I genuinely hope they won't do that. Imo, they should at least put it behind a toggle in settings, so that i can keep using the "hey siri" trigger phrase.
I much prefer the "hey siri" and "ok google" triggers, as opposed to Amazon's "alexa" trigger. The latter approach makes it difficult to talk about it or even use that word without unintentionally triggering the device. Meanwhile, I had exactly zero unintentional triggers with Google Assistant or Siri.
And yes, I know that Amazon's echo devices allow in settings to switch to one of the other 5 or so trigger words, like "echo" or "computer". But they all suffer from the same issue of making it difficult to use those words in a conversation without accidentally triggering the device.
Agreed, Siri is already a little too sensitive. I was raking leaves the other day and Siri muted my music temporarily because the swish swish sound of the leaves somehow activated her!
I've never used any of these voice assistants. Do people find it easier to yell "Hey Siri, set up an alarm for 1 hour" vs going to Clock app and setting one? Not bashing anyone, genuinely curious.
That’s about the only use case I use. Helpful for cooking, when working with kids and you want them to know you set the timer, or you’ve crawled into bed and are barely conscious enough to realize you didn’t set an alarm.
Personally I find it faster to use Siri for alarms, timers, and particularly reminders, than to use the apps directly. Though I don’t actually say Hey Siri, since I always invoke Siri by holding down the button (might be an outdated habit, but Hey Siri used to be pretty unreliable). And even today, my reminder messages get mangled to unrecognizability at least half of the time.
Yes, timers and alarms are much easier with Siri. I also use it to set reminders and to add items to a grocery list. I use Siri to tell a HomePod to play various songs and artists while I’m doing other things in the house and to also to call person “X”. I sometimes ask Siri what the temperature is outside or if rain is forecast in the next N hours. We have some lights that are automated but that we can ask Siri to turn on or off as needed.
A lot of what makes Siri easier than the various apps is easier input and multitasking. Input can be simpler as some apps can have fiddle controls for adding very precise values. I am often doing something else while using Siri to do something. My phone may not be in my hard or even in the same room.
Not when controlling a single device, but as your needs expand across an entire home, it becomes really convenient not to rely on the presence of your phone or have to tie up your hands or attention to do anything.
I have Google Hubs in every room not just for the excellent audio casting, but to keep my phone out of my hands more than it absolutely needs to be.
Yes. I use Siri preferentially for almost every UI task that I can, ranging from alarms to “next song” to sending text messages. These habits were encouraged by the pandemic when FaceID was unreliable due to masks, but they also make sense while driving and doing exercise and are often easier than “pull phone out, unlock, find app, painfully type message” in normal circumstances. With AirPods in your ears Siri is even more convenient because you don’t need to take the phone out of your pocket for many tasks. Honestly I’d switch entirely to voice control for most non-reading tasks if I didn’t occasionally have to repeat myself due to transcription inaccuracies or “Hey Siri” failing to wake up the device.
I wish that they would allow us to use different invocation names for different devices. The Watch can’t always do what the HomePod can and the HomePod can’t always do what the phone can. Yet, if you have them all responding the wrong one will often take the response and tell you that it can’t do that. I have to keep verbal invocation turned off on all of them except the HomePod most of the time and then much use a button to activate a specific instance of Siri.
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[ 4.3 ms ] story [ 54.4 ms ] threadI much prefer the "hey siri" and "ok google" triggers, as opposed to Amazon's "alexa" trigger. The latter approach makes it difficult to talk about it or even use that word without unintentionally triggering the device. Meanwhile, I had exactly zero unintentional triggers with Google Assistant or Siri.
And yes, I know that Amazon's echo devices allow in settings to switch to one of the other 5 or so trigger words, like "echo" or "computer". But they all suffer from the same issue of making it difficult to use those words in a conversation without accidentally triggering the device.
This is a quite common Norwegian name amongst girls. I can imagine this would cause a lot of funny and frustrating situations in Norway.
A lot of what makes Siri easier than the various apps is easier input and multitasking. Input can be simpler as some apps can have fiddle controls for adding very precise values. I am often doing something else while using Siri to do something. My phone may not be in my hard or even in the same room.
I have Google Hubs in every room not just for the excellent audio casting, but to keep my phone out of my hands more than it absolutely needs to be.