Getting comfortable with using voice search

Apple's Siri

Apple's Siri

Published Oct 26, 2014

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Washington - Google released some statistics about how people use voice searches in a study on Tuesday – including the fact that 22 percent of teens are using their phones for voice search while they’re “in the bathroom”.

 

Apart from confirming that, yeah, we take our phones everywhere, the study also found that 55 percent of teens and 41 percent of adults use voice search – through Google search, Apple’s Siri or Microsoft’s Cortana, for example – at least once a day.

Overall, everyone uses voice search most to ask for directions, dictate text messages and make phone calls. Many people also use Google Voice Search while they’re cooking. Google commissioned the study from the consulting firm Northstar: 400 teens and 1 000 adults took part in the survey last month.

The study also found there’s a clear generational divide when it comes to voice search use. Teens opt for voice searches for more social reasons – help with homework, playing songs and finding out movie times.

Teens were also generally more comfortable with the technology. For adults, meanwhile, 45 percent admitted that they still “feel like a geek” when talking to their phones.

The company also asked users what they wish Google Voice Search could do for them. The top answer among teens was to have Google Voice “send me a pizza,” while adults said they wanted Google Voice Search to tell them where they’ve left their keys.

Both are actually within the realm of possibility.

Google is already experimenting with smartphone technology that can read a room for you, and potentially recognise objects. And, really, getting a pizza could be as easy as hooking voice search up to a pizza delivery app.

The question, of course, is where you’ll be when your pizza arrives. – Washington Post

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