Artificial Intelligence For Disposable Voice Recognition, Take Cheap Chips and Add Simple AI Okay, Google: throw yourself in the trash. by Jamie Condliffe 2017-09-25T06:00:00-04:00
Business Impact Why 500 Million People in China Are Talking to This AI iFlytek’s voice recognition technology is everywhere in China, and that’s what’s making it smarter every day. by Yiting Sun 2017-09-14T00:00:00-04:00
Humans and Technology “Alexa, Understand Me” Voice-based AI devices aren’t just jukeboxes with attitude. They could become the primary way we interact with our machines. by George Anders 2017-08-09T00:00:00-04:00
Intelligent Machines For Computers, Too, It’s Hard to Learn to Speak Chinese Challenging written characters make voice-based computing a natural for China, but computers that can hold a conversation in Chinese are some way off. by Yiting Sun 2017-07-25T00:00:00-04:00
Intelligent Machines In 2016, AI Home Assistants Won Our Hearts Amazon’s Alexa took off, Google launched Home—and Mark Zuckerberg even built his own. by Jamie Condliffe 2016-12-20T10:30:00-05:00
Connectivity Apple Wants to Make Siri Far More Powerful By opening its virtual assistant up to outside developers, Apple looks to be positioning it as a way to compete in the suddenly crowded field of devices that users can talk to. by Michael Reilly 2016-05-25T13:55:00-04:00
Connectivity 10 Breakthrough Technologies 2016: Conversational Interfaces Powerful speech technology from China’s leading Internet company makes it much easier to use a smartphone. by Will Knight 2016-02-23T00:00:00-05:00
Connectivity Technology That Knows When to Hand You a Hankie Happy? Sad? A startup called Beyond Verbal has developed technology that can understand how you’re feeling just by listening to your voice. by Rachel Metz 2013-06-03T00:00:00-04:00
Connectivity Nuance Thinks Voice Ads Could Be a Mobile Hit Nuance hopes its voice-recognition tech can produce mobile ads that you actually want to have a conversation with. by Rachel Metz 2013-04-01T08:00:00-04:00
News Securing Your Voice Researchers turn voiceprints into passwords to avoid storing your actual speech anywhere. by David Talbot 2012-08-27T00:00:00-04:00