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« on: April 16, 2018, 04:05:10 pm »

Apple's Siri Learns New Jokes

Apple appears to have recently updated Siri on iPhone, iPad, Mac, and HomePod with a slew of new jokes to tell. Based on reports on Twitter and from MacRumors readers, the new jokes started rolling out earlier this month.





When you ask Siri a question like "tell me a joke" on an iOS device, Mac, or the HomePod, Siri has dozens of fresh responses to share with you.





<img src="" alt="" width="800" height="571" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-631426" />


<ul>


    <li>"What's the difference between roast beef and pea soup? Anyone can roast beef."</li>


    <li>"One night, I paid $20 to see Prince. But I partied like it was $19.99."</li>


    <li>"I taught a wolf to meditate. Now he's Aware Wolf."</li>


    <li>"What do you call a labrador that becomes a magician? A labracadabrador."</li>


    <li>"What do you call a talking dinosaur? Thesaurus."</li>


    <li>"What do cats like to eat for breakfast? Mice Krispies."</li>


</ul>


With the humorous new additions, Siri's joke repertoire has expanded significantly, and you need to ask for jokes several times before hearing a repeat. Siri also appears to have new knock knock jokes, accessible by asking Siri "knock knock."





Apple updates Siri on a regular basis with new content in an effort to instill the personal assistant with personality and expanded capabilities. In February of 2017, for example, Siri promoted the LEGO Batman Movie with a series of funny responses to the query "Hey Computer," and when Pokémon Go was released, Siri was updated with several Pokémon-related responses.





<img src="" alt="" width="800" height="858" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-631427" />


Siri is often criticized for shortcomings in comparison to AI-based offerings from competing companies like Microsoft, Amazon, and Google, which is said to be due to Apple's heavy focus on protecting user privacy.





Apple is aiming to make major improvements to Siri, however, and has recently hired former Google AI chief John Giannandrea and the team from Init.ai, a customer service startup focused on creating AI with natural language processing.

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