Please speak up! – Voice search is growing fast…

Due to a genetic curse that has plagued my family for generations, I have impaired hearing (well before natural ageing determines that I should have anyway). It’s probably not the sort of thing (along with politics, religion and relationships) that I should be discussing on a blog site. However, the simple fact is that this growing disability has driven my interest in web and communications technology and, on that basis, has actually enhanced rather than damaged my career so far.

Having seen my father’s career impacted badly by not being able to communicate effectively in an office environment I was naturally very keen to understand how and where things like email, the web and instant messaging could help me, as and when traditional communications such as the telephone became difficult to use.

speakupSimilarly, I have always kept a close eye on things like voice-to-text translation. Watching my father and aunt trying to communicate these days would illustrate why. Neither of them has any natural hearing left and even the most advanced digital hearing aids are not much use to them anymore. So they have to communicate using a combination of lip reading and pen and paper – which is not the most conducive way to have a meaningful and useful discussion.

During my time at Lucent, I worked on a couple of projects to help explain and communicate VoiceXML concepts. This is basically the ability to drive mobile phone functions by voice which has been adopted by most operators in some form to help users navigate through multiple options, particularly in hands-free usage.

A few years later, at the hosted services company I worked for, I was promoting the use of SpinVox, a service that converts voice messages into SMS and email and does so surprisingly well too.

However, when I suggested a couple of years ago now that the rise of sophisticated mobile apps might mean people being able to speak content into their content management systems in the future and control its publication via voice – suffice it to say it the idea was met with stony silence.

It’s therefore with both personal and professional interest that coverage of Google comments at this year’s Web 2.0 Expo have focused on its announcement that it believes “Voice search is a new form of search and that it is core to our business” and to support that statement the Google representative, Vic Gundotra said “I get the advantage of looking at daily voice queries coming in and it’s amazing. It’s working. It’s reached a tipping point. It’s growing and growing very, very fast and we are thrilled about it,”

Interestingly its uptake as an iPhone app is being credited with this growth and, as it is one of those developments that improves as more people use it, then it looks like this an area destined for bigger and better things. I can already see the potential for an iPhone type device to give a real time text view of what someone is saying to me, as and when hearing aids can no longer provide any benefit. With 9 million hearing impaired people in the UK alone and an iPod generation merrily destroying their hearing prematurely – it looks like a potentially big market. If a developer’s not already buried in the iPhone SDK doing this already then there’s an idea for free. Just send me a note when it’s ready – don’t bother calling as I don’t hear the phone ring 😉

Mob Rule 2.0…

“Nobody knows the age of the human race, but everybody agrees that it is old enough to know better.”
– Anonymous

I liked the above quote, spotted on my iGoogle page over the weekend. Current events certainly illustrate that no matter how smart and sophisticated we think we are, we seem destined to repeat the mistakes of the past. Remember Gordon Brown’s classic sound bite from his time as Chancellor “No more boom and bust”? Hmmm – foolish words in retrospect as he presides over what is looking like the biggest boom and bust in history. But foolish words also if he really thought that the human population had suddenly forsaken greed and everyone could be trusted to manage their own financial affairs without getting themselves into hideous, unsustainable debt.

When I was looking back to 2020 BC last week it was interesting to remind myself of some of the Egyptian history and legacy. There were 31 Egyptian dynasties stretching over 3000 years – the year 2020 was at the start of the ‘Middle Kingdom’ that lasted for 400 years and the Great Pyramid of Giza had already been in existence for over 500 years. Egyptian society was very structured with food and wealth collected centrally and then redistributed in payment for work. Men and women had equal rights and all levels of society had the right to appeal against rulings they thought unjust. Look around the world today – particularly at countries in turmoil – and invariably that last statement cannot be applied and is often the root cause of the problems.

The Greek and Roman civilisations are credited with the development of democracy but it wasn’t to re-emerge and rise again until the 17th Century. However, linked to the primitive democracies of the ancient world is also the concept of ‘mob rule’. Athenian Democracy is perhaps the most documented of ancient democratic movements but was twice interrupted by what the Greeks termed Ochlocracy – which was essentially government by a mass of people through the intimidation of constitutional authorities.  You may also remember in the film Gladiator, the emperor Commodus orders 180 days of gladiatorial games to keep ‘the mob’ happy and distracted from rising social unrest.
The term ‘mob’ originally derives from the Latin phrase mobile vulgus meaning ‘the easily moveable crowd’. In many cases, a mob, however massive, may not be representative of the often silent majority – particularly in large societies that are based on representative democracy.

mobIs history repeating itself once again? Our global crisis appears to be inciting ‘mob rule’ on a global scale. Firstly we have ‘the mob’ baying for the blood of the bankers the world over and our elected politicians who are, by and large, complicit in this debacle echoing ‘the mob’ and feeding its anger still further as if to distract from their own culpability. And then you have the appeasement – Politicians using money that they don’t have to keep the mob happy and reduce the possibility of social unrest on their watch whilst building up a bill that will still have to paid on someone else’s.

The term ‘social media’ has been coined to describe the rise of blogging (macro and micro) and networking sites such as myspace and facebook. However, there is often comment about how representative these environments actually are. True, there are many millions of blogs out there but how many are actually active and how many of the active ones are the mouthpieces of vocal minorities not bound by the journalistic conventions of the mainstream media? Does the ‘mass voice’ of the Twitterverse lead to a dumbing down of political agendas as cited here? Can the classic line from Gladiator – “Rome is the mob” be applied to the contemporary world – “Twitter is the mob”?

Looking back to 2020…

This last week seems to have dominated by Egyptian themes and it’s got me looking back to the last 2020 (BC) as opposed to looking forward to the next 2020.

My youngest daughter’s all time favourite programme ‘Primeval’ returned to our screens on Saturday night. The new episode was set in the Egyptian wing of the British Museum and it reminded me of being in awe of the Egyptian artefacts when I first saw them on a trip to the museum when I was at primary school. On a more recent trip a few years ago I remember that, aside from the architectural marvel of the Museum’s glass roof, the Egyptian wing was the undoubted highlight – as indeed have been similar exhibits in the New York Met and the Louvre.

Earlier in the week I watched a documentary which was about the theories of a French Architect who has devoted 7 years of his life since the turn of this century, using 3D software to painstakingly model how the great pyramids could have been built .

Firstly I found it staggering that the ingenuity of humans 4000 years ago, when the population of the world was equal to half the population of the UK today (around 35 million), was such that we are still trying to figure out how they did these amazing things.

Besides this architect’s ‘internal ramp’ theory (which density scans conducted in previous investigations show could well be the most feasible explanation for how massive blocks were carried to the top of the structures) the explanation for how even more massive single blocks of granite were manoeuvred into place above the main burial chambers using a complex counter weight system was even more inspiring.

egyptian_templeThen, a couple of days ago, I settled down to open the latest National Geographic magazine and its lead article is about Hatshepsut – a woman in the Egyptian royal bloodline who decided to rule as a King rather than as a Queen.
Aside from this quirk that has fascinated archaeologists for years and led to a ‘Indiana Jones’ type quest to locate her Mummy (which was finally discovered a couple of years ago and confirmed her gender) Hatshepsut was responsible for many architectural wonders including his/her temple at Deir el-Bahri. This location has become notorious for the terrorist attack on tourists in 1997 when 62 people were massacred but aside from this bloody recent history, the architectural beauty of the structure would not look out of place in the modern world 4000 years on.