Kiiyor, on 14 December 2014 - 06:34 PM, said:
Well, except Google has one of the best voice recognition algorithms out there. The fact that people complain about it doesn't mean it's terrible - it means that there is no piece of software that can effectively translate lots of different languages, accents and intonations. Even Apple, having spent bajillions of dollars on Siri, have to allow the program to adapt and learn before it can consistently recognize speech from just one person.
If it worked, then heck yes, i'd be all over it.
Far from it actually. Google has one of the worst voice detection programs, ever. You can rig up a program that does better with a few coding classes and some clever code. And Siri? Pfffftttt, yes, it's "advanced". Actually, it's a half-arsed attempt at adaptive AI, with equally half-arsed voice detection. There are better voice detection programs out there, just like the Alien in Alien: Isolation is a better adaptive AI than Siri could ever hope to be. (It's also scary as f**k and good at dropping from vents when you're looking at panels that take hours to get out of. So there's also that.)
You seem to forget that mass-produced products, either physical or virtual, are not on par with the actual capabilities of a specific technology. It's adapted to ease of production, not being a top of the line tech demo. You can make Siri almost flawless, but she'd need a LOT more space on the drive, and a LOT more computing power to drive her. Which is why we don't have a nearly flawless Siri, it would make each phone cost upwards of 1000-2000 dollars and be the size of the classic "Brick".
For instance, we can make aircraft that go faster than Mach 5 (NASA X-43 for instance, clocked in at approximately 11'000kph), but you don't see them being used outside of testing because they're prohibitively expensive. What we use for air travel every day is pedestrian in comparison, because it's costly to use advanced technology on a large scale, and often requires a lengthy adaptation process that impacts efficiency.
Edited by Alek Ituin, 14 December 2014 - 07:05 PM.