while hard-core users like you and me use many of the features including smart lights, smart thermostats, smart kettles, etc, to create a real smart home, for the most part people are using these speakers for the most simple, basic uses like search (and here Google search built into GA is second to none---Alexa uses Bing) and playing music and setting a timer.
Meanwhile, last week, Google announced it has sold one Google Home smart speaker every second since it started shipping a smaller version of the voice-controlled device (GH Mini) on 19 October— or about 80 days. That works out to roughly seven million units. Not bad.
When casual GH Home users become power users like you and me, Google said the Assistant can now accomplish more than one million tasks, or “actions,” such as asking for photos from Halloween or adding events to a calendar and much more. It created a Directory (I attached the link in a recent post above) — searchable, of course — to highlight these capabilities, hoping to remind users what the Assistant can do when they are ready!
In the 20 months since it first started making the Google Assistant available, Google said GA is now accessible on more than 400 million devices including washing machines, dryers, air-conditioners, refrigerators and dishwashers from LG, headphones from Bose and a range of speakers from 15 different companies. And of course on millions of Android smartphones. Compare these numbers to the approximately 35 million combined GH and Alexa devices sold last year in the US.
Still way too early to declare Alexa the winner, which you obviously feel inclined to do.