Questions and answers: The Evi smart-phone app uses semantic data from its platform as well as outside info to answer questions. You can ask questions aloud, or type them in.
Credit: True Knowledge
Computing
New Virtual Helper Challenges Siri
An app named Evi uses semantic data to provide a wider range of answers.
- Friday, January 27, 2012
- By Rachel Metz
The market for sweetly named smart-phone assistants is heating up, as Siri, Apple's iPhone-based virtual helper, just got a new "frenemy" named Evi.
Created by True Knowledge, a Cambridge, U.K.-based semantic technology startup, Evi, like Siri, can answer questions posed aloud in a conversational manner. But unlike Siri, which is only loaded on the latest iPhone, Evi is available as an app for the iPhone and phones running Google's Android software.
Siri and other personal assistants are still fairly limited. As they become more popular, established companies and startups will need to expand the range of tasks they can perform. True Knowledge is hoping the semantic database it has built up over the past few years could provide this edge.
Evi's availability and promise as an artificial intelligence app, coupled with its low price (99 cents on the iPhone and free on Android phones), caused its popularity to skyrocket following its Monday release, and made it difficult for those downloading it to try it out. Evi isn't the only Siri competitor—and in fact its capabilities are somewhat different from Siri's offerings—but plenty of smart-phone users, it seems, are eager for Evi's help in particular.
Evi uses a platform with hundreds of millions of data points that True Knowledge developed over several years (initially for Web search). Information in this database has been tagged to add meaning and context. For example, Apple is classified as a "company" and Tim Cook is classified as a "person" and a "CEO." True Knowledge founder and CEO William Tunstall-Pedoe says this allows the app to understand all sorts of things—people, places, buildings, colors, and more—and how they interact, which helps the app find the right answer for a wide range of questions. In addition to all this information, Evi, like Siri, can access data on some outside websites.
Essentially, the app takes your spoken or typed question and uses its vast store of knowledge along with outside data from websites like Yelp to give pertinent answers. This is similar to how Siri works, but Apple's assistant focuses more on accomplishing tasks, such as making calls, setting alerts, or dictating text messages, by working with the iPhone's other apps. Evi does not do these things, but Tunstall-Pedoe says it will eventually be able to take on more tasks.
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Spicoli
166 Comments
- 477 Days Ago
- 01/28/2012
Whenever I ask people what they like about Siri, it's always the funny responses. Do people actually use it for anything beyond a toy? It reminds me of the old text adventure games.
briang1621
173 Comments
- 477 Days Ago
- 01/28/2012
What is the airspeed velocity of an unladen sallow?
One million high five to the Rachel Metz for picking this joke to include as a picture! I emailed it to all my friends!
Best Regards,
Dr. Brian Glassman
scott miller
1 Comment
- 471 Days Ago
- 02/03/2012
I bought this app, and it really sucks ! Not even in the leauge with Siri...







dcmeserve
215 Comments
Meh
The only problem I have with Siri is that it doesn't connect to the 3rd party apps. You can thus do exactly 4 things with it: make phone calls, set up reminders, get directions via the Google Map app, and ask questions.
Evi does just the last of those 4 functions. And that's the function I never use. Why? Because I can do my own google searches faster and easier.
I only really need a voice interface to issue commands when I'm driving my car and can't safely type on the screen. And ever since I found a good messaging app ("Voxer") and a non-Google-Map GPS type app ("Waze"), I basically don't use Siri at all. I even forget to use it to make phone calls, for cases where it would have worked.
So what I need is Siri's command-issuing capability, applied to any app on the phone. If Evi someday does this, I'd be very excited to try it out. But just to go find answers to questions... well it's certainly not worth the 99 cents to me.
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