

Our gadgets finally speak human, and tech will never be the same
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. All over the world, millions of people have been doing something in private that’s now spilling into public spaces, on our sidewalks and in our open-plan offices alike. They’re…talking to their gadgets.
And not just a little—constantly. These aren’t the old voice assistants we’ve come to resent. Billions of devices are equipped with microphones and internet connections, and more of them are getting generative artificial intelligence, making them radically better at both hearing and understanding us.
A revamped Siri, powered by Google, is coming to the iPhone. Hundreds of millions of Alexa-capable devices from Amazon already support the generative-AI Alexa+. Google is rolling out an AI model to its smart speakers and the Gemini app that understands spoken audio without first transcribing it into text.
ChatGPT, Claude and Gemini are approaching human-conversation-level frictionlessness. Then there’s OpenAI’s forthcoming hardware, designed by none other than Steve Jobs’ former collaborator Jony Ive. The unveiling is expected late this year.
And you couldn’t swing a dead cat at CES without hitting an AI-powered gadget that promises to listen and interpret your every utterance. This is shaping up to be the year that AI makes talking as powerful as tapping and swiping. The shift could be as transformative for the tech industry as the introduction of the Mac, Windows or the iPhone.
Read on livemint.com