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Voice Tech Like Alexa and Siri Hasn't Found Its True Calling Yet (recode.net) 75

An anonymous reader shares a report: As the holiday shopping season approaches, voice-powered smart speakers are again expected to be big sellers, adding to the approximately one-quarter to one-third of the U.S. population that already owns a smart speaker and uses a voice assistant at least once a month. Voice interfaces have been adopted faster than nearly any other technology in history.

While some of this will likely come to pass, the hype might be disguising where we really are with voice technology: Earlier than we think. About a third of smart speaker owners end up using them less after the first month, according to an NPR and Edison Research report earlier this year. Just a little more than half said they wouldn't want to go back to life without a smart speaker. While people are certainly enthusiastic about the new technology, it's not exactly life-changing yet. Today, voice assistants and smart speakers have proven to be popular ways to turn on the radio or dim the lights or get weather information. But to be revolutionary, they will need to find a greater calling -- a new, breakout application.

Smart speakers, like training wheels, are getting people more used to talking to their devices. However, the future of voice probably won't be on speakers at all. The major speaker makers have all added screens to their assistants. Samsung, smartly, is putting its voice assistant Bixby on its TVs, which have the potential to become the smart assistant hub of choice. The key element is the voice assistant, regardless of what device it resides in. Smart assistants will creep into every aspect of our lives and will be available at home and away.

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Voice Tech Like Alexa and Siri Hasn't Found Its True Calling Yet

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  • True calling? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Monday November 12, 2018 @12:59PM (#57631300) Homepage Journal
    Not sure what you are talking about. They are generating billions of dollars of revenue and profits. What do you think their true calling is?
    • Re: True calling? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by peragrin ( 659227 ) on Monday November 12, 2018 @01:04PM (#57631328)

      It isn't the profits but the usage.

      They don't post profit by user numbers.

      I listened to someone just yesterday go hey Siri and asked a question.

      The question and resulting answers could be found faster by typing wiki subject name.instead the lady goofes off for 15 minutes attempting to get Siri to understand the question and then pull up the various sections of Wikipedia.

      Voice assistants take a simple search or inquiry and lengthen it by minutes to get a response. That you end up having to read anyways

      • by Minupla ( 62455 ) <[moc.liamg] [ta] [alpunim]> on Monday November 12, 2018 @01:19PM (#57631396) Homepage Journal

        Not sure I agree. We have one in our living room where we don't have any desktops. We often use it during dinner conversations to get facts to support a position, "Hey Google, when was France invaded during WW II?" or cooking "Hey Google, how long do you boil a potato?" or set a timer "Hey google, set a timer for 7 minutes".

        None of those would be accomplished faster by going upstairs and bringing a system back from sleep and typing the question in.

        And "Hey Google, let there be light!" is just fun :)

        Min

        • ^^^ This. Mine's an Echo Dot and I just got it a week ago, but I already can tell it's way quicker - as long as you know when to ask it, and when to fire up the laptop. Things like sports scores and schedules, weather / temperatures, facts and statistics all are basically as fast as asking someone. I also ask for the definitions of words while reading. I've often done this online if I was interested in the word enough, but I find myself doing it verbally a lot more often now because it's so much quicker
          • by cykros ( 2538372 )

            For shopping, I've found it a LOT more useful for reordering things than buying them the first time. Trash bags, paper towels, toilet paper, etc, have all become as simple to restock as "Alexa, reorder ".

            Buying things the first time with Alexa seems...suboptimal.

        • None of those would be accomplished faster by going upstairs and bringing a system back from sleep and typing the question in.

          So no one has a smart phone on them?

          • by Minupla ( 62455 )

            Funny thing - before, yes. Now, not as often actually. I find myself tending to leave my phone in a charger and grabbing it when I go out.

            And of course our 10 year old ("Hey google, how do you spell X") doesn't have a phone, and she often leaves her tablet on a different floor (or dead :)).

            As for the flow of conversation (not your comment, but figure I'll save some electrons :)) - I find it helps for us. We'd get hung up on some question that's parenthetical to the main topic. Now we can google that and

        • by Anonymous Coward

          You all leave your cell phones asleep upstairs?
          There's literally zero reason for a smart speaker interface, when you can ask/use your cellphone, other than putting a dedicated monitoring device into each home.

          • by Minupla ( 62455 )

            I don't generally respond to ACs but just in case this point is useful to someone who hasn't though this through. If you're worried about spying, faraday bag your cell phone first. At least with my google home I can do network traffic analysis on it (hint, when its idle it sends very little). Try that trick on your cell phone. Well for starters, there's a whole level of your phone you don't have access to. (check out https://media.ccc.de/v/27c3-40... [media.ccc.de] ) - spoiler alert: Silicon/firmware security hasn't

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Re: True calling? (Score:4, Insightful)

        by arth1 ( 260657 ) on Monday November 12, 2018 @01:21PM (#57631422) Homepage Journal

        Voice systems aren't optimal even when humans are listening.
        Much of the automation and overall design we use in our daily lives became popular because it reduced the amount of talking we had to do.
        It might have started with pulling a string instead of calling a servant, but it could have been even earlier, perhaps a library index allowing a monk to find the right manuscript without having to talk to their fellow menk.

        Speech is inefficient and error prone. I predict that a few thousand years down the line, we will have evolved away from it.

        • by lgw ( 121541 )

          allowing a monk to find the right manuscript without having to talk to their fellow menk.

          Can we all adopt "menk" as the plural of "monk"? Like polygoose as the plural of mongoose, it's obviously right in hindsight.

  • True calling? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 12, 2018 @01:01PM (#57631312)

    Their "true calling" is collecting personal information from the users. And they are very good at it.

    • ^^^ This. (No mod points today, so can you please give a brother a hand?)

      I'm still surprised that people part with their money to acquire these devices; you'd think you'd get a $100 break on your federal income taxes or something for installing a free one considering how they get used.
  • Come on, we all know this where it's heading

    • Well lets hope in the future, when you are old and begin to have trouble with once simple tasks, that you will have friends and family available to help you out, and live your later years with dignity.

      I don't see caring technology, however I see technology doing the busy work giving people the time and resources to be caring to others. If the volunteer for meals on wheels isn't so interested in getting food to all his spots, they can actually take their time and talk with the people. Even it means 1 meanin

      • by arth1 ( 260657 )

        Voice recognition really doesn't work well for the elderly, who both have problems raising their voice to enunciate clearly, and problems hearing.

        • That, and adapting to the "logic" of many modern devices. What makes sense for a lot of younger people becomes a remarkably non-intuitive approach for people who grew up before television sets were available.
    • Why would we need voice tech for lonely people? Isn't that what Social Media is for?
  • Siri is terrible (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Lucas123 ( 935744 ) on Monday November 12, 2018 @01:09PM (#57631346) Homepage

    It feels like I'm alone in my opinion that Siri is a terrible voice-activated, virtual assistant technology. More often than not, Siri can't get simple commands right, often due to the iPhone's poor natural-language user interface. I don't think I've ever had a dictated message turn out correctly using Siri and any of my iPhones (generation 5-8). I'm actually a bit jealous when I see how easy my friend's Android phone understands voice commands and natural language dictation. Google's natural language processing, works nearly flawlessly.

    I'm just throwing this out there because I'm wondering if anyone else thinks, for lack of a better criticism, Siri simply sucks.

    • I use Siri all the time and I find it works pretty well. Having friends with Google phones that also use voice I haven't seen any way they actually use the device so far with voice that is heads and shoulders above what Siri can do - it probably has better voice dictation but that's about it right now.

      If I want to make a reminder or set an alarm, Siri works great.

      If I want to ask for directions, Siri works great.

      If I want to open an App, Siri works great...

      I don't know what people are doing exactly where S

    • I don't think you're alone, that's all I ever read about Siri.
    • Yes it does suck. Itâ(TM)s surprising how much it sucks actually.

  • by DNS-and-BIND ( 461968 ) on Monday November 12, 2018 @01:20PM (#57631408) Homepage

    The entire point of these devices is not to be useful by speaking to them. The entire point is to get people to put a freaking microphone in their houses. They can listen to everything. How do you think the device knows how to respond to its name? But that's OK, they pinky swear they delete it all and it will never be used against you.

    Down the road a few years people will get wigged out that they're in a home with no microphone. It will feel weird and unsafe. You'll get people refusing to allow their children to visit the houses of the microphone-less (a pejorative will be coined to describe these anti-progressive Luddites). When I read George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four I thought that the telescreen that watched and listened to everything you did was an incredibly stupid idea that nobody would ever agree to voluntarily. We're already halfway there. How did it come to this?

    • by rogoshen1 ( 2922505 ) on Monday November 12, 2018 @05:06PM (#57632794)

      These tech gadgets are basically 'toys'. (Which granted, is a very unpopular opinion here.) Post war boom, consumerism and the resulting infantilism of society, fixing a 'need' through advertising yadda yadda.

      But yeah, somewhere after 1950 the notion of 'growing up' and focusing on work/family was perverted into individualistic consumerism -- did grown men really play with toys to this extent before then?

      Most of these gadgets that you think you need -- or make your life more convenient; really just make you lazy, neurotic, and stupid.

    • How did it come to this?

      "Give me convenience, or give me death"

  • The article says: "turn on the radio or dim the lights or get weather information. But to be revolutionary, they will need to find a greater calling -- a new, breakout application."

    Why?

    Turning on the radio (playing music generally), dimming/turning on/off lights and getting weather information is all pretty critical to my day. I do every single one of those things every morning (using my Google Home). In addition I also check my calendar...

    Why does it _need_ to do more than that? That is perfectly enough

  • They certainly did (Score:3, Insightful)

    by ugen ( 93902 ) on Monday November 12, 2018 @01:23PM (#57631430)

    The true calling of the voice "assistants" is to collect and provide personal information that can be processed and used to better market goods and services by various corporations.

    What they have not found yet is a plausible use case that would be universally acceptable and persuasive enough to get these devices into as many hands/homes as possible.

  • The devices are still too stupid.

    The speech-to-text engines are amazing. Google and even distinguish voices between users.

    What's lacking is the natural language understanding. Everything right now is rule based. They may need to move to an AI approach to get that part really working well, but they haven't come close to what they can still do with their current approach. There are so many things that it either can't do, or I have to use cryptic code-like phrasing to make work. For example, I can set a t

  • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Monday November 12, 2018 @01:42PM (#57631548)

    Voice interfaces have been adopted faster than nearly any other technology in history.

    Really? I find that curious because I almost never see anyone actually using them. Seriously, I just never see anyone using Siri or any of the others and I'm around people using smartphones and tablets constantly. Once it while I see someone do a search on their iPhone or dictate a text message. But if I see it happen more than once a week that's a lot.

    I don't have any problem with the idea of them but in my experience they don't generally work very well outside of a few niche applications. It's almost always faster for me to type what I'm searching for because they screw up the transcription most of the time. (I have the most generic US midwestern accent you can imagine and no speech problems either) I also cannot imagine any practical use for something like Alexa in my house. Your mileage may vary of course but I don't really see the appeal. I have an iPhone and I find Siri nearly useless to the point of it actually being a hindrance at times. I've never used Cortana on any Windows 10 machine and see no point to it. I haven't played with the Google versions much but similarly I don't see much value in it. I also don't like the idea of announcing what I'm searching for in public even when it isn't anything sensitive.

  • Do I need to elaborate?
  • Smart assistants will creep into every aspect of our lives ...

    Creep being the operative word. When you aren't paying for the product, you are the product. That includes your voice and contact list. With AI-driven voice simulation technology reaching the point where, given samples of a person's voice, it can craft a reasonable facsimile thereof, won't it be possible for Alexa to call someone, spoof your phone number, and threaten that person using your voice and mannerisms?

  • They are good for party games, and grins and giggles. But, very little more. With very few exceptions, it is faster and more convenient to do things ourselves, than trying to get these devices to do things for you.
  • by DickBreath ( 207180 ) on Monday November 12, 2018 @02:50PM (#57631974) Homepage
    See Audio Adversarial Examples: Targeted Attacks on Speech-to-Text [arxiv.org]. And see the data [carlini.com].

    Just imagine. A television commercial says: Alexa, what is the weather?

    Now every human in the room heard that, and it sounds harmless.

    What Alexa actually heard: Alexa, browse to evil.com

    Pretty neato.

    Or see this: DolphinAttack: Inaudible Voice Commands [github.io], and see this [github.com].

    Hope that helps!
  • Bing or Google search going 100% voice would ring VOX true calling.

    Alexa's service approach .vs. Siri's assistant really is about footprints. Siri's in mobile and Alexa's in home. VOX search could steal away both

  • This is 2018 (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Bobrick ( 5220289 ) on Monday November 12, 2018 @02:54PM (#57632000)
    The last interaction I would want with a connected device is talk to it. I already patch my cameras (phone, laptop) with tape to avoid being snooped on, and at the risk of repeating what other commenters have said already, I have zero use for a surveillance and marketing device listening to me.
    Shopping list? If it's really so long that I might forget something, use a pen and piece of paper.
    Want to play music? Well, load up the playlist "manually", it will take a whole lot of 3 seconds.
    Whatever the fuck else people use these for, I've never heard one example that didn't make me go "Why?".
  • by BrendaEM ( 871664 ) on Monday November 12, 2018 @02:55PM (#57632004) Homepage
    I like the idea of voice recognition, but it's insane to trust any company to put a computing box in my room that records everything and sends out what information that company chooses over the internet. Own your own voice recognition.
  • With a few refinements.

    One problem: I don't like being spied on.

  • It's too hard to use. I have to give commands in some odd way. Like: Phone - Phone Book - Find - Call . . .

    It practically never gets commands right.

  • Still working on the spy part?
    Trying to get past the last of the users computers installed ad blocking?
  • true calling depends on the user. for me, alexa's true calling is to make me lazy. No longer do I have to get out of bed on a cold morning to turn up the heat. No longer do I have to get out of a comfortable, living room recliner to turn off tv's, lights and other controlled devices in the bedrooms. No longer do I have to look for a remote in order to turn off the tv before leaving the house. No longer do I have to go from room to room to make sure everything it turned off before going to bed. no long

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