Google developing Siri-like voice commands, proximity-based controls for Google TV

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A patent filed by Google showcases a new technology that could enable users to control Google TV-equipped devices using their voices, reports Patently Apple. Using a specific smartphone app, users could be able to speak commands or queries that are then acted upon by a television, a set-top box, a DVD player or another device equipped with Google TV, according to the patent filing. The patent documentation also mentions an interesting feature where “the provision of the query to the television may occur when the user is within a set distance of his home also (e.g., by determining with GPS functionality on the smartphone that he is within 1/4 mile of the home), and the television may be turned on automatically as he approaches the home, with the television tuned to a channel that is determined to be most relevant to the query.” Google’s technology can also be applied to music, allowing users to remotely set up a playlist to be streamed on a TV or other device. Whether or not we can expect Google TV products to launch with the functionality described in this patent is unknown.

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10 Comments
  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1084899215 Jay Rock

    Could be an android-like…just saying :P

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1042895525 Justin Wingate

    Voice commands were capable on Android long before Apple ever introduced Siri. The above patent is just another voice command which Google has been doing for a long time now. Everyone I know with a iPhone 4s used Siri for about 1 month. After that, the novelty wore off and there back to just getting the information they need by pressing a couple buttons. Not to mention, they all admit Siri is very inaccurate. In the end, voice commands is just another feature that iDiots think Apple invented.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=57702887 Adam Reid

    Justin Wingate Saying Apple does something better than the competition is not akin to saying Apple invented something. Learn the difference. Yes, Android had some voice commands before Siri, but so did Apple. They had this little app called Voice Commands. But neither Apple nor its competition, Android or otherwise, offered the sort of natural language voice processing present in Siri before it launched on the 4S. So while Apple didn’t invent voice actions, they certainly refined it and made it a selling feature (notice the lack of voice commands in any Android marketing until AFTER Siri launched). Now that Apple has made it a selling feature and sold a record number of smartphones others are trying to copy that success, including implementing it on TV because the popular rumor is that Apple may do it. And why do people who use Android have to resort to name calling to prove their point?

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=57702887 Adam Reid

    Justin Wingate Saying Apple does something better than the competition is not akin to saying Apple invented something. Learn the difference. Yes, Android had some voice commands before Siri, but so did Apple. They had this little app called Voice Commands. But neither Apple nor its competition, Android or otherwise, offered the sort of natural language voice processing present in Siri before it launched on the 4S. So while Apple didn’t invent voice actions, they certainly refined it and made it a selling feature (notice the lack of voice commands in any Android marketing until AFTER Siri launched). Now that Apple has made it a selling feature and sold a record number of smartphones others are trying to copy that success, including implementing it on TV because the popular rumor is that Apple may do it. And why do people who use Android have to resort to name calling to prove their point?

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=57702887 Adam Reid

    Justin Wingate Saying Apple does something better than the competition is not akin to saying Apple invented something. Learn the difference. Yes, Android had some voice commands before Siri, but so did Apple. They had this little app called Voice Commands. But neither Apple nor its competition, Android or otherwise, offered the sort of natural language voice processing present in Siri before it launched on the 4S. So while Apple didn’t invent voice actions, they certainly refined it and made it a selling feature (notice the lack of voice commands in any Android marketing until AFTER Siri launched). Now that Apple has made it a selling feature and sold a record number of smartphones others are trying to copy that success, including implementing it on TV because the popular rumor is that Apple may do it. And why do people who use Android have to resort to name calling to prove their point?

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=667061512 Luis Reich

    Orlando Sablon Development? Google TV hasnt been exactly popular… But Android has had voice commands for years… And while true that Siri took it a step further, Apple did not invent voice commands, and they were not the first to implement it in mobile

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=667061512 Luis Reich

    Orlando Sablon By the way, one can use the same argument in instances such as why didnt Apple have picture messaging since day one? Or multitasking? Or copy and paste? Features get added as a platform matures…

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1042895525 Justin Wingate

    Orlando Sablon…Because the first iteration of Google TV was a failure. It didn’t have a lot of things that people wanted. Voice commands is nothing new. Contrary to popular belief, Apple wasn’t the first to use them on a smartphone. Google has been slowly implementing Android features into it’s Google TV and this is just another implementation. By the way, Apple wasn’t the first company to talk about voice commands on there TV’s. TV manufacturers like Samsung and LG have been showing off voice commands for months now. Hell, they were just showing them off at CES.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1042895525 Justin Wingate

    Orlando Sablon…Because the first iteration of Google TV was a failure. It didn’t have a lot of things that people wanted. Voice commands is nothing new. Contrary to popular belief, Apple wasn’t the first to use them on a smartphone. Google has been slowly implementing Android features into it’s Google TV and this is just another implementation. By the way, Apple wasn’t the first company to talk about voice commands on there TV’s. TV manufacturers like Samsung and LG have been showing off voice commands for months now. Hell, they were just showing them off at CES.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1042895525 Justin Wingate

    Orlando Sablon…Because the first iteration of Google TV was a failure. It didn’t have a lot of things that people wanted. Voice commands is nothing new. Contrary to popular belief, Apple wasn’t the first to use them on a smartphone. Google has been slowly implementing Android features into it’s Google TV and this is just another implementation. By the way, Apple wasn’t the first company to talk about voice commands on there TV’s. TV manufacturers like Samsung and LG have been showing off voice commands for months now. Hell, they were just showing them off at CES.

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