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June 10, 2008 5:16 PM PDT

Voice search for the iPhone? Maybe someday

by Stefanie Olsen

For years, people have wondered when they would be able to voice a command to a digital device, have it understand the query, and respond with some degree of intelligence. That day still isn't here, but speech-technology companies like Nuance are working on it.

On Tuesday, Nuance, maker of Dragon Naturally Speaking for the desktop, said that it has developed a prototype for voice search on Apple's iPhone. In August, the company plans to start selling a downloadable application for the iPhone that lets them speak a question to the phone to retrieve search results from Google or another search engine, according to Steve Chambers, Nuance's president of mobile and consumer services. Chambers said that Nuance hasn't set a price for the application yet.

The prototype, called open-voice search, demonstrates that with a click of a button, people can ask a question, such as "cholesterol of a cheeseburger?" to call up search results without typing on a keyboard. Nuance's application sends the audio file to the company's servers, transcribes it, and then sends it back to the phone's search box for results. Also, in the course of a person's use, Nuance will create a unique acoustical model that learns how that individual speaks. That way, it can deliver more accurate translations over time.

Up next: Nuance plans to tackle voice dictation for SMS, e-mail, and instant chat messages on the iPhone. And even further out would be voice commands for playing music or map directions.

To work well, that kind of iPhone search would require Apple to license the software--which is Nuance's ultimate goal. But there's no indication that the highly proprietary Apple would turn to an outsider for speech technology. One of these days we'll have speech-recognition software.

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by lituus June 10, 2008 6:20 PM PDT
Ever heard of GOOG411 or TellMe? Both are available from any phone. That takes care of voice search.

Even simple phones like the KRZR, and scrappy Samsung phones have limited voice-command & dialing.

And Windows Vista has by far the best free Speech Recognition implementation. I think it will eventually trickle down to Windows Mobile when the standard WM device gets more powerful CPUs
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by pjaiello June 10, 2008 7:13 PM PDT
Or also have you heard of Vocera? Wi-Fi based communication systems driven completely by voice commands? They're prevalent in hospitals because they allow instant communication without cumbersome alpha numeric pagers.
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by Philstera June 10, 2008 7:30 PM PDT
Gawd the level of journalism on this site is terrible. Have you never heard of Voice Command a product released by Microsoft since around 2003 for Windows Mobile users it already does all this and uses natural language processing. How backwards are the CNET crew.
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by jrm125 June 11, 2008 5:31 AM PDT
Haven't you heard? The iPhone is apparently perfect according to CNET. GPS was invented by Apple too. Any WindowsMobile stuff was just imaginary.

Seriously, this place pisses me off. Better products exist, people just buy into the hype.
by rdegner June 10, 2008 8:39 PM PDT
Strange... I just used voice recognition earlier today to search for a restaurant and get directions using Live Search on Windows Mobile 6. iPhone is still working on that? Interesting.
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by amarvrm June 11, 2008 4:18 AM PDT
Nice Posting. Apple iPhone is the best mobile phone. There is one "app" that I would like to see on the iPhone... it's called Flash. Ever heard of it.

(Editors' note: a spam link has been removed from this post.)
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