Categories: Mobile

Apple’s 25 year-old concept finally realised in Siri ‘intelligent assistant’

Among a slew of reports flooding from Apple’s iPhone event this evening lies one of their most important announcements in recent years – Siri. Siri is an all-new intelligent voice-control feature in iOS5 and will be available on the forthcoming iPhone 4S. But Siri isn’t strictly a new concept at Apple. Siri’s vision was originally devised almost 25 years ago by Apple and was known as Knowledge Navigator.

With Siri, iPhone 4S users pose questions to their device out loud. Siri makes sense of this verbal input and presents results and performs relevant tasks accordingly. The system can then itself respond verbally back to the user to confirm, clarify or disambiguate actions – something which is remarkably similar to the original Knowledge Navigator concept.

Task examples include organising meetings, checking the weather in any location or querying Wikipedia. Here’s Apple’s contemporary realisation of Knowledge Navigator:

Albizu Garcia

Albizu Garcia is the Co-Founder and CEO of Gain -- a marketing technology company that automates the social media and content publishing workflow for agencies and social media managers, their clients and anyone working in teams.

View Comments

  • The whole thing creeps me right out. People look mental enough as it is when they're on headphones having actual conversations with other people but talking to your phone and having it answer you is ridiculous. I really don't like this at all...

    • @seanear1ey I see what you mean. Maybe the phone responding verbally is a bit out there. Still, it's probably useful to select groups of people - visually impaired, people with stubby fingers...

    • come on this is the opposite of creepy. Being able to tell your phone something and have it respond it convenient and in 5 years it will be standard on all phones.

  • The whole thing creeps me right out. People look mental enough as it is when they're on headphones having actual conversations with other people but talking to your phone and having it answer you is ridiculous. I really don't like this at all...

    • @seanear1ey I see what you mean. Maybe the phone responding verbally is a bit out there. Still, it's probably useful to select groups of people - visually impaired, people with stubby fingers...

    • come on this is the opposite of creepy. Being able to tell your phone something and have it respond it convenient and in 5 years it will be standard on all phones.

Recent Posts

Gates-funded World Bank project seeks to connect digital ID with fast payment systems

The public-private financial revolution requires every person to have a digital identity, so they can…

4 hours ago

Tony Colon to keynote Articulate conference alongside industry execs, share best practices for leading in an AI-first future

At the outset of 2025, digital workflow platform ServiceNow revealed plans to hire up to…

3 days ago

Digital ID, face scans for age verification are becoming internet passports

Online age checks are not just about children; they're about getting everybody onboard with digital…

3 days ago

15 startup conferences that are actually worth attending in 2025

Big-name expos and star-studded keynotes may grab headlines, but in 2025, it’s the smaller, more…

4 days ago

US wants digital ID for patients, providers & payers

Trump says the system will be 'entirely opt-in,' but HHS is looking to encourage, require…

2 weeks ago

Why a proactive approach to threat exposure pays dividends 

Over the past year, not only has the frequency of cyberattacks skyrocketed across all industries…

2 weeks ago