Showing posts with label Siri. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Siri. Show all posts

Saturday, March 3, 2012

10 Siri tips and tricks: do more with iPhone 4S

10 Siri tips and tricks: do more with iPhone 4S

Say the right things - get your iPhone 4S working better for you

10 Siri tips and tricks

Siri is a digital assistant that's currently only available on the iPhone 4S. Siri is designed to understands what you say and get the right meaning from the instructions that you give it.

Using Siri you can dictate, send messages, schedule meetings, place phone calls and plenty more - it'll even tell you the weather.

But its effectiveness can be patchy unless you give it the right commands. So we've put together our top tips and tricks to get more from Apple's digital assistant.

But first, why not check out our video - see how Siri copes with different accents.

1. Dictate to Siri

Why type when you can speak?

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Commands and questions aren't the only ways to put Siri to work. Wherever you can type a long passage of text, tap the microphone key (left of the spacebar) to dictate instead. Siri listens for a bit longer in this mode. Tap the Done button when you're finished. If it stops listening prematurely, just tap the mic key to continue. If you forgot something, move the text cursor to the correct spot, tap the mic and Siri will insert text at that specific point.

2. Fix mistakes

Correct Siri when it gets it wrong

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By now, you'll know that Siri doesn't always get things right. It's particularly sensitive to slurred or mumbled words. Sometimes, Siri will recognise that it probably didn't understand what you said and underline those words and phrases in blue. Tap them to see likely alternatives. Any word, not just those underlined, can be tapped to type over it; or tap the mic key to dictate a replacement for what's selected instead of repeating everything.

3. Add grammar

Punctuate your dictation

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Siri doesn't make assumptions about punctuation and grammar, but it recognises commands for inserting new paragraphs, commas, full stops and many other grammatical constructs. Sadly, these aren't recognised when composing emails outside of Mail. Work around this by starting to compose a message, but provide only the recipient and subject. Next, tap the message to open it in Mail. The text cursor will be in the body, so tap the mic key to start dictating. In this mode, Siri responds to grammatical instructions. 

4. Set relationships

Personalise the conversation

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In the Contacts app, find your record and edit it. Swipe all the way to the bottom of the form, add a field and pick Related People from the list. Tap the left side of the field that appears on the form and you'll be presented with a list of relationships. Siri recognises these connections to you, allowing it to understand personalised requests, such as "Send a message to my boss to say the train has broken down so I'll be late." You can even establish these relationships with spoken commands, such as "My father is...".

5. Arrange to meet

Let Siri find your friends for you on the map

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You were planning on a quiet weekend, but a friend just called encouraging you to meet them at a cool new place they've found. They don't have to send their location using the Maps app to show you where it's at, provided you've already linked up with Apple's Find My Friends app (Free). When you ask Siri where that person is, it retrieves the information from the app and shows their location on a map, along with an approximation of the address so you can pop over and be there in no time.

6. Schedule events

Organise your diary

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Setting up calendar events is one of Siri's most useful features, but its scheduling abilities are more sophisticated than that. You can check your availability with phrases like "Do I have anything on my calendar next July?" and "What does my day look like next Friday?"

If you don't check your schedule, Siri will warn you about any potential overlaps that might exist. It only explicitly asks if you still want to add the new event. However, it will take into account the context for further spoken commands, so you can tell it: "Change the time." Alternatively, if it's the existing event that you want to change, commit the new one to your calendar, then say something like: "Change my 5pm meeting to 4pm."

7. Add to an email

Pick up where you left off

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You might want to add something to a note or email after Siri stops listening. Say "Add" to append where you left off. If you are using the Home button or raise-to-speak method to talk to Siri, you can't use instructions like "new paragraph". Nor can you tell it where to add text. To overcome this, tap the preview to open the item in its corresponding app. Use the mic button to give further dictation. It will be inserted at the cursor's position.

8. Get social with Siri

This tip works with Twitter too

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Siri can't interact with Facebook directly, but you can set things up to post status updates just by speaking. On the Facebook website, in Account settings, click Mobile on the left and follow the instructions to set up text messaging. Create a new contact on your iPhone with 'Facebook' as its name and set its mobile number to the text messaging one Facebook provides. Now you can tell Siri to "Send a message to Facebook".

9. Make lists

Add to pre-existing reminders

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Although Siri can't create new lists in the Reminders app, it can add to existing ones as things spring to mind. Say something like: "Add passport renewal to my holiday list", substituting the list's name followed explicitly with 'list' to give context. Be wary of including the word 'list' in a list's name; Thankfully, if it recognises you're adding to a list but isn't sure which one, it'll prompt you to choose from those available.

10. Security

Prevent tricksters and strangers from using Siri

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You can prevent access to your apps and information by locking your iPhone with a passcode. Still, Siri can answer questions, reassign relationships and, most worrying of all, send messages without you entering it.

You can turn off access to Siri when the phone is locked to stop practical jokes by your friends – or strangers if your phone is lost. In the Settings app, go to General > Passcode Lock, enter the code, then flick the Siri switch to off. Siri remains accessible when the phone is unlocked.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Siri not coming to older versions of iPhone

Apple's voice assistant Siri will remain exclusive to the iPhone 4S, Apple has confirmed.

In an answer to an inquiry from developer Michael Steeber, asking about a possible special Siri-enabled iOS build for iPod touch and iPhone 4 owners, Apple responded with a resounding "no."

"Siri only works on iPhone 4S and we currently have no plans to support older devices," Apple said.

Siri is one of the most recognizable features of the iPhone 4S, and although it could work on the iPhone 4, Apple probably wants to give iPhone 4S buyers a little extra something for their money.

Of course, Apple can change its mind in the future, but for now it seems that only iPhone 4S owners will enjoy the benefits of chatting with their phone.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Siri co-founder and CEO Dag Kittlaus has left Apple

Siri co-founder and CEO Dag Kittlaus has left Apple — just 12 days after the virtual assistant launched with the iPhone 4S and became an overnight phenomenon.


Kittlaus, sources told All Things D, had been planning a departure from Apple for a while due to a desire to take time off, be closer to family and brainstorm new ideas.


He and his co-founders Adam Cheyer and Tom Gruber spun Siri out of a project by non-profit R&D institute SRI International in 2008. SRI International had been asked by the Department of Defense's innovation arm, DARPA, to create an "enduring personalized cognitive assistant," which inspired the consumer-branded product. Apple acquired the company in April 2010.


Since the acquisition, Kittlaus has led Siri and speech recognition teams at Apple.


Kittlaus left just after the launch of the iPhone 4S on "amicable" terms, according to All Things D. Both other co-founders remain at Apple, according to their LinkedIn profiles.

Saturday, October 22, 2011

10 Ways Using Siri

Siri, Seriously: 10 Ways Using Siri


By now it seems we're all well aware of the many Easter eggs Apple has left for us in Siri, the intelligent assistant baked into the iPhone 4S. She has enough answers to silly questions to delight you for a weekend or more. Some sites are getting a lot of mileage out of finding each and every amusing answer Siri has up her sleeve.
But once the novelty has worn off, will you really use Siri in your everyday life — or will she fade into the background, an unwanted extra like Apple's previous iPhone voice control feature? After using the 4S for more than a week, I think Siri will enter our lives in small but vital ways. Most of these are things you could do before, but that required too many cumbersome steps that Siri can easily overcome.
Here's my shortlist of ways Siri really works for me. If you have an iPhone 4S already, how are you putting her to work? Take our poll and let us know in the comments.

SEE ALSO: Siri Is Impressive, But Still A Work In Progress
1. Siri, Wake Me Up. When you're ready to crash, the last thing you want to do is fiddle with an alarm app. It's much faster and more satisfying to hold down the home button and say "Wake me up at 7:15." This also works well for power naps — "Wake me in 40 minutes." — or the weekend, when you don't have a specific appointment but don't want to oversleep: "Wake me in eight hours."

2. Siri, Find Coffee. Likewise, typing on a small screen is something you just don't want to do when you're caffeine-deprived, especially in a strange town. For more complex restaurant requests later in the day, you'll probably want to go straight to the Yelp app — but if you just need a java jolt to get started, she can point you at the nearest coffee place. Chances are it's a Starbucks.
3. Siri, Do You Know The Way To San Jose? Here's another area where typing takes too damn long (and if you're doing it on the road, where most of us need directions on the go, typing can kill.) Siri is an effective and reliable shortcut to Google Maps directions. She'd be a lot more effective if she offered to read the directions out ahead of each turn; that would give GPS device manufacturers like TomTom a run for their money. But Siri hasn't steered me wrong on any city name I've tried yet. And yes, putting your question in the form of a song title works too.

SEE ALSO: iPhone 4S: Siri Politely Answers 10 Absurd Questions [PICS]
4. Siri, Play A Random Song. I'm pretty fastidious about organizing my tunes; setting up a new "most wanted" playlist every month is only the beginning of it. I thought nothing could ever stop me from scrolling through them to choose the playlist I wanted — but Siri did. What's more, instructions that match my spur-of-the-moment musical tastes — like "Siri, play some Queen" — have come in very handy, especially on my morning run.

5. Siri, Send A Text. Here's where Siri's lift-to-talk feature comes in handy. No more texting and walking! Just turn the phone on, put it to your ear and say "Siri, text my wife and let her know I'm going to be late." No muss, no fuss, and anyone walking past will simply think you're talking to your personal assistant. Which, of course, you are.
6. Siri, Will It Rain Today? Apple made a big deal of Siri's weather prediction capabilities, so it's no surprise that she understands all manner of meteorological questions. But I never expected to be asking so many of them as I stand and stare at my closet, hat rack and umbrella stand.

SEE ALSO: Teach Siri How to Pronounce Your Name
7. Siri, Remind Me To Do This Every Day. Here's another area where I had my system all thought out — a to-do app called Things combined with Google Calendar. Siri hasn't replaced this system, but she has lessened my need to put stuff in it. Best of all, she can set repeating items with ease: try "Siri, remind me to brush my teeth at 10pm every night." That may sound like micromanaging, by the way, but it's the most effective way I've found to get me to wind down at a certain time.

8. Siri, Remind Me When I Come Back Here. Siri's location-based reminders aren't perfect — it's hard to get her to understand location labels other than "home" or "work," for one thing. But one location she definitely understands is "here" — your current GPS coordinates. This can be useful in all sorts of small ways. For example, the other night I walked past a beautiful house I really wanted to take a picture of during the day. A quick note to Siri, and she reminded me when I passed that way a few mornings later. Good Siri.
9. Siri, Settle Our Argument. No, Siri doesn't know it all. But she is plugged into Wolfram Alpha, a two-year-old "computational knowledge engine" that can give you everything from the height of Mount Everest to the size of global GDP to quotes from Pulp Fiction — all in response to questions in natural language. She just might be able to give you the last word in that spirited discussion of yours faster than Google can. Besides, Google doesn't give you the satisfaction of asking, holding the phone up, and smiling smugly.

SEE ALSO: A Duet With Siri [VIDEO]
10. Siri, Send a Tweet. Going to Twitter.com to post your update? Launching the Twitter mobile app? That's so last month. Twitter and Siri were made for each other — you just have to do a bit of work to get them together.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Siri and milk

The folks behind Remember the Milk, a popular task management service, have integrated the iPhone 4S‘s voice assistant Siri with the app’s calendar.

The process of adding a new task requires no additional steps — simply tell Siri to remind you of something, and that task will be automatically created in Remember the Milk as well.

To be able to do this, you need to have an account with Remember the Milk and go through a short setup process explained here.

This latest integration is another sign that Siri might revolutionize the way we interact with our phones.

Sure, voice commands and tasks existed before Siri — even on the iPhone — but thanks to Apple’s enormous reach and influence, as well as some of Siri’s advanced and fun features, we’re seeing a lot of buzz around Apple’s take on speech recognition and artificial intelligence.