Difference between revisions of "Apple Siri"

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<blockquote>Say your colleague cancelled shortly before a meeting. CALO, knowledgeable about each person’s role on a project, could discern whether to cancel the meeting, and if needed, reschedule, issue new invitations and pin down a conference room. If the meeting went ahead as planned, CALO could assemble (and rank) all the documents and emails you’d need to be up to speed on the topic at hand. The assistant would listen in on the meeting, and, afterwards, deliver a typed transcript of who said what and outline any specific tasks laid out during the conversation. CALO was also able to help put together presentations, organize files into folders, sort incoming messages and automate expense reports, among a host of other tasks. - ''BOSKER, Biance, SIRI RISING: The Inside Story Of Siri's Origins -- And Why She Could Overshadow The iPhone, 22 January 2013, The Huffington Post''<ref name="huff13" /></blockquote>
 
<blockquote>Say your colleague cancelled shortly before a meeting. CALO, knowledgeable about each person’s role on a project, could discern whether to cancel the meeting, and if needed, reschedule, issue new invitations and pin down a conference room. If the meeting went ahead as planned, CALO could assemble (and rank) all the documents and emails you’d need to be up to speed on the topic at hand. The assistant would listen in on the meeting, and, afterwards, deliver a typed transcript of who said what and outline any specific tasks laid out during the conversation. CALO was also able to help put together presentations, organize files into folders, sort incoming messages and automate expense reports, among a host of other tasks. - ''BOSKER, Biance, SIRI RISING: The Inside Story Of Siri's Origins -- And Why She Could Overshadow The iPhone, 22 January 2013, The Huffington Post''<ref name="huff13" /></blockquote>
  
This project eventually inspired Adam Cheyer and former Motorola employee Dag Kittlaus to work on their own virtual assistant. Cheyer, Kittlaus, and several other SRI employees (Mark Drummond (then SRI's executive director of ventures and licensing), Norman Winarsky (vice president of SRI Ventures and a member of Siri's board), Didier Guzzoni (then Cheyer's Ph.D. student), William Mark (then vice president of SRI's information computing sciences division and a principal investigator for CALO) first envisioned the idea of Siri in 2007. They subsequently founded the Siri, Inc. company and secured funding from Morgenthaler and Menlo Ventures.<ref> BARBIERRI, Cody. Siri raises $15.5M more for virtual personal assistant. VentureBeat [online]. 2009, Nov 24. Available online at: http://venturebeat.com/2009/11/24/siri-raises-15-5m-more-for-virtual-personal-assistant/ (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).</ref><ref>9to5mac. Meet Dag Kittlaus, the guy who made Siri and became a millionaire following a personal phone call from Steve Jobs. 9to5mac [online]. 2011, Nov 10. Available online at: http://9to5mac.com/2011/11/10/meet-dag-kittlaus-the-guy-who-made-siri-and-became-a-millionaire-following-a-personal-phone-call-from-steve-jobs/ (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).</ref>
+
This project eventually inspired Adam Cheyer and former Motorola employee Dag Kittlaus to work on their own virtual assistant. Cheyer, Kittlaus, and several other SRI employees (Mark Drummond (then SRI's executive director of ventures and licensing), Norman Winarsky (vice president of SRI Ventures and a member of Siri's board), Didier Guzzoni (then Cheyer's Ph.D. student), William Mark (then vice president of SRI's information computing sciences division and a principal investigator for CALO) first envisioned the idea of Siri in 2007. They subsequently founded the Siri, Inc. company and secured funding from Morgenthaler and Menlo Ventures.<ref> BARBIERRI, Cody. Siri raises $15.5M more for virtual personal assistant. VentureBeat [online]. 2009, Nov 24. Available online at: http://venturebeat.com/2009/11/24/siri-raises-15-5m-more-for-virtual-personal-assistant/ (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).</ref><ref name="meet">9to5mac. Meet Dag Kittlaus, the guy who made Siri and became a millionaire following a personal phone call from Steve Jobs. 9to5mac [online]. 2011, Nov 10. Available online at: http://9to5mac.com/2011/11/10/meet-dag-kittlaus-the-guy-who-made-siri-and-became-a-millionaire-following-a-personal-phone-call-from-steve-jobs/ (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).</ref>
  
 
The development of Siri begun at a great speed. The release of iPhone 3GS, a smartphone with enough processing power to run Siri, breakthroughs in voice recognition technologies, and opening of the iTunes app marketplace, immensely helped the development of the Siri app, which was originally planned to be text-only at first. The company released the app on 4 February 2010, then for iPhone 3GS only. On 28 April Apple Inc. purchased the start-up for an undisclosed sum.<ref name="released">ROUSH, Wade. The Story of Siri, from Birth at SRI to Acquisition by Apple—Virtual Personal Assistants Go Mobile. Xconomy [online]. 2010, Jun 14. Available online at: http://www.xconomy.com/san-francisco/2010/06/14/the-story-of-siri-from-birth-at-sri-to-acquisition-by-apple-virtual-personal-assistants-go-mobile/?single_page=true (Retrieved 15th December, 2016).</ref>
 
The development of Siri begun at a great speed. The release of iPhone 3GS, a smartphone with enough processing power to run Siri, breakthroughs in voice recognition technologies, and opening of the iTunes app marketplace, immensely helped the development of the Siri app, which was originally planned to be text-only at first. The company released the app on 4 February 2010, then for iPhone 3GS only. On 28 April Apple Inc. purchased the start-up for an undisclosed sum.<ref name="released">ROUSH, Wade. The Story of Siri, from Birth at SRI to Acquisition by Apple—Virtual Personal Assistants Go Mobile. Xconomy [online]. 2010, Jun 14. Available online at: http://www.xconomy.com/san-francisco/2010/06/14/the-story-of-siri-from-birth-at-sri-to-acquisition-by-apple-virtual-personal-assistants-go-mobile/?single_page=true (Retrieved 15th December, 2016).</ref>
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[[File:O-SIRI-HISTORY-570.jpg|thumbnail|right|Founders of Siri Inc. at the Cypress Inn. From left to right: Mark Drummond, Norman Winarsky, Dag Kittlaus, Adam Cheyer, Didier Guzzoni. Also present, but not pictured was Bill Mark. ]]
 
[[File:O-SIRI-HISTORY-570.jpg|thumbnail|right|Founders of Siri Inc. at the Cypress Inn. From left to right: Mark Drummond, Norman Winarsky, Dag Kittlaus, Adam Cheyer, Didier Guzzoni. Also present, but not pictured was Bill Mark. ]]
 
* Adam Cheyer - Former AI researcher at SRI International and a chief architect of the CALO project. Co-founder and VP of engineering of Siri Inc, later a engineering director of the iOS group at Apple Inc. Currently the co-founder and the VP of engineering at Viv Labs.<ref>CHEYER, Adam. About. Adam Cheyer [online]. Available online at: http://adam.cheyer.com/about.html (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).</ref><ref>Adam Cheyer. Cruncbase [online]. Available online at: https://www.crunchbase.com/person/adam-cheyer#/entity (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).</ref>
 
* Adam Cheyer - Former AI researcher at SRI International and a chief architect of the CALO project. Co-founder and VP of engineering of Siri Inc, later a engineering director of the iOS group at Apple Inc. Currently the co-founder and the VP of engineering at Viv Labs.<ref>CHEYER, Adam. About. Adam Cheyer [online]. Available online at: http://adam.cheyer.com/about.html (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).</ref><ref>Adam Cheyer. Cruncbase [online]. Available online at: https://www.crunchbase.com/person/adam-cheyer#/entity (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).</ref>
* Dag Kittlaus - Formerly a Motorola manager, joined the CALO project at SRI International as an Entrepreneur-in-Residence.<ref name="man behind"/> He co-founded Siri Inc. and assumed the role of the CEO (Marketing and Product). He left Apple Inc. in 2011.<ref name="meet"> SMITH, Dave. Dag Kittlaus, Creator of Siri, Leaves Apple. International Business Times [online]. 2011, Oct 24. Available online at: http://www.ibtimes.com/dag-kittlaus-creator-siri-leaves-apple-360382 (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).</ref> Now he is the CEO of Viv labs, a technology company that aims to build an AI that should surpass Siri.<ref>MACARTHUR, Kate. Siri co-founder Dag Kittlaus on Viv, artificial intelligence and 'V'. Chicago Tribune [online]. 2015, Mar 24. Available online at: http://www.chicagotribune.com/bluesky/originals/chi-dag-kittlaus-viv-bsi-20150323-story.html (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).</ref>
+
* Dag Kittlaus - Formerly a Motorola manager, joined the CALO project at SRI International as an Entrepreneur-in-Residence.<ref name="man behind"/> He co-founded Siri Inc. and assumed the role of the CEO (Marketing and Product). He left Apple Inc. in 2011.<ref> SMITH, Dave. Dag Kittlaus, Creator of Siri, Leaves Apple. International Business Times [online]. 2011, Oct 24. Available online at: http://www.ibtimes.com/dag-kittlaus-creator-siri-leaves-apple-360382 (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).</ref> Now he is the CEO of Viv labs, a technology company that aims to build an AI that should surpass Siri.<ref>MACARTHUR, Kate. Siri co-founder Dag Kittlaus on Viv, artificial intelligence and 'V'. Chicago Tribune [online]. 2015, Mar 24. Available online at: http://www.chicagotribune.com/bluesky/originals/chi-dag-kittlaus-viv-bsi-20150323-story.html (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).</ref>
 
* Mark Drummond - Former Executive Director for Ventures and Licensing at SRI International. Now a manager of advanced product development at Apple Inc.<ref>Mark Drummond. LinkedIn [online]. Available online at: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mdrummond (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).</ref>
 
* Mark Drummond - Former Executive Director for Ventures and Licensing at SRI International. Now a manager of advanced product development at Apple Inc.<ref>Mark Drummond. LinkedIn [online]. Available online at: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mdrummond (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).</ref>
 
* Norman Winarsky - Co-founder and board member of Siri Inc. Now advisor at SRI Ventures.<ref>Norman Winarsky. SRI International [online]. Available online at: https://www.sri.com/about/people/norman-winarsky (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).</ref>
 
* Norman Winarsky - Co-founder and board member of Siri Inc. Now advisor at SRI Ventures.<ref>Norman Winarsky. SRI International [online]. Available online at: https://www.sri.com/about/people/norman-winarsky (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).</ref>

Revision as of 17:24, 16 December 2016

Siri
Siri icon.svg.png
Category Intelligent Personal Assistants
Developer Apple Inc.
Announced 2007 [1]
Released Developers:
Consumers: 4 October 2011 [2]
Price 0 USD free to users of Apple products[3]
Operating system iOS, watchOS, tvOS, macOS
Controls

voice, commands written in the app [4]

Data available
Risk factor
Not offline
Software
http://www.apple.com/ios/siri/

Siri, or Speech Interpretation and Recognition Interface, is an intelligent personal assistant from the American company Apple Inc. The users interact with Siri via a natural language interface. Siri is able to search for data and answer questions based only on a vocal input. The underlying algorithms learn user's habits and personal language and better itself in order to deliver more individualized results.[5] The user can invoke Siri by saying "Hey Siri" or by double-tapping the device's Home button.[6]

Siri originally started as an iOS app created by a technology start-up of the same name which was founded by Dag Kittlaus, Tom Gruber, and Adam Cheyer in 2007[1] The aim was to offer a "virtual personal assistant technology" which would be a new way for the users to interact with their devices. The company was acquired by Apple, Inc. in 28 April 2010, and the app was integrated into the following version of iOS with the introduction of the iPhone4S.[7][4][8] Apple Inc. released a desktop version of Siri in the June 2016.[9]

Main characteristics

Siri is a personal assistant which is integrated into operating systems runs by Apple as iOS, watchOS or macOS. Originally it was provided only for iOS, but is widen its applicability later.[9] It could not work offline.[10] Siri uses natural language comprehension that processes the spoken information and then sends the query to be search, retrieve the data, and translate it back to spoken language to the user. The app itself does not conduct any search. The front-end merely consist of the speech recognition engine developed by Nuance Communications, Inc.[11] that comprehends what the user is saying and sends the translated query to Apple servers. There, the user query is analysed and relevant information is retrieved from the database and the Internet.[10] Siri does not de-construct sentences to discrete linguistic units but instead treats the key words as objects and constructs the search appropriately. In order to avoid misinterpretation Siri understands also written text, thus users could type their questions to it.[4]

Tom Gruber argues in the interview with Nova Spivacek that Siri works on behalf of it user. Siri is able to help the user with their task organization, text messaging, looking up services, social networks management, locating people, entertainment and more. In order to provide its service Siri tried to understand context of user's task and his or her intent. It learns from previous tasks.[12] It can directly interact with popular Internet services such as Facebook, Rotten Tomatoes, Wolfram Alpha, Yahoo Sports, as well as the Apple services ecosystem and the features present on the device Siri is installed on.[13][14]

Historical overview

The development of Siri begins with the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) creating the PAL (Personalized Assistant that Learns) research funding program.[15] This funding spawned the CALO, or Cognitive Assistant that Learns and Organizes, collaboration of which SRI International was a member.[16] The CALO was a five-year program to develop a new artificial intelligence assistant that would help military commanders with their duties.[17] This assistant would learn the user's habits and learn to be more efficient in assisting them.[18][19] The following excerpt from The Huffington Post describes CALO's abilities:

Say your colleague cancelled shortly before a meeting. CALO, knowledgeable about each person’s role on a project, could discern whether to cancel the meeting, and if needed, reschedule, issue new invitations and pin down a conference room. If the meeting went ahead as planned, CALO could assemble (and rank) all the documents and emails you’d need to be up to speed on the topic at hand. The assistant would listen in on the meeting, and, afterwards, deliver a typed transcript of who said what and outline any specific tasks laid out during the conversation. CALO was also able to help put together presentations, organize files into folders, sort incoming messages and automate expense reports, among a host of other tasks. - BOSKER, Biance, SIRI RISING: The Inside Story Of Siri's Origins -- And Why She Could Overshadow The iPhone, 22 January 2013, The Huffington Post[4]

This project eventually inspired Adam Cheyer and former Motorola employee Dag Kittlaus to work on their own virtual assistant. Cheyer, Kittlaus, and several other SRI employees (Mark Drummond (then SRI's executive director of ventures and licensing), Norman Winarsky (vice president of SRI Ventures and a member of Siri's board), Didier Guzzoni (then Cheyer's Ph.D. student), William Mark (then vice president of SRI's information computing sciences division and a principal investigator for CALO) first envisioned the idea of Siri in 2007. They subsequently founded the Siri, Inc. company and secured funding from Morgenthaler and Menlo Ventures.[20][21]

The development of Siri begun at a great speed. The release of iPhone 3GS, a smartphone with enough processing power to run Siri, breakthroughs in voice recognition technologies, and opening of the iTunes app marketplace, immensely helped the development of the Siri app, which was originally planned to be text-only at first. The company released the app on 4 February 2010, then for iPhone 3GS only. On 28 April Apple Inc. purchased the start-up for an undisclosed sum.[3]

Several months before Apple Inc. acquired Siri, Verizon Communications contracted Siri Inc. to make their product an integral part of the upcoming series of Android smartphones but the deal was cancelled after Apple purchased the start-up.[4]

http://techcrunch.com/2012/03/25/the-future-of-the-virtual-personal-assistant/

Purpose

Siri is a intelligent personal assistant available on products from the American company Apple Inc. As a personal assistant it acts on behalf of the user and can quickly help him search for information and carry out several tasks such as day planning, messaging, entertainment, and information retrieval.

Company & People

Founders of Siri Inc. at the Cypress Inn. From left to right: Mark Drummond, Norman Winarsky, Dag Kittlaus, Adam Cheyer, Didier Guzzoni. Also present, but not pictured was Bill Mark.
  • Adam Cheyer - Former AI researcher at SRI International and a chief architect of the CALO project. Co-founder and VP of engineering of Siri Inc, later a engineering director of the iOS group at Apple Inc. Currently the co-founder and the VP of engineering at Viv Labs.[22][23]
  • Dag Kittlaus - Formerly a Motorola manager, joined the CALO project at SRI International as an Entrepreneur-in-Residence.[24] He co-founded Siri Inc. and assumed the role of the CEO (Marketing and Product). He left Apple Inc. in 2011.[25] Now he is the CEO of Viv labs, a technology company that aims to build an AI that should surpass Siri.[26]
  • Mark Drummond - Former Executive Director for Ventures and Licensing at SRI International. Now a manager of advanced product development at Apple Inc.[27]
  • Norman Winarsky - Co-founder and board member of Siri Inc. Now advisor at SRI Ventures.[28]
  • Didier René Guzzoni - Former PhD. studend of Adam Cheyer. Currently a research engineer at SRI International.[29]
  • William Mark - President of Information and Computing sciences at SRI International.[30][31]
  • Thomas Robert Gruber - Leader for development of new technologies for Siri and related products at Apple Inc.[32] Former CTO and VP of design at Siri Inc.[33]

Important Dates

  • 2004 - DARPA introduces the PAL program that gives funding to research aiming to develop an intelligent personal assistant. SRI International receives a substantial sum and begins their work as a part of the CALO collaboration.[34]
  • 2007 - Siri Inc. is founded. It is a spin-off from the DARPA funded SRI International research into AI.
  • 4 February 2010 - Siri Inc. releases the Siri app.
  • 28 April 2010 - Apple Inc. acquires the company.
  • 4 October 2011 - Siri is integrated into the iOS operating system with the introduction of iPhone 4S.[2]
  • 13 June 2016 - Siri was opened to third party developers and bring it to the desktops[9]

Enhancement/Therapy/Treatment

Adam Cheyer, the developer of Siri claims that they want Siri to maximise human capabilities.[24] Norman Winarsky and William Mark, the developers of Siri argue that intelligent personal assistants due to their organising skills could help their user to solve complex problem situations.[35] Siri could organise multiple services and interact among various Apple products with and is supposed to smoothed and quicken these interaction. It also makes the interaction hands-free.[36] Finally, Siri learns from communication with its user, thus it could provide personalised solution of user's task.[35]

We have not found any therapeutical or medical use of Apple Siri, but it could appears in further development of the app.

Ethical & Health Issues

http://blog.gsmarena.com/siri-cracked-open-its-secrets-revealed/

http://www.wired.com/2013/04/siri-privacy/ this new program, they say, will be able to teach itself, giving it almost limitless capabilities

http://www.forbes.com/sites/ciocentral/2012/01/30/apples-siri-the-truth-is-shes-no-bandwidth-hog/#6578df536eee bandwith https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/apples-siri-threatens-to-damage-cellphone-service-for-all/2012/01/23/gIQAZ1O5TQ_story.html?utm_term=.31f2876561ee

https://techcrunch.com/2011/10/04/siri-my-humble-female-personal-secretary/ - Siri is a woman.

Public & Media Impact and Presentation

There were rumoured that Siri was given a name of Siri Kalvig a Norwegian meteorologist who worked with Kittlaus. However Kittlaus claimed that he intended to named his first child "Siri" but it turned to be a boy, who was named "Marcus". Therefore he use the name in a case of his intelligent personal assistant. The journal 9to5mac argues that Siri means “beautiful victorious counselor” in Norwegian.[21]

The developers of Siri claim that they originally did not expect Siri to speak. It should be just text technology. However, when the possibility of voice control was suggested, they found it groundbreaking and used it in Siri.[3]

Siri invaded journalist's life - https://www.cnet.com/news/how-apples-siri-is-beginning-to-freak-me-out/

There were a huge hype around Siri when it was introduced and it was predicted a magnificient future. For instance Blanca Bosker from The Huffington Postargued in 2013:

But as a new wave of virtual assistants compete to take on our to-do lists, Apple is under growing pressure to use the technology it already has and turn Siri into the multitasking, proactive helper it once was. Siri’s history suggests a fantastical future of virtual assistants is coming; where we now see Siri as a footnote to the iPhone’s legacy, some day soon the iPhone may be remembered as a footnote to Siri.[4]

and Gary Morgenthaler said in an interview for Tech Crunch: "Siri is the precursor to a revolution in search that provides far more intelligence in filtering results." This was in response to Eric Schmidt of Google defending Google's dominant position among the web search engines before the American Senate a year before. Siri was then released for 3 weeks and was still considered to be in beta.[37]

However, several journalists reported recently, that the system is not useful as it supposed to be. Mark Gurman and Ian King from Bloomberg claim:

While Apple’s ability to make high-quality hardware isn’t in question, the Siri voice system has failed to meet expectations. Since launching in 2011 with the iPhone 4S, Siri has frequently stumbled with long load times and by misinterpreting information. If the speaker is to thrive in a marketplace dominated by Amazon’s advanced Alexa service, Apple needs to improve Siri.[38]

http://techcrunch.com/2011/11/02/siri-why-are-you-so-underwhelming/

http://www.engadget.com/2011/10/04/iphone-4s-hands-on/

http://techcrunch.com/2009/05/27/siri-the-virtual-assistant-that-will-make-everyone-love-the-iphone-even-more/

http://techspecs-hossain.blogspot.cz/2013/07/siri.html

http://fortune.com/2012/12/20/in-piper-jaffray-re-test-siri-raises-her-grade-from-a-d-to-a-c/

http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2011/nov/20/voice-recognition-apple-siri?newsfeed=true

Public Policy

The use of Siri has been banned in IBM offices, since the company worries about the data Siri could acquire there.[39]

Related Technologies, Projects or Scientific Research

http://www.wired.com/2014/08/viv/ ("this new program, they say, will be able to teach itself, giving it almost limitless capabilities")

http://www.chicagotribune.com/bluesky/originals/chi-dag-kittlaus-viv-bsi-20150323-story.html

http://www.theverge.com/2014/8/12/5994325/viv-labs-siri-founders-creating-new-more-powerful-ai

https://patentscope.wipo.int/search/en/detail.jsf?docId=WO2011088053


https://www.elgato.com/en/eve

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 STODOLA, Barbara. A Michigan City success story: Former resident Dag Kittlaus, an Elston grad, creates Siri for Apple. The News Dispatch [online]. 2011, Nov 20. Available online at: http://www.thenewsdispatch.com/news/local/article_23f61073-2ef4-5a13-bc48-507463d40bb4.html (Retrieved 15th December, 2016).
  2. 2.0 2.1 HARRISON, Natalie and BREWER, Teresa. Apple Launches iPhone 4S, iOS 5 & iCloud. Apple [online]. 2011. Oct 4. Available online at: http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2011/10/04Apple-Launches-iPhone-4S-iOS-5-iCloud.html (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 ROUSH, Wade. The Story of Siri, from Birth at SRI to Acquisition by Apple—Virtual Personal Assistants Go Mobile. Xconomy [online]. 2010, Jun 14. Available online at: http://www.xconomy.com/san-francisco/2010/06/14/the-story-of-siri-from-birth-at-sri-to-acquisition-by-apple-virtual-personal-assistants-go-mobile/?single_page=true (Retrieved 15th December, 2016).
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 BOSKER, Blance. SIRI RISING: The Inside Story Of Siri’s Origins — And Why She Could Overshadow The iPhone. The Huffington Post [online]. 2013, Jan 24. Available online at: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/22/siri-do-engine-apple-iphone_n_2499165.html (Retrieved 15th December, 2016).
  5. Apple Inc. Siri. Apple [online]. Available online at: http://www.apple.com/ios/siri/ (Retrieved 15th December, 2016).
  6. PRICE David. Complete guide to Siri: How to set up Siri in iOS 9 & train it to recognise your voice. MacWorld [online]. 2015, Oct 22. Avaialble online at: http://www.macworld.co.uk/feature/iosapps/complete-guide-siri-ios-features-commands-questions-voices-ios-9-apple-music-proactive-3495151/ (Retrieved 15th December, 2016).
  7. SRI Inc. Siri, Inc. SRI [online]. Available online at: https://www.sri.com/work/timeline-innovation/timeline.php?timeline=computing-digital#!&innovation=siri (Retrieved 15th December).
  8. ELEMER-DEWITT, Philip. Live from Apple's iPhone event. Fortune [online]. 2011, Oct 4. Available online at: http://fortune.com/2011/10/04/live-from-apples-iphone-event/ (Retrieved 15th December, 2016).
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 PIERCE, David. Apple Might Have Just Made Siri Into Something Really Good. Wired [online]. 2016, Jun 13. Available online at: https://www.wired.com/2016/06/apple-might-just-made-siri-something-really-good/ (Retrieved 15th December, 2016).
  10. 10.0 10.1 CHIP. Siri cracked open, its secrets revealed. GSM Arena [online]. 2011, Nov 16. Available online at: http://blog.gsmarena.com/siri-cracked-open-its-secrets-revealed/ (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).
  11. Nuance. Speech recognition. Nuance [online]. Available online at: http://research.nuance.com/category/speech-recognition/ (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).
  12. SPIVACEK, Nova. How Siri Works – Interview with Tom Gruber, CTO of SIRI. Nova Spivack [online]. 2010, Jan 26. Available online at: http://www.novaspivack.com/technology/how-hisiri-works-interview-with-tom-gruber-cto-of-siri (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).
  13. CIPRIANI Jason. How to use Siri's new features in iOS 6. CNET [online]. 2012, Sep 19. Available online at: http://www.cnet.com/how-to/how-to-use-siris-new-features-in-ios-6/(Retrieved 16th December, 2016).
  14. HAY, Timothy. Apple Moves Deeper Into Voice-Activated Search With Siri Buy. The Wall Street Journal [online]. 2010, Apr 28. Available online at: http://blogs.wsj.com/venturecapital/2010/04/28/apple-moves-deeper-into-voice-activated-search-with-siri-buy/ (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).
  15. DARPA. Personalized Assistant that Learns (PAL). DARPA [online]. Available online at: http://web.archive.org/web/20081205185306/http://www.darpa.mil/ipto/programs/pal/pal_back.asp (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).
  16. SRI International. About us. SRI International [online]. Available online at: https://www.sri.com/about (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).
  17. SRI International. Timeline of Innovation: 2007. SRI International [online]. Available online at: https://www.sri.com/work/timeline-innovation/timeline.php?timeline=computing-digital#!&innovation=siri (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).
  18. MARKOFF, John. A Software Secretary That Takes Charge. The New York Times [online]. 2008, Dec 13. Available online at: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/14/business/14stream.html?_r=2 (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).
  19. CALO. About CALO. CALO [online]. Available online at: https://web.archive.org/web/20100820231257/http://www.calosystem.org/about/ (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).
  20. BARBIERRI, Cody. Siri raises $15.5M more for virtual personal assistant. VentureBeat [online]. 2009, Nov 24. Available online at: http://venturebeat.com/2009/11/24/siri-raises-15-5m-more-for-virtual-personal-assistant/ (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).
  21. 21.0 21.1 9to5mac. Meet Dag Kittlaus, the guy who made Siri and became a millionaire following a personal phone call from Steve Jobs. 9to5mac [online]. 2011, Nov 10. Available online at: http://9to5mac.com/2011/11/10/meet-dag-kittlaus-the-guy-who-made-siri-and-became-a-millionaire-following-a-personal-phone-call-from-steve-jobs/ (Retrieved 16th December, 2016).
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