churchvova.blogg.se

Google mumble a song
Google mumble a song





google mumble a song
  1. #Google mumble a song code#
  2. #Google mumble a song tv#

When I got my first iPhone (iOS 5) I put in my date of birth during configuration, and promptly noticed that the german speech synthesizers says Nineteenseventynine when I enter 1979. And some hand-crafted rules go haywire after a while, because apparently nobody reviews them. These things have absolutely no idea about the context. You will likely not be able to call it with siri, since it insists to search for taxis in your area. Put any taxi organisation into your phonebook, and include "taxi" in the name. I think the "taxi" problem is still around with Siri. However, whenever I visit an Alexa owner, I realize after a few interactions that I really couldn't be bothered with this stuff. If these things would actually work, I'd definitely use one regularily.

#Google mumble a song code#

This is so weird that it actually feels like someone wrote that piece of code to prank the user. " it would answer "OK, calling you" and actually try to call my own number. For about 2 years, when Siri happened to misunderstand the command "Call. It's super fun to tell coworkers about a script that sets my lights in the office (and visible in video meetings) to red because the server in the living room is having trouble. So with the Eria lights I just change the colors manually with a third party app on my phone.Īnd as a bonus as a developer: Philips Hue has an API to work with the devices connected to the base station. Apple Home (and Siri) only recognizes the expensive Philips Hue lights even though the Eria ones are connected to the same Philips Hue base station. But the downside is that they don't integrate with Apple Home. They were about 1/2 the price of Philips Hue. I have some colored lights from Eria that have about as good color spectrum and integrate with Zigbee base stations. Even then it's significantly more expensive than a plain light bulb (even LED ones) but for that you gain colors and ease of remote use. If they were a third their price I would recommend them to even the less affluent friends and family. If they were half their current price then I would recommend them to affluent friends and family. It's technically part of "hue labs" but it's a "beta feature" that's been available in the product now for over three years so I would argue it is core functionality at this point.Īhh well I would say that while Philips Hue (name brand) does work well, it is too expensive for the value provided - by about 2x to 3x. The color loop slowly and nearly imperceptibly fades the colors from red to green to blue etc over several minutes. Also as recently as this summer I used to be able to set the whole house to "the color loop" this feature recently disappeared. "We" compromised and those lights are now called "screen wall" lightsĪs for setting certain lights to "the color loop", what used to be a 90% success rate (the other 10% turning my lights to "the color blue/bloo(p)") will now set the lights of the room I'm currently in to the color loop, which is usually the living room, not the screen wall.

#Google mumble a song tv#

The problem is that "TV", "Television" and "Screen" are semi-protected words, so "turn off tv lights" ends up with the TV being turned off 9/10 times. My issue is that I found out the special incantations two years ago, and then they changed (I presume) something about the core language processing logic, and now none of that works.įor example I have Philips Hue lights behind the TV/Screen on my living room wall, and I use their "color loop" behind the screen when watching movies etc.







Google mumble a song