Will Apple Lose Siri's Core Tech To Samsung?
An anonymous reader writes Apple bought Siri in 2010, but its core technology is owned by Nuance, maker of Dragon NaturallySpeaking. Now Samsung is looking to buy Nuance. From the article: "This past June, Nuance and Samsung began merger talks, but nothing came of it. At the time, the two companies said talks had 'slowed' due to 'complexities.' But they didn't say it was dead. Guess what? The talks are back on. The first hint came in June, after the company missed the quarterly projections. The Wall Street Journal then brought up the talks with Samsung and also noted the company had taken financial steps that could indicate a buyout was imminent. The company’s earnings report for June stated that Nuance was redeeming $250 million in 2027 convertible notes. By calling back the debt, that would save the future acquirer around $50 million from a debt-to-share conversion."
User: Will Apple Lose Siri's Core Tech To Samsung? Siri: Sod off, you insensitive clod!
Don't you mean "acquirer"?
I wonder how that meeting at Samsung went. I'm guessing it opened with someone saying "Ok guys! We need to come up with some ways we can fuck Apple!"
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
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You don't get it. Samsung would never revoke Apple's license. Think about it...
Apple technology... brought to you by Samsung!
I have been in the tech scene for decades, and having have my "tech baptism" we always have that "community" feel to what we do
That was decades ago
Now, everything changed. Tech companies today are like warring fiefdoms. Instead of focus on innovation they wasted all their resources on making their competitors suffer
Take this SIRI/Nuance -- Apple/Samsung saga for example ---
Instead of innovate - Innovate - INNOVATE what we have here are "strategizing - scheming - blocking"
Instead of innovation the tech companies are more interested in dog fights, and the one thing that I need to know is this ---
Why are they doing all these?
Is it because they no longer have the urge to innovate?
Or is it because the corporate culture (the ROI mentality) that has taken over (in almost all the big tech companies that I know) and it is killing the tech field as we know it?
This is a very unhealthy trend, very very unhealthy, and if we let them corporate guys taking over our tech industry sooner or later we will be facing the sad cold reality that one day, somebody else, maybe India or China or Russia, will become much more technologically advance than the West
Please pay a visit to India or Russia or China, if you have the chance. Over there they still have a lot of people devoting their lives on innovation, because to them, it is the right thing to do
Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
The first hint came in June, after the company missed the quarterly projections.
In an article about two companies possibly merging (and the possible ramifications of said merger for a third company), "the company" ends up being just a bit ambiguous.
systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
Just like Samsung would never stop selling chips and screens to Apple. Oh wait.
PlusFive Slashdot reader for Android. Can post comments.
it's means it is
I'd be grateful if someone could come up with Dragon Natural Apostrophe.
Right now Cortana (Windows Phone) is the digital assistant that is furthest ahead. Microsoft / Apple's relationship is good for example the Bing integrations. So potentially they could license Cortana (likely calling it Siri and using the Siri voice) and get an upgrade. I don't see this as devastating, just annoying. Or of course it isn't like Apple couldn't afford to move anything in house.
I find it funny how this article implies that because Samsung might now own the technology behind Siri, Siri is in trouble.
Samsung is a REALLY big company with lots of different divisions. One of those, the phone division, is in stiff competition with apple. Another one of those, the chip division, has apple as their best customer.
Apple will continue licensing siri technology. Yes, they'll probably look for alternatives (the same way they are looking for an alternative to the Samsung chip fabrication).
But whether or not they're successful, all that will happen is two really big companies will continue having divisions that work together, and divisions that are in competition.
It's a non story.
I'm genuinely curious here, do any Slashdotters use Siri on a regular (let's say daily) basis? What do you use it for?
I've always thought this kind of tech to be more of a gimmick, something to show your mates every now and again.
Summation 2
Actually, nothing has changed.
The BUNCH vs IBM, Amdahl vs IBM, LANManager vs Netware, Word vs WordPerfect, Excel vs Lotus 1-2-3... The first big anti-trust case in IT was against IBM in 1969.
It may be seem different to anyone who arrived on the scene at a point in time when tech took its first Internet turn and there was enough virtual turf in cyberspace for everyone to have a piece of the action. However, most of those claims are now staked, so this is merely a return to business as usual.
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Seriously, do you really think that Apple would allow one of its flagship technologies to be compromised by another company?
I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
It'll be a license for a limited number of years. In this hypothetical situation of Samsung buying Nuance, they would simply put impossible terms upon Apple renewing the contract. At which point Apple would withdraw and get another solution, with perhaps a year available to do so. Nuance isn't the only speech recognition company in the world. This is what happened with Google Maps.
Of course it could leave Apple with a temporarily worse solution, just as happened with maps.
Apple doesn't OWN this tech. There's nothing to "lose." They've NEVER owned it.
They have a license to this tech. Almost certainly a perpetual license that can't be cancelled without cause (and "we don't like you" does not constitute cause). That's all they need. They don't NEED to own the patents or the IP to the code if they have a sufficient license to USE them. If they did, they would have BOUGHT NUANCE THEMSELVES. It's not like they couldn't afford it.
There is approximately ZERO percent chance that this would affect Apple in the slightest. At very worst, they might not get a license to any NEW tech built on top of the tech they already own.
So they can send a squadron of attorneys to sue Samsung.
Litigation over Innovation
Siri was bought from SRI international and prior to purchase was a standalone application. I've met some of the folks that worked on it and this is the first I've heard of Dragon being involved at all...
SIRI does not work well, on the other Google Now works every time even in a noisy coffee shop.
"If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
Instead of innovation the tech companies are more interested in dog fights, and the one thing that I need to know is this --- Why are they doing all these?
Because they have to. It has nothing to do with their desire (or lack thereof) to innovate. Once you are an established player part of remaining a successful company is competitive strategy. Some products simply cannot be rapidly innovated. Coca-Cola isn't going to come up with some new miracle drink. Apple is not likely to reinvent the personal computer. Those are mature businesses and they have to be tended to and protected. The notion that every problem can be solved and every business can be run if we are just more innovative is incredibly naive. Even if you do have some incredibly innovative new product it is going to be copied within days and you will be out of business if you cannot protect that new product. To do otherwise is irresponsible and a one way ticket to bankruptcy.
For Apple or Samsung or Microsoft to grow at even a modest 5-8% rate they would have to create as much new business as the entire revenue of EBay *every year*. You think it is easy to create a new company the size of eBay each any every year? When you become big enough there simply are not that many new lines of business that are big enough to really move the needle. It is unbelievably difficult
Please pay a visit to India or Russia or China, if you have the chance. Over there they still have a lot of people devoting their lives on innovation, because to them, it is the right thing to do
I have been to China and India. There is no religion of innovation over there any more than there is lack of it here in the US. There are a bunch of people who are working hard to find economic opportunities, just like here. A lot of the effort over there is largely aimed at copying industry from other parts of the world with the advantage of cheaper Chinese labor rates. Sure there are a few companies doing some pretty nifty new stuff, but their economy is in no way centered around innovation. Most of it is engaged in contract manufacturing for export. They don't design the products, the just make or copy them. Nothing (generally) wrong with that but China is not driving product innovation in any big way yet. One day maybe but not today.
I don't really use it for texting or notes since it makes too many mistakes but I think that's more of my problem. I feel weird talking to a computer so I talk weird and not loud enough.
Not unusual. Dictating is a learned skill and not that many people are used to doing it. I'm not particularly good at it either.
An ancient Samsung flip-phone I had, gosh, 10 years ago maybe, had a sort of rudimentary voice command operation powered by Nuance. Between that and other similar things Samsung has done, they were working with Nuance long before SRI and Siri came along.
Rather than being something to damage Apple, I would say the current idea of buying them probably has more to do with "OK Google" now being mandated on devices, which in turn cuts Samsung and Nuance out of the game. I am not sure what buying Nuance is supposed to do but it has to be a defense of some sort.
Sig for hire.
History shows that Apple likes to own any tech they depend on....
http://9to5mac.com/2014/06/30/...
This is not a big deal. Even if it does happen, there is likely a preexisting licence, or they will just licence the tech from Samsung. Both devices licence each other Apple/Samsung, along with a host of other companies that have various patents on technology. Or what will happen is the Apple will just continue to use it, refuse to pay the licencing fees as Samsung has set them too high per device, then they will eventually go to court over the whole thing 5 years later, and a army of lawyers will get rich trying to figure it out. The later has already happened on one occasion.
You would be surprised at how few speech recognition companies are left in the industry. Nuance was on a buying spree a few years ago and there really are almost no mature companies left. There are a few smaller ones, but their software really isn't any good. Plus, they own almost all the patents, so others are quickly purchased or squashed...
Powered by Nuance... Sorry, try again.
"Siri, direct me to the nearest Apple store."
"Oh, you don't want to go there. Let me direct you to a place where you can buy a nice Samsung Galaxy Note Edge."
Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
Nuance ate Scansoft and several other companies. Nuance now owns Paperport, Dragon NaturallySpeaking, and Swype. Will Samsung ditch the desktop products if this goes through?
Even if they get Nuance, and put it on their devices to replace S-Voice; I predict it will be completely useless, because they're still going to wrap it with their craptacular TouchWiz interface.
They will attempt to force-tie it in to other craptacular Samsung apps, and it will die because NOBODY LIKES VENDOR LOCK-IN, STUPID MOTHERFUCKERS!
These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
Try doing something original samdung
because I have nothing good to say about s-voice.