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279 points nnx | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.253s | source
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cdrini ◴[] No.43543088[source]
Completely agree, voice UI is best as an augmentation of our current HCI patterns with keyboard/mouse. I think one of the reasons this is, is because our brains kind of have separate buffers for visual memory and aural memory (Baddeley's working memory model). Most computer use takes up the visual buffer, and our aural buffer has extra bandwidth. This also means we can do things aurally while still maintaining focus/attention on what we're doing visually, allowing a kind of multitasking.

One thing I will note is that I'm not sure I buy the example for voice UIs being inefficient. I've almost never said "Alexa what's the weather like in Toronto?". I just say "Alexa, weather". And that's much faster than taking my phone out and opening an app. I don't think we need to compress voice input. Language kind of auto-compresses, since we create new words for complex concepts when we find the need.

For example, in a book club we recently read "As Long as the Lemon Trees Grow". We almost immediately stopped referring to it by the full title, and instead just called it "lemons" because we had to refer to it so much. Eg "Did you finish lemons yet?" or "This book is almost as good as lemons!". The context let shorten the word. Similarly the context of my location shortens the word to just "weather". I think this might be the way the voice UIs can be made more efficient: in the same way human speech makes itself more efficient.

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1. gblargg ◴[] No.43543873[source]
The multitasking is something I like about smart home speakers. I can be asking it to turn the lights on/off or check the temperature, while doing other things physically and not interrupting them, often while walking through the room. Even if voice commands are slower, they don't interrupt other processing nearly as much as having to visually devote attention and fine motor skills, and navigate to the right screen in an app to do what you want.