Siri, the voice recognition technology on Apple's (Nasdaq: AAPL) new iPhone 4S, has attracted buyers by the millions with its ability to handle complex search queries. Siri's personified as a somewhat sassy female personal assistant, but at least one person finds her downright disturbing: Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) Chairman Eric Schmidt.
At a U.S. Senate antitrust hearing in September in which Schmidt testified in front of Congress, he said Apple's voice-activated search technology could prove to be a "significant development" in search technology and could become tough competition to traditional Google searches.
Google did not respond to TechNewsWorld's request for further comment.
Really a Rival?
Schmidt's statements could be taken with a grain of salt. He was, after all, speaking to antitrust officials, and stating that other companies are actually dangerous competitors with potentially killer technology would tend to downplay Google's market dominance. In fact, Siri does not have its own search engine -- its default is Google.
Also, though Siri's been wooing iPhone 4S users with her wit, many users are still used to checking their weather apps or typing "Thai restaurants in Brooklyn" rather than asking Siri, "Should I bring an umbrella?" or "Where can I get pad thai near me?"
In addition, Google has a clear stronghold over the market with a 65 percent share of online searches. Its very name has been adopted as a verb meaning "to search."
However, the search scene is still relatively young and evolving, especially on smartphones.
"It's true that Siri could be a 'significant threat' to Google's search business, particularly in mobile. But mobile search is a very different animal than PC-based search. Not only is mobile search used differently, it can leverage things like location and context more effectively than the desktop," Colin Gibbs, analyst at GigaOM Pro, told TechNewsWorld.
Mobile search gives way to a more targeted type of search than on a PC. Voice technology has been possible for years, but the acute searches that mobile users perform are especially conducive to the complex and advanced searching that Siri can do.
"On a mobile device, you know what kind of information you want, and you usually know where you want to get it from. You have a set of favorite or trusted sources, and when you're on the go with a mobile, it's just a matter of using natural language and processing those requests to get there," Vlad Sejnoha, CTO of Nuance, told TechNewsWorld.
That kind of search is what could pose a threat to the more traditional search business models like the ones by Google, and it also could change the way advertisers and carriers provide information.
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