Voice-Activated BlackBerry Assistant Aims To Rival Siri

BlackBerry has revealed more details about its voice-activated personal assistant, imaginatively called ‘BlackBerry Assistant’, which it hopes will help its BlackBerry 10 operating system compete against iOS, which has Siri, and Windows Phone, which has Cortana.

The personal assistant will be included in the next version of the operating system, BlackBerry OS 10.3, and was shown running on a BlackBerry Passport, a square-shaped 4.5-inch QWERTY keyboard smartphone due to be released later this year.

BlackBerry Assistant can be controlled either via the keyboard or through voice, and can search the web, calendars, emails and Twitter, while it can also send messages, emails and invitations. The company claims it becomes more responsive and returns more accurate results the more it is used.

BlackBerry Assistant

The application is compatible with Bluetooth devices and can complete most tasks without having to open another piece of software.

BlackBerry OS 10.3 is currently available as a beta SDK for developers ahead of a consumer launch later this year and brings a host of UI and productivity improvements to the ailing platform

These include updated screen icons, endless folders, custom two-finger swipe gestures for favourite functions and an extra row of icons for touch screen devices or an extra column of icons for QWERTY devices.

BlackBerry Hub can now download all attachments and delete the original text from an email, while updates to the calendar provide a weekly agenda and the ability to turn off all notifications during the time which a meeting is scheduled.

The Canadian manufacturer is currently in the middle of a recovery plan cantered around high-end business devices, services, messaging and QNX-embedded systems, while it is also targeting emerging markets where its devices are still seen as status symbols and objects of desire.

Is this the beginning of a new dawn for BlackBerry in 2014? Try our 2013 BlackBerry quiz!

Steve McCaskill

Steve McCaskill is editor of TechWeekEurope and ChannelBiz. He joined as a reporter in 2011 and covers all areas of IT, with a particular interest in telecommunications, mobile and networking, along with sports technology.

Recent Posts

Meta Plans Subsea Cable For Its Own Exclusive Use – Report

World spanning subsea cable measuring 40,000km (or 24,854 mile) long, reportedly being planned by Meta…

2 days ago

Canada Sues Google For Alleged Anti-Competitive Conduct In Advertising

More legal trouble. Canada's Competition Bureau sues Google for alleged anti-competitive conduct in online advertising

2 days ago

German Government Plots €2 Billion For Chip Subsidies – Report

Is it enough? After Intel disappointment, Germany to offer approximately 2 billion euros in subsidies…

3 days ago

Google Asks Appeal Court To Throw Out Epic App Store Verdict

After Epic Games 2023 courtroom victory, Google appeal argues “dramatic redesign” of Play store will…

3 days ago

Intel Says $7.86bn Grant From US Will Restrict Foundry Spin-off

Chip giant's plan for Intel Foundry to be spun off as independent subsidiary will be…

3 days ago