![The base of Amazon Echo, the smart speaker home of voice agent Alexa](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/958f14_08c5fa88b7304fedb1164da10c80c514~mv2.jpg/v1/fill/w_800,h_450,al_c,q_80,enc_auto/958f14_08c5fa88b7304fedb1164da10c80c514~mv2.jpg)
The base of Amazon Echo, the smart speaker home of voice agent Alexa
In September of last year, PullString announced its Author platform for developing text-based chatbots.
A few months after the launch, the firm added the ability to create Skills — that is, conversational third-party applications — for Amazon’s Alexa voice agent.
This week, PullString is launching a new platform called Converse that is solely focused on letting non-technical users create voice-based Skills.
The company says this is the first end-to-end platform for non-technical users to create conversational interactions for Alexa. Converse is also PullString’s first self-service, cloud-based platform, as Author — which has now been discontinued — was desktop-based and required some professional services.
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