One of the biggest leaps forward from #WWDC2019 is voice control. The ability to control your phone and mac with your voice. Yet rather than use this as a catalyst for voice interaction across the user base, they branded it as an accessibility feature @BrianRoemmele wtf?
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Replying to @VUXworld @BrianRoemmele
I don’t get the fuss to be honest - they’ll still be on par for the vast majority of use cases. From surveys I’ve seen, iOS developers have shown no interest in other voice platforms so aren’t in a rush either.
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Replying to @daviddlow @BrianRoemmele
Apple devs are likely to be hooked on iOS apps. What’s more important is what are Apple customers doing? In Microsoft’s voice report 2019, Siri was joint with google in terms of the most used assistant. Regardless of where the devs heads are, following users is a good idea.
2 replies 0 retweets 3 likes -
Replying to @VUXworld @BrianRoemmele
That’s my first point though, of those users who adopt Siri, how many are crying out for voice apps? Could be a lot, might not be; Apple clearly aren’t over the line on opening it up yet...
1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
Gentleman, I hear ya. The complication with how most folks see this is through linear thinking. The premise starts with the idea that we needed a mechanical keyboard and a visual display taking up 100% cognitive load. #VoiceFirst is about contextually replacing this with AI.
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