Cars with Voice Command Systems Cumming GA

When Ford first announced its plans to jump into bed with Microsoft to create Sync, a voice-command system for in-car media, I had terrible visions of me shouting profanities at the dashboard of a new Focus.

A & G Motors of Cumming, Inc.
678-965-4411
PO Box 949
Cumming, GA
Automagic LLC
678-456-5303
104 Ind. Park Dr
Cumming, GA
Stripland Motor Co. Inc.
770-889-7503
2024 Atlanta Hwy
Cumming, GA
Chuck Reynolds Car Co Inc.
770-806-7177
1820 Anticoh Rd
Cumming, GA
Sauke Inc.
2865 Dahlonega Hwy
Cumming, GA
Rafiki Auto Brokers
1915 Aurelia Dr
Cumming, GA
C & W Auto Sales
1435 Dahlonega Hwy
Cumming, GA
Wazi Automotive LLC
770-888-7455
5075 Elrod Cir
Cumming, GA
Southeast Truck Sales Inc.
678-455-3025
5410 Chattahoochee Indust Park
Cumming, GA
The Wright Import Service Center
2636 B Business Dr
Cumming, GA
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The Joy of Voice Command

The Joy of Voice Command By Zach Bowman, DriverSide Contributing Editor 


If you’ve ever suffered through your bank’s automated phone system, you probably know voice recognition software leaves something to be desired. What should be a five second exchange between you and an actual person, or you and your phone’s keypad turns into blood-pressure raising event. After all, how many ways can you say “yes” into a phone? When Ford first announced its plans to jump into bed with Microsoft to create Sync, a voice-command system for in-car media, I had terrible visions of me shouting profanities at the dashboard of a new Focus . People in the lanes next to me would stop and stare, mothers would cover their children’s ears – the works.
 

Thankfully, both Ford and Microsoft seem to have done their homework. Sync is billed as a one-stop solution for all of your mobile media. Watching the promo video for the system, it’s hard not to look on with a cynical eye. In the video, a smiling young gent breathlessly commands phone calls, music and text messages by merely pushing buttons on the steering wheel and speaking out loud. Watching it reminds me a bit too much of those amusement park rides that take you through the hall of the future. Have a cell phone? Great. An MP3 player? No problem. Get text messages while you’re driving? Sync’s got you covered in the year 2008! Now where’s my robo puppy?
 
It’s not that I don’t think the premise isn’t great. Though talking on your cell while driving is illegal in California and a few other localities, in most of the U.S. drivers can chat as much as they like – weaving in and out of traffic and taking out orphanages as they go. Even worse are those that somehow believe they can pull off the reverse triple-axle of using a cell phone behind the wheel – the text while driving. It’s not like phones are the only culprits, either. iPods and other mobile media devices are just as bad if you’re looking for a song while flying down the interstate. It’s just that frantically mashing buttons on a steering wheel may be just as bad as eying a keypad while in the captain’s seat if the system doesn’t work properly.
 
To find out for myself, I asked a buddy who had just picked up an ’09 Focus, complete with Sync, to show me the goods. One of my first questions was how easy it is to hook up different media players. Taking along my iPod’s USB cable, all it took to get my Apple to talk with his Blue Oval was plugging it into the in-dash jack. With a quick word about not driving while distracted, Sync immediately recognized the device. Now how’s about searching?
 
Though I felt like a David Hasselhoff stand-in on the set of Knight Rider while barking commands at my buddy’s Focus, the system managed to pick up my selections without too much o...

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