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14 votes
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Ring says it doesn't use facial recognition, but it has “a head of face recognition research”
16 votes -
Announcements from Amazon's 2019 hardware event: Echo Buds, Frames, Loop, Eero, Studio, Ring camera, and Alexa updates
5 votes -
Security researchers find several bugs in Nest security cameras
10 votes -
Apple globally suspends program in which humans review users' Siri queries
11 votes -
Everything cops say about Amazon's Ring is scripted or approved by Ring
18 votes -
The Hamburg Commissioner for Data Protection and Freedom of Information has banned Google from listening to Google Home recordings in the EU for three months
9 votes -
Google employees are systematically listening to audio files recorded by Google Home smart speakers and the Google Assistant smartphone app
23 votes -
GE's smart light bulb reset process is a masterpiece... of modern techno-insanity
24 votes -
Ring is using its customers’ doorbell camera video for ads. It says it's allowed to.
18 votes -
'It's time for us to watch them': App lets you spy on Alexa and the rest of your smart devices
11 votes -
I tried to sexually harass Siri, but all she did was give me a polite brush-off
5 votes -
“Get off my lawn” goes digital: Home surveillance apps and community social networks aren't making anyone safer. They're allowing paranoid jerks to harass their neighbors.
12 votes -
Nest, the company, died at Google I/O 2019
19 votes -
Google is shutting down the "Works with Nest" API on August 31, 2019
5 votes -
Amazon workers are listening to what you tell Alexa
16 votes -
The microphones that may be hidden in your home
23 votes -
DeathHacks
6 votes -
Nike’s self-lacing sneakers turn into bricks after faulty firmware update
22 votes -
Now your groceries see you, too
6 votes -
For owners of Amazon’s Ring security cameras, strangers may have been watching too
10 votes -
Doomba
9 votes -
Amazon sends 1,700 Alexa voice recordings to a random person
17 votes -
Google Home (in)security
11 votes -
Alexa, should we trust you?
10 votes -
Google announces "Made by Google" family 2018: Phones (Pixel 3, Pixel 3 XL), tablet (Pixel Slate), and virtual assistant (Google Home Hub)
6 votes -
Siri, Alexa, Google - Who's using and having good experiences with voice commands?
Hi there, Big companies are spending big money on allowing consumers to control everything from their TV, smart speakers, lights, microwaves, etc with voice commands. But do people really want...
Hi there,
Big companies are spending big money on allowing consumers to control everything from their TV, smart speakers, lights, microwaves, etc with voice commands. But do people really want that?
I'm curious because I very much do NOT want to interact with computers vocally. I find it's slow and prone to error, not unlike writing out long passages on a smartphone. It functions, but it's not a great experience and remains a novelty for me.
Bought both kids Echo Dots which is a smart speaker with Amazon's Alexa assistant. It's cool, really innovative. But after a couple weeks both remain unplugged in my kids' rooms - totally lost interest. The only person who I've seen really use a voice speaker is an elderly gentlemen for whom it was the easiest way to interact with a computer (using it specifically to play music and get news).
My friend swears that teens commonly use Siri on their phones to look up information. I can only think of one person I've seen actively use the voice controls and that was an older woman who wanted show her friends how Siri could "rap."
So I was curious how many of you find yourself frequently interacting with computers via voice commands. I personally feel very awkward and self-aware and get easily frustrated because it reminds me so much of the terrible automated attendants on 800 numbers.
Edit: You all are confirming my suspicions. Anyone under age 25 use the voice commands often? I feel like this is all just the first step in designing AI interfacing
28 votes -
Amazon makes Alexa-controlled microwave
5 votes -
The next smart home peripheral? Smart home gym, Tonal, reviewed.
4 votes -
Amazon is invading your home with micro-convenience
13 votes -
Alexa, Siri, Cortana: Our virtual assistants say a lot about sexism
8 votes -
Amazon plans to release at least eight new Alexa-powered devices this year, including a microwave, an amplifier, and an in-car gadget
14 votes -
Share your experiences with smart thermostats
I have used a Nest (gen 1) for many years and recently switched it out for an Ecobee 3 with 3 additional room sensors. The Nest worked as advertised and I was happy with it. I moved my thermostat...
I have used a Nest (gen 1) for many years and recently switched it out for an Ecobee 3 with 3 additional room sensors.
The Nest worked as advertised and I was happy with it. I moved my thermostat location to a higher-traffic area of the house and used Nest Sense to have it automatically determine if I was away. All in all, I was pleased. The only reason I switched to Ecobee was so that I could use my Nest in another home and try something new.
The Ecobee is pretty much the same as the nest. They was you schedule temperatures is to first create Comfort Settings and then you schedule when they should run. It's a little less intuitive than the Nest, but it accomplishes the same task. The additional sensors are a nice touch but I find they are too sensitive. My ~50 lb dog can trigger them, which can run additional air conditioning when I wouldn't otherwise want it to run.
6 votes -
Thermostats, locks and lights: Digital tools of domestic abuse
12 votes -
Banking by smart speaker arrives, but security issues exist
2 votes -
Researchers have found methods of sending secret audio instructions undetectable to the human ear to Apple's Siri, Amazon's Alexa and Google's Assistant
6 votes