• @[email protected]
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    7 months ago

    The FOSS-only crowd might flame me for this, but I’d argue this type of scenario is a legit use-case for voice assistants, because “remind me to buy ________” is a fairly easy habit to get into and it’s a single step, fast enough to beat the attention bounce.

    Edit: I meant no offense. Reworded to “FOSS-only.”

    • deweydecibel
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      317 months ago

      It absolutely would be a good thing for a voice assistant.

      But most kickback against voice assistants isn’t the lack of use case, it’s all the other bullshit you have to accept alongside it.

      If I could install a voice assistant that didn’t require a constant internet connection and could work alongside other services, I’d use it.

    • @[email protected]
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      167 months ago

      I’ve tried voice assistants, won’t be viable until there’s at least half a million autistic linux users who iron out all the kinks for a self hosted service.

      • @[email protected]
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        57 months ago

        I bet some FOSS voice recognition projects have matured since last I checked, but the closest I had sketched out in the past required external calls to the local speech kit api on macOS or iOS. We’ll get there. It’s too useful to let big tech have a monopoly on it.

    • @[email protected]
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      87 months ago

      We did that for years, until the products we bought switched APIs making us have to change shopping list apps a couple times, then shut off the feature altogether.

      Any tech that requires an outside server eventually gets shut off and you spend my more time managing it than you saved in the long run.

      Just toss the shampoo bottle on the floor to remind yourself.

    • Captain Aggravated
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      37 months ago

      Yes, that is a legitimate use case for that technology.

      I do not consider myself anti-tech by any stretch of the imagination (I can put my hands on no less than five computers from where I’m sitting) and I want things like voice assistants and smart houses and whatnot for the benefits they can provide, but we’ve got to pry the invasive corporate bullshit out first.

        • Captain Aggravated
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          17 months ago

          Like I stopped using fitness trackers on smart phones because I realized all of them want my data more than they want to be a value add to my smart phone purchase. I don’t want the power company to manage my thermostat because the power company isn’t on my side.