Siri has been embarrassing me since she first appeared on my iPhone 4S. Showing off the feature at a dinner with friends on that first weekend of its release, she choked on the simplest query.
Apple servers were slammed with people around the world doing exactly the same show-off maneuver simultaneously. And I learned my lesson. For most civilians outside the tech and media bubble, nothing
quite satisfies that schadenfreude urge as an Apple geek epic fail.
“Screw you, Siri.”
“!” she replies. Turns out she actually stops talking to you if
you start insulting her. For all I know, the platform is learning about my bad attitude. In a world increasingly dependent on rules-based robotics, you don’t want to alienate an algorithm. What
if Siri decided to get snippy with me during a request for directions?
American culture has had its way with Siri in the last few years. Our ambivalence with automation, the gadgetry we
otherwise crave, come out at moments like these. Like celebrity, gadget lust is both evident in our behavior and reviled in our rhetoric. Siri is icon and joke, all in the same cultural sentence. That
is how America rolls. Siri has become such a familiar voice that my wife objected when I used the new iOS 7 option of turning on the male version. “That is not Siri,” she complained.
Apparently a gentleman’s gentleman makes her more uncomfortable than having a female automaton serving her husband. Go figure.
But it turns out that like a lot of cultural
phenomena, more people know about and joke about Siri than actually use it. According to a commissioned survey of over 2000 mobile users by Intelligent Voice, part of the UK Chase Information Technology Service for transactional processing,
only 15.2% of Americans had used Siri in her latest non-beta iteration on iOS 7.
I have to admit I use Siri on a regular basis only as a shortcut to setting a timer. Otherwise my main use of
voice commands on my phone is for transcribing text messages faster. As a virtual assistant I gave up on Siri a long time ago. I not only find the accuracy and effectiveness too hit-and-miss, but I am
not drawn to the human-like relationship it is supposed to engender toward the machine itself. I never dreamed of robotic personal assistants, or real life valets, for that matter.
But
even more to the point, Siri is not impressing those who do use it. Once the survey winnowed out non-users, the 150 respondents left were still underwhelmed with the service. Only 12.7% find Siri
“extremely accurate” in understanding them. Still, 43.3% say Siri is “quite accurate.” Put the two responses together and I guess Siri gets a fair vote of confidence. A good
third of users find the results, like me, hit-and-miss. Only a small percentage find Siri altogether bad. But you have to figure those users gave up a while ago anyway.
When asked if Apple
“oversold” the voice command feature on iOS, only a bare majority of 54% disagreed. The analysts at Intelligent Voice asked the question because of their concern that a good technology is
sullied by unrealistic expectations. “All told, not great news for Apple, but probably worse news for the voice recognition industry,” the site states. “We sell it like it’s
magic, but as I’ve read elsewhere, it’s still an emerging technology that’s been emerging for 30 years. The sooner we are honest with people about what can really be achieved, the
more chance we have of adoption.”
I have been reviewing voice command software for over 15 years -- from the earliest days of Dragon. And I actually rely on voice-to-text for some
writing on a daily basis. It is still not ready. And as an interface, arguably we are not ready for it. Voice still suffers from a fundamental problem -- people don’t want to talk at their
machines in public. Voice is an impractical interface in most cubicle environments just because of the awkwardness of the out-loud phrasing and the sheer cacophony of voices. I have yet to see someone
use Siri in a public setting, I guess largely because most of us are too self-conscious to do so.
The idea of the amiable Android valet goes back into the first decades of Sci-fi pulp fantasy
in the 1930s and 40s. It was a cultural byproduct of mechanization itself because it embodied the ways in which the machine age was replacing aspects of human toil with machines. The dutiful robot
with nefarious aims was a trope for Americans who are unsure whether mechanization was challenging their human worth or helping to free it to a next order of being beyond toil. This is an unresolved
question, but it is interesting that the Android theme re-emerges at just that moment when the technology has evolved from utilitarian to intimate. Voice interfaces may be a long way off, because of
practical and social restraints. But the larger issue may be: what are we really talking about when we talk about Siri?