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by rueynshard 2898 days ago
Wouldn't the user's speech data need to be sent to Apple to convert to text, or identify the intent first?
1 comments

We were doing speech recognition 20 years ago without any kind of networking. I dictated part of a term paper in 1995. Dragon Dictate I think is what it was called. You could even navigate the word processor menus and UI with it, or say things like “make that bold” and it usually worked! Just a bit less often often than Siri works actually.

Sure it was more of a novelty, and had to be trained on your voice. But that was 20 years ago.

Not only is Dragon still a product, it is owned by Nuance, which helped to develop Siri and drew on SRI research, https://www.forbes.com/sites/rogerkay/2014/03/24/behind-appl...
Hence Siri’s name.
Also, a purely local 'Voice Control' was standard in iOS 3-4, and it's still there in iOS12... just, buried.
Even Apple had this working a long long time ago in classic mac os. I used to launch all my applications via voice til I got bored of it.
macOS still has non-Siri voice-control under Accessibility Preferences.
And iOS has very good non-Siri dictation
I believe that still requires the use of Apple’s servers.
Having just double-checked, yes you are correct.