Woman Uses 'Hey Siri' To Call An Ambulance and Help Save Her Child's Life (networkworld.com) 208
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Networkworld: When Apple released the iPhone 6s, it included a great new Siri feature which enables users to activate the intelligent assistant via voice. Dubbed 'Hey Siri,' the feature is particularly convenient because the iPhone 6s' M9 motion co-processor is 'always listening' and thereby lets users use 'Hey Siri' even when the device isn't connected to a power source. Recently, Stacey Gleeson of Australia used the 'Hey Siri' feature to successfully call an ambulance while she was tending to her daughter Giana who had stopped breathing. "I picked her up and sat down with her on the floor," Gleeson said in an interview. "And as I checked her airways, I looked over and remembered my phone." Thinking quick on her feet, Gleeson said, "Hey Siri, call the ambulance." Fortunately, Gleeson managed to resuscitate her daughter while the ambulance was in route. And while it's impossible to know for sure, it's entirely possible that the time Gleeson saved by not having to call an ambulance manually helped save her daughter's life. "Saving me the trouble of having to physically dial emergency services was a godsend," Gleeson said.
Yeah - not at all an advert. (Score:5, Insightful)
"the feature is particularly convenient because the iPhone 6s' M9 motion co-processor is 'always listening' and thereby lets users use 'Hey Siri' even when the device isn't connected to a power source."
Re: Yeah - not at all an advert. (Score:4, Funny)
I hole-hardedly agree, but allow me to play doubles advocate here for a moment. For all intensive purposes I think you are wrong. In an age where false morals are a diamond dozen, true virtues are a blessing in the skies. We often put our false morality on a petal stool like a bunch of pre-Madonnas, but you all seem to be taking something very valuable for granite. So I ask of you to mustard up all the strength you can because it is a doggy dog world out there. Although there is some merit to what you are saying it seems like you have a huge ship on your shoulder. In your argument you seem to throw everything in but the kids Nsync, and even though you are having a feel day with this I am here to bring you back into reality. I have a sick sense when it comes to these types of things. It is almost spooky, because I cannot turn a blonde eye to these glaring flaws in your rhetoric. I have zero taller ants when it comes to people spouting out hate in the name of moral righteousness. You just need to remember what comes around is all around, and when supply and command fails you will be the first to go. Make my words, when you get down to brass stacks it doesnt take rocket appliances to get two birds stoned at once. It's clear who makes the pants in this relationship, and sometimes you just have to swallow your prize and accept the facts. You might have to come to this conclusion through denial and error but I swear on my mother's mating name that when you put the petal to the medal you will pass with flying carpets like its a peach of cake.
Re: Yeah - not at all an advert. (Score:5, Funny)
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Dogberryism (Score:3)
This was brilliant; I wonder why he posted as anonymous coward*; I want to give him credit.
*(Well, I can guess why-- he probably figured that half the moderators would rate this -1 incoherent and his Karma would drop to values you have to measure in Kelvin. Say, why doesn't slashdot have a moderation "-1 incoherent", anyway?)
Re: Dogberryism (Score:2)
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I seem to remember it being intensive porpoises not purposes. Perhaps he rambled it from memory.
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How many iPhone users does it take to wreck a nice beach?
Re: Yeah - not at all an advert. (Score:5, Funny)
Three.
One to wreck the beach and two to sit back in the coffee house loudly bragging to everyone that they don't even *OWN* a television.
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Says the person that relied on Autocorrect to Post
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This needs to be put to song like Laika's song "Bad Times" [youtube.com]. Lyrics:
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I love speech wreck ignition.
Incidentally, just for fun, if you have an android phone, try to use speech recognition to search for "speech wreck ignition". No matter how clearly you enunciate it and no matter how long you pause between words, it absolutely refuses to search for anything other than "speech recognition".
Re: Yeah - not at all an advert. (Score:5, Insightful)
"WHOOSH". Damn, you fucking idiot, you missed the obvious fact this guy was simulating what text-to-speech comes up with most of the time. You read three words and wanted to show off how smart you are when you have really demonstrated what an absolute fucktard you are.
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I forget what those are called. Something like "Flowers for Algernon".
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I stopped thunking (Score:2)
Really? I stopped thunking about the post when I got to "in route"
You've got a pint. That should have been "in root."
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or "except the facts"
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Why would there? What relevance do they have to the story? The story is about a particular situation that involved an iPhone not a comparison article about voice agents n
Re: Yeah - not at all an advert. (Score:2)
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I think what bothers me the most is how there is no mention of any competing platform that has had this feature for, say, 2 years now at least?
Well, that's because Android users are never in any danger and thus don't need to call an ambulance ever. Because Google keeps them safe with all they know about them.
Well, I'm joking [fox6now.com]
Welch used his phone's "OK Google" feature to search heart attack symptoms.
"I touched a link and up came a list of symptoms. I was realizing that I had all of these symptoms," Welch said.
So with Siri you call an ambulance, and with Google you search for the symptoms of a heart attack. Minor difference there.
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So with Siri you call an ambulance, and with Google you search for the symptoms of a heart attack. Minor difference there.
I assume you're being sarcastic here. Obviously it would make a huge difference whether you could get your phone to make an emergency call if you couldn't reach, or operate, your phone, than being able to use voice commands to run a web search, (a function which, incidentally, Macs have had since OS 8, at least). It seems to me that the latter is primarily useful to people who wish to continue playing with their phones as they drive, and then to the minority of people who are handicapped in some way. OTOH,
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If Apple invented everything, why the fuck did they invent Microsoft and Google? They have to compete against Windows and Android now because of these two.
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I took this as a comment explaining why it doesn't work on all previous iPhone models.
I wasn't aware iPhones did this, because I don't know anyone with a 6s.
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It's funny that the first time this happened didn't get much publicity. I mean, Android phones have had this feature for years so I assume this isn't the first time someone say "ok Google, call 999" or whatever the local variant is.
I literally LOLed when I saw that advert. Only Apple would advertise a three year old feature as the latest and greatest innovation.
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In the UK it's 0118 999 881 999 119 725.
3.
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NSA funded story (Score:5, Insightful)
This is supposed to make us love how its always recording our conversations
AI (Score:2)
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The Sun is our star. He said another star. Two completely different things.
I also asked my co-workers about this, and one suggested that we'll be living in black holes in millions of years. Another replied "that would suck".
Turn on your microphones so we can listen or... (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah sure (Score:2)
Do you really think "they" would need you to turn the microphone on to listen to you if they want to listen to you? I mean, are you people actually thinking for moment before saying such things? If they want to use phones for audio mass surveillance they would be idiots to have to trick you into turning on the microphone first.
And then? "Damn, he tricked us by disabling Siri! What do we do now?!".
If you're carrying any connected device with a microphone, using voice recognition or not just does not make a t
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The Vorlon would answer: Yes.
Mother Saves the Daughter's Life (Score:5, Interesting)
Oh, and she called for an ambulance with her phone.
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This is pretty much what I was thinking.
How long before the liability lawsuit against "assistant" app makers / service providers for incorrectly calling an Uber instead of an ambulance...
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To do it by touching the phone would take me several seconds. There are a few situations in which I'd have a much better use for those seconds. Arterial bleeding comes to mind.
Yeah (Score:2)
"let us spy on you so we can rescue you!" (Score:2)
Extremely unlikely. The few seconds difference it might make is lost in the noise in all the factors that affect the response time. This rings as a bullshit justification of constant surveillance: "We're always watching out for you! Like a helpful older sibling."
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Re: "let us spy on you so we can rescue you!" (Score:2)
I don't get it (Score:2)
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Her phone was out of reach. She dropped it when she entered the room.
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As I said, she dropped it when she entered the room. She then went to check on her dying child, and, realising an ambulance was required, summoned one in the quickest way possible.
I don't know why everyone's so annoyed about what happened.
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And ... she couldn't turn around and pick it up?
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Sure she could. But she didn't have to, so why would she?
Someone, once, was the first person to call an ambulance on a mobile phone. Would you have berated them for not using the landline?
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If that mobile phone was a smartphone, yes. Walking down the stairs and picking up the landline would probably have been faster than finding the telephony-app in the pile of apps...
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Sure she could. But she didn't have to, so why would she?
Because we all know how well voice functions work.
This story could just as easily been "Woman saves child despite Siri calling her friend Annie instead of the requested ambulance"
She is lucky it worked out, but taking the 3 seconds to dial 911 would have been the safer choice, imo.
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Did this lady not have hands?
That's a good assumption to make. A better assumption is that she was preoccupied with saving someone. In nearly all cases this requires use of said hands which is why in an emergency situation the first thing you do is call for help loudly before you even started things like checking airways. That way if someone comes and the person needs CPR you can actually get started with the important things like CPR while someone else talks on the phone.
Siri also (Score:2)
So they got it from Star Trek (Score:2)
Computer: Tea, Earlgrey, hot.
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Oh how could she have done it without SIRI? (Score:2)
Oh. I know. Grabbing the phone, hitting the three numbers necessary to call your emergency service (which is admittedly easier on a real phone but on one that buries that "telephony-app" somewhere between the hundreds of inane apps nobody needs but you can't uninstall) and turn on speakerphone (again, something that's easier on a real phone), putting it down next to her daughter and listening to the emergency service while helping her daughter.
Nonstory coming your way, film at 11.
Re: Oh how could she have done it without SIRI? (Score:2)
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And that's why you need SIRI.
Meanwhile, on my old Nokia 7110 you could simply push the emergency button for a 911 call.
SIRI: Solving problems we didn't have before phones got smart.
Slow news day (Score:2)
The Slashdot rule (Score:2)
This article should have been about a mother using the Android voice assistant for this to have been taken as a heroic technology example. Of course, she would first have had to yell, "Launch antivirus!" and wait for the phone to be scanned to eliminate the possibility of that ambulance call going to a Nigerian scammer.
The iPhone is a walled garden, and that's the way I like it.
What they don't tell you... (Score:2)
Editing (Score:2)
Try editing. WTF does "in route" mean?
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I am going to take a wild stab in the dark and say it means "on the way" ?
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Then why didn't they write "en route"?
Here's what my iPhone 6 Plus would do... (Score:2)
Fun little prank (Score:3)
What happens if someone shout "Hey Siri call an ambulance" in a crowded room full of iPhone 6?
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911 works even on a locked and or phone with no sim does siri do the same?
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And hopefully Siri calls the correct emergency number rather than 911 ;)
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I don't think even Apple would suggest using Siri for this rather than dialing 911...
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But the moment anyone catches the smell of potential liability they'll boilerplate about 911 services so fast your head'll spin. "Wait, no, don't do this, it's a bad thing now, not a good thing."
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It's completely hands-off calling, and in a first-aid situation that is an advantage. Whether it's worth the monitoring is another question.
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Apple isn't taking credit for anything. This is a puff piece by Network World.
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None of these always-on systems track every word you say, because this would run your battery dry in no time. They all have just a low-power minimal voice-recognition in hardware that only recognizes the keywords and only then wake up and hand over control to the SoC itself for what you're actually saying.
Besides, if Big Brother wants to listen to your microphone he can just do that anyway, no need for such tricks. If you don't trust your networked microphone containing device not to listen to you, don't c
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Voice recognition in hardware?
I call bullshit on that one.
Perhaps it's a low power subsystem, but coding voice recognition in hardware sounds incredible to me. Do they have different chips for differen languages?
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YET
Keywords like "Hey, Siri", or "OK, Google". Or "bomb" or "overthrow" or "cocaine" or...
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Orwell was not completely right about Big Brother. Big Brother is here, yes. But it's being helped by millions of Little Snitches. The irony is that it's the people themselves that are buying the Little Snitches, carrying them everywhere they go and even paying to keep them running and connected.
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Of all the reasons to hate Apple, why hate it for that non-issue?
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Re: Shouting Fire! in a crowded theater. (Score:2)
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Someone should put some less drastic, silly command for Hey Siri or OK Google in a movie, and see how many in the theater it affects.
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Great. Exactly what we needed. More stuff we can't talk about because someone's going to be "triggered"...
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You can dial emergency numbers without unlocking your device.
I am with the AC, literally 3 seconds of time. That amount of time would not make any difference in this situation.
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Are you serious?? Do you really think saving three seconds to manually call 911 did any help at all???
Yes. Yes it does. CPR to be effective needs to be constant quick and as early as humanly possible. Even basic training will teach you if there is more than one first aider present to share duties to minimise the fractions of a second between breath and compression. If someone enters cardiac arrest blood pressure drops instantly and that has an immediate effect on the body.
3 seconds is a long time without a heartbeat.
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Then turn on the fuckin' lights. Or don't drop the phone in the first place.
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Then turn on the fuckin' lights.
Or don't, because you don't need to. Seriously, why is someone so pissed off about her using an advanced feature on a phone?
Or don't drop the phone in the first place.
Right, stupid cow. Dropping her phone as her child fights for its life. What a stupid woman.
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I'm more pissed at this being treated like it's noteworthy. I'm used to reading stories on /. that are not stories that belong on /., but this takes it to a new height by not even being a story.
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I'm more pissed at this being treated like it's noteworthy.
Then complain about that rather than berating the poor woman for her actions in a crisis.
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I'm also not really a huge fan of hysteric women. In every zombie movie I eventually start rooting for the zombies when someone starts screaming instead of walking (not even running, WALKING) away.
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I'm also not really a huge fan of hysteric women.
Anything else you're not a huge fan of that has nothing whatsoever to do with the story?
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They already thought of that- part of the "hey siri" setup is training your voice. You have to say the trigger phrase 3 or 4 times to teach it your individual voice.
I guess it also helps with false positives with background noise.
Personally, I like to keep control over when the phone is listening and taking actions.
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And as we all know, your voice is your passport... totally unique... which is why we have so many voice-is-your-password authentication mechanisms....
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Thank you. I knew I could rely on someone remembering that on /.
If that was the emergency service number, yes, I could see how SIRI could be of any use. Then again, I would probably have stored it as "!!Emergency number" in the phone.
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If Apple's trend with laptops continue, in a few years we'll hear about how Gordon Ramsay used a MacBook Air to cut vegetables.
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As an Apple user, this really creeps me out.
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I still occasionally mix live sound. One night I was using my iphone to play background music outdoors when the SMS recieved tone sounded, thru a the large PA system. To my amusement, about a third of the crowd pulled out their phones to check. :)
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Ivan Petrovich Pavlov would be proud.