> "When you ask or instruct Siri to do something, it first sends a little audio file of what you said over the air to some Apple servers, which use a voice recognition system from a company called Nuance to turn the speech – in a number of languages and dialects – into text. A huge set of Siri servers then processes that to try to work out what your words actually mean. That's the crucial NLU part, which nobody else yet does on a phone."
Android phones have been doing this long before Siri came out. I am still amazed (and annoyed) at how often people claim Apple to be the first to produce things without even the smallest bit of research to see if it's actually true.
Android phones have been doing this long before Siri came out. I am still amazed (and annoyed) at how often people claim Apple to be the first to produce things without even the smallest bit of research to see if it's actually true.