|
|
|
|
|
by ravenstine
3559 days ago
|
|
I think it depends on the interaction. If it behaves more like a toy than a tool, I could see it being kind of embarrassing. Then again, imagine just how annoying it would be to have people walking around in a museum saying "Asteria, tell me about this painting." and then the device blurts out some description from Google without using an inside voice. |
|
It would sound like an American tourist by doing that.
(There’s lots of articles from US expats in europe, or european expats in the EU, showing how US-Americans tend to speak a lot louder than Europeans in quiet settings, from museums to restaurants)
This leads to an interesting question: Which culture should a voice assistant follow? Should there be multiple variants of each assistant?