Car voice commands won't suck with Nuance's assistant - Roadshow
Prompted by an activation phrase, Dragon Drive recognizes a driver named Lior by his voice. Voice command in cars shows so much potential to help drivers keep their eyes on the road, but since its implementation, the technology largely resulted in frustration. Sure, placing a call to a specific contact usually works, but just try finding a destination in the navigation system. It becomes worse when the car doesn't show what commands it understands. Nuance, the company behind the majority of voice systems in cars, thinks it has the problem licked through the use of machine learning and the cloud, essentially equipping cars with a virtual assistant.
Feb-2-2017, 17:30:13 GMT