Super-small Voice-controlled Wireless Phone
The phone comes in two pieces, (much like other cordless phones). The earset weighs only 1.1oz (including the lithium polymer battery, smaller than a pack of gum), and only has a single button on it. The base station plugs into your analog phone line, and connects to your computer via USB. The included software runs a custom copy of IBM's ViaVoice speech engine to interpret your voice commands; right now the software only runs on Windows.
The software integrates into Outlook, ACT! and Windows Address Book. At boot-up, the software looks at the list of contacts, and loads their names into a custom speech dictionary. If you want to call John Public, you press the button on the earset and say "Call John Public at work." The software matches your speech to John's name, looks up John's information, finds his Work number, and dials it for you. (Very cool). Dialing by numbers is done by pressing the button, and saying "Dial" and announcing the digits you want to dial, (i.e. "Dial one eight-hundred five five five one two one two").
All the other telephone functions are also handled via voice command, (answer, hang up, flash, mute, hold, volume, etc).
Right now the software only works with telephony functions, but they have just released an add-on package that lets you use the phone as a wireless headset for your computer, (for voice-dictation, IP Telephony, other voice-recognition software, etc). They say they want to extend the software to handle home-automation and entertainment, (can anyone say voice-controlled X10?!?)
The phones are priced at $300, which is targeted at the business crowd. It's a little steep for home use.
I happened to find a deal on mine, and have been using it for about a month now. I work out of my home for a software company on the other side of the country. It is very handy to be able to talk to my co-workers simply by saying their name. The size and form factor are also very nice. I can wear it around all day, and am able to take a call from anywhere near the house, (office, back deck, breakfast table, neighbor's house, changing a diaper, etc).
I know this doesn't have much to do w/ Linux, but the geek in me couldn't keep my mouth shut! I thought this might be an interesting story, simply for the application of voice technology and miniaturization.
Slashdot welcomes reader-submitted hardware reviews.
Is a really good idea, especially if you could hook it up to an X10. Being able to say "lights off" is much easier than having to clap :-).
The only concern I would have in the business application is what frequencies it uses and how secure it is. Most companies I know dislike cordless phones for this exact reason, and usually stay with in building lines. But they probably have a solution for this already.
If it requires Windows to run, then its really not a seperate product is it? Its more of just an add-on for Windows?
If its useless without a particular brand of some other product, then its useless.
I don't know what your cellphone technology is like in the USA (and I probably don't want to, since I can't think of a single US cellphone manufacturer or innovator), but this sort of thing is not really new in Europe, and is probably even passé in Japan.
This ArialPhone uses a base station as the actual phone bit, as having the phone actually right next to your ear like that all the time would probably give you cancer. So... this is absolutely no different to a standard Bluetooth phone with a Bluetooth headset.
Infact, it's worse, this uses 900Mhz spread spectrum, whereas Bluetooth is better because it has a cool name and better branding.
mogorific carpentry experiments
Whilst I dont want this to sound like flaimbait but why is this here? We've had cell phones that have voice recognition for a while and this post reads like an ad.
i dont see the point in smaller phones, i like em the size that they are now... i dont want something thats so small i cant tell it between a rock and a phone hehe
"Is it that difficult to push the buttons?"
"It's not that it's difficult, it's unnecessary."
I worry about hanging a permanent wireless phone like this on my ear. According to this study Pagers are much safer.
Yes, it's a parody.
tcd004
The phone made by McSiemens is even better: http://www.eel.nu/mcsiemens/McSiemens.html
"Call Barry at work."
brr-brr...brr-brr...
"Yes, who is this?"
"Oh, hi, Barry, it's me, Drew."
"Um, I'm not Barry. And I'm not at work, either. I think you have a wrong number."
"Who is this?"
"This is Garry. I was busy playing Solitare."
And also, does it integrate with my 3rd party emailer (Turnpike)? And three hundred dollars for something that automates dialling a number? I know this is aimed at business, but $300 is still a bit steep when all I have to do anyway is look up John's name in my little black book, dial his number and talk.
Note to M1-ers: a curt but otherwise insightful message is not "Flamebait" or "Troll".
OK, so this phone does speech recognition. That's cool, if not exactly ground-breakingly new. But does the speech recognition actually work?
Students of this sort of thing are taught all about the problems of getting speech recognition to work in noisy environments, in a car, in a restaurant, in a busy street etc. On top of the noise compensation problems, you have something called the Lombard effect, which means that when they're in a noisy environment PEOPLE TEND TO SHOUT INTO THEIR PHONE to try and make themselves heard. And this means that the speech you used to train your phone in your nice quiet office no longer matches the aggressive shouty tone of voice you're currently using.
True, there are ways and means round both of these problems. But they're by no means 100%, or even 95% reliable. And if I buy a phone that has speech recognition as its primary (its only?) interface, I'd want to make pretty damn sure I can use it anywhere.
So, the question for Noah - you can use this phone while changing a diaper, or around the breakfast table, but can you use it in the middle of Grand Central Station?
http://misterhouse.sourceforge.net/
Enjoy
Note that this is also possible using ericssons wireless headset (bluetooth) and a bluetooth enabeled phone.
I have one of those bluetooth phones (ericsson T-38) (around 100-150 dollars). And it works great!
'Could lead to all kinds of weirdness. Case in point...
Bob: "So, you really like that tiny phone?"
Ted: "It's fantastic. It's so light I barely notice I'm wearing it. I bought it right after that horrible stuff in New York."
Bob: "You mean the nine-eleven attacks?"
Ted: "Yeah, although I hear you're supposed to call them 'nine-one-one.'"
Alice (911 Operator): "Hello. Please tell me what the nature of the emergency is."
Bob: "Hey, aren't you wearing your phone now?"
Ted: "uh-oh..."
Alice: "Sir, abusing the Emergency Response line is *not* funny..."
(And I won't even get into what happens if you badmouth an ex by name while wearing one... although 911 might come in handy)
"Prepare for the worst - hope for the best."
A local computer reviewer had a bit on this unit - said it was nearly impossible to get the earpiece/mic unit to stay on the site of their head, and that they found it uncomfortably heavy.
I'd prefer something that used a small in-ear speaker/mic combination (something like my pair of Sony EX70LPs, although those don't have mics) and a small pager-sized beltpack.
Besides looking like a spy, I think it would be less intrusive and not look like you had become a borg drone.
"Nothing strengthens authority so much as silence." - Charles de Gaulle
nahh...they got their design wrong!
Re-design it and you'll have everyone at slashdot buying it!
When I first saw the name to the company...I though it said Anal phone....and I was like...yeah...it better be small then! Otherwise...ouch!
Anonymous Coward: (n.) 1. nerd at school or library. 2. karmawhore in training. 3. embarrased prep.
So when do we get TimesNewRomanPhone?
Please stop apologizing for stories not being about Linux! they don't have to be... according to the Slashdot faq,
"There are many components to the Slashdot Omelette. Stories about Linux. Tech stories. Science. Legos. Book Reviews. Yes, even Jon Katz. By mixing and matching these things each and every day, we bring you what I call Slashdot."
Just a random thought...
Sig- http://www.dreamhost.com/rewards.cgi?ayefly
but it doesn't seem particlarly small.
= HBH-30
in fact, aside from the voice recognition - which some mobile phones have - how is this all that different from
bluetooth headsets for mobile phones?
http://www.expansys.com/product.asp?code
they're not any larger and they work with you mobile phone
-
If this thing relies almost solely (if not completely) on voice recognition, how accurate are the results?
I have a mid-range priced phone by Verizon that supports voice recognition. The thing is ok, but it isn't very accurate... especially with multiple words.
For example, when I tried to call "Rob cell"... I got back:
Automated voice: "Did you say 'Rob Work'?"
Me:"No"
Automated voice: "Did you say 'Rob home'?"
Me:"No"
Automated voice: "Did you say 'Robert apartment'?"
Me:"NO"
Automated voice: "Did you say 'Robert cell'?"
Me:"NO!!"
Automated voice: "Calling: 'Robert cell'"
Me:"GRRR!"
"PC Load Letter? What the $@#% does that mean?!"
Super-small Voice-controlled Wireless Phone
now I'm going to need my Super-large(tm) microscope to press the buttons or tweak the insides...
Jesus saves souls and redeems them for valuable cash prizes
When the phone fits in your ear like a hearing aid.
He who knows not and knows he knows not is a wise man. He who knows not and knows not he knows not is a fool.
What kind of range does this device have from the base unit?
What is the sound quality like?
How does the headset respond to sources of interference like running microwave ovens?
How long does a charged battery last compared to the manufacturer's claim?
Get off my virtual lawn, you damned virtual kids!
Why not just get one of these, and hack together some software? Marginally cheaper, but much cooler, and potentially useful for more than just phone calls.
Personally, I can't wait until I can get CD-quality stereo out of two little earpieces like that. I guess the bandwidth is a bit low now, but surely Bluetooth 2.0 could do it.
MSK
I can't wait to get one and hook it up to my Mac!
Huh? Oh, I can't wait to get one to hook to my Linux box!
What?
I guess I can wait.
Dialing by saying a name is nothing new -- many cell phones do it. All the ones I've had did it poorly. Is this any better?
Dialing by saying numbers is something I wish my cell phone had. It should be very simple to implement, and very useful.
I just can't wait till people start accedently swallowing their phones.
Now there's a product which would sell...
The sucking noise would probably get to you after awhile, but then again it would probably be a fitting noise to have the phone make...
Just wondering...
Is it the guy, or the phone... or is it just me? But, does this picture on the main page just make you NOT want to buy the phone.
This seems like a pretty clunky piece of equipment. You can get telephone services that give you voice dialing with any phone. Many cell phones already have something like this built in. If, at least, the thing worked standalone and didn't use the PC for voice recognition. You can probably throw together an application like this from open source speech recognition and Linux telephony software fairly easily.
when you can get an article on slashdot for free?
Technology is sooooooo coool, and I really mean this, I dig Warcraft III, and Diablo II expansion....
But I werk around it, every day, at least 12 hours a day, and have done so since 1981.....(yes, I actually "knew" how to allign a floppy drive),
And I have come to this conclusion......
ya want to reach me on my off hours? Piss Off!
I don't need any device that has any possibility of making it any easier, for the world to reach out and touch me....leave me the fuk alone....
I resolve to NEVER WEAR A PAGER, AND......
Never EVER have a cell phone.....(unless the price comes way down, and even then, It would be OFF most of the time)
Fer gawwwds sake people, get a damn life....!
just get one of these?
Wow, an e-tailer. Was that on the information superhighway?
Most the managers and the MD have them here, I never realised they had voice rec on them though. Thats probably more due to the fact that the way they make a phone call is:
"Secretary! Get Bob from Company A on the line now and put him through to me"
Glenn
The Smrt way to trade CFDs on the ASX
1. What happens when you need to use an automated system? "Press 1 for ...." ?
2. I thought the whole point of pressing a mute button was to be discrete about it. Not yell "MUTE!" into the ear of the person you -don't- want to hear you.
3. "So, I was standing there, then there's this great flash of light, and in the muted silence that followed...."
How does it know that I didn't just want to a) switch lines and b) shut off my mouthpiece?
Hmm, I've heard enought stories about the wireless mics in theatre and actors forgetting to take them off when they go to the bathroom ....
I'm also interested in what the health risks might be. I understand that mobile phones are pretty dodgy, but the US are doing their best to hide this research. Are there any decent studies showing the long-term effects of mobile phones on the brain?
that the Submitter's name links to the "Arialphone User's Group"? Is it not completely obvious that this crappy Arialphone company is responsible for this post, and might have even PAID slashdot to post it???
Here's what I said:
To be perfectly honest mine didn't do anything strange after this. Maybe you should your defective one back to the manufacturer and try to get a new one.I design user interfaces for a free network management application,
When you said voice control for your X10, my first thought was "Take clandestine video of teenage girl undressing and then pan really slow"....
Damn popup ads...
There are now quite a few Bluetooth headsets for mobile phones (meaning you have much less radiation close to your head, by the way), and many of these phones have speech recognition. I use the Motorola Bluetooth headset with an Ericsson T68 and it works well. The speech recognition is OK indoors but quite unusable on the street. One good feature is that you can keep the keypad while listening to IVR prompts for 'press one' etc.
And of course I can do GPRS, which is very useful for small web pages and email, even though I've clocked it recently at just 10 Kbps when doing a timed HTTP download...
A company I worked with briefly bought a couple. The key points were: (a) they are blighters to get working (b) the driver d/l is 170mb (the just up an iso of the latest cd) (c) the quality of sound is good, and it does link nicely into outlook (d) the easiest way to use it is to use the software's OSD to dial (also how to enter things like p/wrds or cc numbers over the phone) Initially the voice recognition was a bit dire, but it did improve with use; although we noted that the biggest boost to accuracy could be gained by talking with an american accent (honest!)...
"Success is based on knowing how far to go in going too far"
Part of the indymedia crowd, are we?
Roughly one study has said that they're dangerous, around a dozen have said that they're harmless.
From distant recollection, the one that said 'dangerous!' was using far greater signal strength than any cell phone ever had.
Hmm.. i think the phone won't be too popular here in Europe; at least not while the system is on the same frequency as GSM. On the other hand, it's not on the "free" overpopulated 2.4 GHz (microwave, WLAN) area.
What i'd like to see is this phone working with a Bluetooth or DECT link instead. DECT would be better for range, but Bluetooth would be, well, niftier ;)
This occurs to me every time the topic of voice activation comes up... do you really want everyone within earshot hearing who you're calling, or worse, what number you're actually dialing? Picture it... you're in parking lot of your office and say to your phone, "Gloria Stitz, call". Maybe no one knows that Gloria is your beautiful, lonely neighbor, trapped in a loveless marriage, and no one would be able to put two and two together, based on the fact that you're calling her in the middle of the day, when the kids are at school and your wife is at her Pilates class. On the other hand, though....
The man who does not read good books has no advantage over the man who cannot read them. - Mark Twain
This so reminds me of a stripped down version of the old Ericsson Cybergenie. The only difference is that the Cybergenie supported multiple extensions acted like a mini PBX for those extensions included voice mail and ran two incoming pots lines. It has a slew of other features and supported multiple interfaces to the unit including a headset unit that could be worn.
These things can be picked up for less than this product is selling also at around 100 dollars used.
Amazon Cyber Genie
Somewhat interesting product. Fairly weak review.
When this is applied to cell phones (yes, "wireless") it will really be interesting. I foresaw this as an inevitable result of voice recognition and cell technology miniaturization a couple years ago and have been waiting for it ever since. Guess I'll have to wait a while longer.
Light cup, beer drink, thin so chain, neck turtle fat, man I won't say it again
(Noah Bergevin here. I finally got the whole registration thing worked out...)
To start out with, I'd like to set the record straight. I don't work for ArialPhone, and I haven't and will not receive one red cent from anyone for my opinions.
I've been using this product for about a month and a half, and I like it. It suits my needs in my home-office environment.
I think a few of the readers are missing some key points.
First off, the ArialPhone isn't all things to all people. Every situation has a different need, and a different set of solutions. This one seems to fit my needs and my situation.
It isn't a cell phone. It's a cordless phone. How often do you take a cordless phone to a noisy environment like Grand Central Station? Some cell phones do have voice dialing, but how many rely almost completely on voice commands for operating the phone?
It isn't Bluetooth. I'm a big fan of Bluetooth, and am eagerly awaiting it's acceptance into the mainstream. However, I don't think Bluetooth would make a very good cordless phone; I think it would have the range of a $15 pair of walkie-talkies. Bluetooth is meant to be the RF link in a Personal Area Network in the 2.4ghz spectrum, amongst other devices fighting for bandwidth, (802.11b, HomeRF, Microwave Lighting, etc). 900mhz digital cordless phones have proven themselves as being able to "play nice with each other" for quite some time.
Voice Recognition isn't perfect, but there are some things you can do to make it useable. First off, the Voice Recognition software that comes with the ArialPhone doesn't have the full Oxford English Dictionary to try to guess what you are trying to say. It has a very simple dictionary, composed only of the phone commands, numbers, and the names of the Contacts from your address book. Voice Recognition does a lot better on a multiple-choice test than a sort essay, (as do the rest of us). If it knows that the first word you are going to say is either "Call", "Dial", "Hang-Up", "Mute", "Hold", "Press", "Flash", or "Cancel", it has a pretty good chance of getting it right. I also have a scaled-down list of contacts in my address book instead of everyone in my Outlook Contacts; fewer choices mean it has a better chance of getting a good match, and during a normal work day you probably only call a handful of people on a regular basis. Sure, it has a hard time hearing you with the kid screaming in your ear, but the person on the other end probably can't hear you very well either; it's time to take a second and find out what's wrong with the kid before continuing w/ your conversaion.
Yes, it does require Windows. It was a business call that ArialPhone made as a Startup Company, and who is to say that down the road they won't decide to release a Linux/Mac verion of the software.
This really isn't a home phone, (unless you can shell out the cash). It's an Office tool. It's designed for helping with the day-to-day communications needed to complete whatever business process you're into. It is useful for not only automating the process, but being able to improve on the form factor, (I don't know how many times I've yanked the earpiece out of my other cordless phone while walking past the chair...). I can wear the earpiece around all day comfortably, and not have to worry about where I left the old bulky cordless.
Lastly, this isn't the end-all-be-all of Telephony. There are already phones that do much the same thing - talk to people seperated by some distance. But, why didn't we stop at the two-tin-cans-and-string? This is just a step in the evolutionary process of communication devices. This will die out in it's time, and another newer, fancier, more technilogically advanced verion will take it's place. I'm just glad to see it moving in an upwards direction.
Just my $0.02.
- Noah Bergevin
I just checked with my GPS, and I could get it to 400 feet outside. I had to stand real still, and had to point the earpiece towards my house, but I could talk.
350 feet was more reliable. I got a few gaps in sound here and there, but it was ok.
250-300 feet was just fine. I would get sound gaps if I was walking towards or away from my house, (doppler effect...).
I would say the effective range is 250-300 feet, (I live in a semi-rural area, so your results may vary...)
- Noah
null
Get off my virtual lawn, you damned virtual kids!