海角大神

Google's mobile voice search: Can you hear me now?

|
Jake Turcotte

Eager downloaders hoping to catch an earful of Google searches on their iPhones this weekend heard nothing but .

A media storm heralded the coming of an application that would translate search terms spoken into iPhones on the fly and return results in seconds, but launch day, Friday, came and went without so much as a whimper out of Mountain View. Tech watchers 鈥 that Apple's now-famous had somehow snared the program.

But patience prevailed, and users the world over can now download the slick little app. What are people saying? Plenty.

Michael Arrington over at TechCrunch and reminds that address book contacts aren't voice-searchable.

Macworld UK had trouble getting the application to (despite demonstrations in one of Google's ).

鈥 Staffers at CNET's iPhone Atlas discovered that speaking search requests than typing them out.

鈥 And the folks at Fortune asking Google questions about the program's delay.

My tests found the voice recognition to be surprisingly accurate, except when it came to names (I'm now "Andrew training" and coworker Casey Bayer is "the bear") and complex phrases (it turned "" into "harder apologizes," but how often are people searching for the Half-naked Hatchetfish, anyway?)

Also cool is that the application is location-aware, so my search for "movie times" automatically returned results for Boston. Same deal with a verbal Google Maps search I performed. The name of a small burrito chain turned up a list of locations, sorted by distance from my location in the Back Bay.

Those interested in downloading the free program can [iTunes] or search for Google Mobile App in the iPhone's application store.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
QR Code to Google's mobile voice search: Can you hear me now?
Read this article in
/Technology/Horizons/2008/1118/googles-mobile-voice-search-can-you-hear-me-now
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe