iOS 17: What You Should Know About Audio Message Transcripts

Apple’s release of iOS 17 on Sept. 18 brought a handful of fun and useful features to your iPhone, such as Live Stickers and offline maps. Another new feature is transcriptions of audio messages, also known as voice notes, in Messages. 

Apple introduced audio messages with the release of iOS 8 in 2014. Audio messages — not to be confused with voicemail — are short audio recordings you send to someone in Messages, and they’ve become a popular way to communicate. According to a YouGov survey conducted by Vox earlier this year, 62% of Americans surveyed said they’d sent an audio message, and about 30% said they use audio messages weekly. About 43% of people between the ages of 18 and 29 also said they use audio messages at least weekly. 

Zach McAuliffe/CNET

Another excerpt from The Fellowship of the Ring I read had no proper nouns in it, but still managed to get messed up badly. The feature injected the name “Shelby” into the transcript, making the whole passage read like gibberish. I read the excerpt back more slowly and deliberately and the transcript got most of it correct, but still mixed up some a‘s with of‘s.

Audio message transcripts didn’t seem to be affected by loud music, though. In one message I sent, you can clearly hear the group Outkast in the background, and my message was transcribed without issues and with none of the lyrics. I can’t speak to concert-level noise, but the regular level of noise you run into every day shouldn’t affect transcriptions much.

Interestingly, I tried to use Spanish in an audio message and it transcribed it, but only when my iPhone’s language was set to English. When I set my iPhone’s language to Spanish and used Spanish to send an audio message, it didn’t transcribe at all. I also tried to send a message in English while my iPhone was set to Spanish and it didn’t transcribe that message, either. I tried this with German, as well, and had similar results.

Final thoughts on audio message transcriptions

Audio message transcriptions work well enough to be understood in most cases, but Apple has some work to do to improve the feature. 

Your iPhone will likely struggle with proper nouns, and if you speak quickly your words might be transformed or combined in weird ways. I also imagine that if you have an accent or if English isn’t your first language, your iPhone might have a difficult time transcribing your speech. This feature also only worked for me when my iPhone’s language was set to English, and Apple would benefit from expanding this feature to other languages.

If you’re having problems with the transcriptions, I recommend speaking slowly and enunciating every letter to help your iPhone transcribe your message better.

For more, check out CNET’s iOS 17 cheat sheet and my review of iOS 17.

17 Hidden iOS 17 Features and Settings on Your iPhone


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Article source: https://www.cnet.com/tech/mobile/ios-17-what-you-should-know-about-audio-message-transcripts/#ftag=CAD4aa2096

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