Skip to main content

Google expands voice search to Chrome on your computer

Google IO 2013_conversational search2

During today’s Google I/O’s opening keynote, Senior Vice President Amit Singhal showed off how the new and improved Google Search can better answer, converse, and anticipate your questions so you can better tap into all the knowledge available on the Internet.

Google IO 2013_search

You can already use your voice to search Google on your mobile devices, but you have to tap on the red mic icon before you can put the search engine to work. If you need to resort to using your voice to search the Internet, your hands are probably tied up cooking or driving, so why should you have to touch the screen to activate this feature?

Recommended Videos

With the “conversational search” that Google introduced today on stage at I/O, you’ll be able to say your questions to Google out loud, and it will be able to respond with contextually-correct answers whether you’re using the Chrome Web browser on your smartphone, tablet, or computer.

Google IO 2013_search_google now

All you have to do is start your questions with “Okay, Google,” so the search engine knows when to start listening, and it will speak its answers to you when it’s ready. And it’s already a smart conversationalist. In the keynote demo, Johanna Wright, Google’s vice president of search and assist for mobile, asked Google “How far is Santa Cruz from here.” Interestingly enough, she didn’t have to specify that “here” refers to the San Francisco’s Moscone Center because Google Search remembered that detail from a previous search. The search engine was able to correctly anticipate her real question and give her the answer she was looking for.

This voice search feature isn’t limited to the Internet, either; it’s also capable of search through your local device to answer your questions. For example, Wright was able to ask Google Now to set a reminder to contact a friend on an upcoming trip to New York City, as well as ask her phone to locate her photos from a previous trip to the city, with just her voice.

Google IO 2013_search_new languages

In addition to making Google searchable by voice, the search giant also expanded the ability of the Knowledge Graph to map out knowledge of real-world people, places and things. Plus, it added four new languages: Polish, Turkish, and Simplified and Traditional Chinese.

Starting today, you’ll be able to ask Google to show you Canada’s population, and it’ll automatically queue up some common follow-up questions like how does it population compare with California or Australia, according to its press release.

We can’t wait to find out what else Google has in store for us at I/O. Stay tuned!

Gloria Sin
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Gloria’s tech journey really began when she was studying user centered design in university, and developed a love for…
Why Google Chrome Incognito Mode isn’t what it claims to be
Google Chrome icon in mac dock.

A seemingly obscure little class-action lawsuit filed in 2021 has exploded into the mainstream news lately, alleging that Google continues to track users when they’re using incognito mode on Chrome.

Of course, any savvy web user knows there’s no such thing as complete privacy on the internet, at least not without running Tor through a VPN tunnel while wearing a Guy Fawkes mask. But it seems what we expect of Google Chrome’s incognito mode and what Google actually does are two different things.

Read more
Google Chrome tops this list of most vulnerable browsers
Google Chrome logo appears over photo of laptop with chart of vulnerabilities.

According to a recent report, Google Chrome is the most vulnerability-ridden browser of all the major players. Chrome also happens to be the most popular browser in the world, accounting for over 60% of usage according to most sources, which means that a larger number of people are at risk until the bugs are fixed.

Every browser suffers from these security weaknesses from time to time, including the increasingly popular Apple Safari, Microsoft Edge, and Mozilla Firefox, but Chrome has had a startlingly high number of weaknesses in 2022. The vulnerability report from Atlas VPN summarized data found in the VulDB vulnerability database. In this year alone, 303 vulnerabilities have been detected in Google Chrome. Firefox came in a distant second with 117, while 103 were found in Edge, and only 26 in Safari.

Read more
Spellcheckers in Google Chrome could expose your passwords
Office computer with login asking for password and username.

If you like to be thorough and use an advanced spellchecker, we have some bad news -- your personal information could be in danger.

Using the extended spellcheck in Google Chrome and Microsoft Edge transmits everything you input in order for it to be checked. Unfortunately, this includes information that should be strictly encrypted, such as passwords.

Read more