Siri Tips & Settings

By tunmi13, 14 March, 2016

Everyone knows that Siri is Apple's virtual assistant. From getting directions to finding pictures, Siri is the best. Before Siri, virtual assistants didn't sound human like. Instead, they were robotic and slow. But now we do have human virtual assistants, and one of them is Siri, and that is why I have created this guide to teach you some tips to using them.

I will also go in detail of the Siri Settings.

Tips to Using Siri

These tips include some jokes you can ask Siri that are yes, appropriate, as well as some useful commands.

  • You can ask Siri to calculate a math problem and they will tell you the answer.
  • Want to call your friend or loved one? Siri can do that for you.
  • Want to go have dinner at a restaurant? Leave Siri in charge to have them find a seating spot ready for you.
  • Want to tell Siri what a number divided by 0 is and see their response? It will be funny.
  • Your friend told you where he lives or she lives, and you really want to go there, right? Tell Siri the address and they will give you directions. You may also use the fully accessible app from Google that goes by the name of Google Maps, or you can also use the fully accessible app called Maps by Apple.
  • You really don't want to go surfing through pictures and looking for a specific picture. Ask Siri to search for your vacation photos.
  • You hear a song on the radio and you really want to know the name, right? Ask Siri to listen to the tune and they will answer. They can find out things like remixes and lots more.
  • Dictionaries dictionaries dictionaries, yeesh! Use Siri instead of having to surf through a bunch of pages to find the definition of something, and they will tell you the definition in at least 3 or more ways!
  • Want to roll some dice? Ask Siri to roll as many dice or they can randomly generate numbers from 1 to 6 and other things.
  • Siri can also beatbox. Just ask.

Quick Note: If your device doesn't have a Home button, use the Side button for Siri instead.

Siri Settings

First go to Settings > Siri & search. Siri & search settings is where you can customize Siri, as well as turn it off completely. I will now go through all the Settings one by one:

  • Listen for "Hey Siri": Allows you to use your voice by saying, "hey Siri" instead of pressing and holding the Home or Side button.
  • Press Home for Siri: Toggles home or Side button access to Siri on or off.
  • Allow Siri when locked: Allows you to decide if Siri can be used if the screen is locked.
  • Language: Allows you to change the language of Siri.
  • Siri Voice: Allows you to choose from a variety of accents and voices for Siri.
  • Siri Responses: Allows you to change when Siri gives or does not give spoken feedback.
  • Call Hang Up: Turn this on to allow you to ask Siri to hang up a call in progress. Note that the other parties on the call can hear you make the request to hang up.
  • Announce Calls: When enabled, Siri will speak the contents of caller ID when the phone rings.
  • Siri & Dictation History: Allows you to delete all past interactions with Siri associated with your Apple ID.
  • Automatically Send Messages: When enabled, if you ask Siri to send a text message, the message will be automatically sent without the chance to verify it first.
  • My Information: Allows you to put your name in Siri's memory.
  • Siri Suggestions: Displays a list of apps that you can allow Siri to access data from to provide a more relevant experience. If the app supports it, you can also allow Siri commands to perform functions within that app. For example, you could use this feature to hail a ride in Uber or pay a friend in Venmo.

Want to turn Siri off completely? Just toggle both listen for "Hey Siri" and "press Home for Siri" off.

Conclusion

If you have any questions or if I made any mistakes, be very sure to comment below. Bye.

Tags

Disclaimer

The article on this page has generously been submitted by a member of the AppleVis community. As AppleVis is a community-powered website, we make no guarantee, either express or implied, of the accuracy or completeness of the information.

Options

Comments

By John Diakogeorgiou on Friday, March 25, 2016 - 18:13

With an IPhone 6s or 6s+ the charger does not need to be plugged in for hey siri to work.

Thank you, i will be sure to make fixes to the guide about that.

By tunmi13 on Friday, March 25, 2016 - 18:13

In reply to by AnonyMouse

Thank you AnonyMouse.

The reason why I didn't give all of the commands of siri was only because I picked the ones that I thought were going to be most likely used often, but like AnonyMouse posted, you can also find more commands by following the link he has given.

By Deborah Armstrong on Friday, March 25, 2016 - 18:13

I've worked with several people who've had a lot of trouble with Siri. A few things to remember:

* Longer phrases are better than shorter ones. "Call Mom" is not as effective as "Call my mother on her mobile". For another example that's personal to me: "Call outreach" is not as effective as "Call Outreach paratransit."

* Siri works best if you tweak your contacts. Again, looking at my paratransit example, which is run by an organization named Outreach, I have Outreach as its first name, and paratransit as the last name. I then have entries for "Dispatch" "IVR" "Customer Service" and "Scheduling". So when I tell siri "Call Outreach Paratransit Scheduling" or "Call Outreach Paratransit Dispatch" it automatically dials the correct extension. To accomplish the extension dialing, I have the main number in each field, followed by a comma for a 1 second pause, followed by the digits for that extension.

* To make reminders more useful, tweak them as well. For example to get siri to "add milk to my grocery list" create a list in reminders called "grocery" and not "groceries". Remember when you say "remind me to ..." siri will add this reminder to your default list, which for me is a to-do list, but for you, could be something else.

* You can also ask siri to read information from contacts out loud. For example, you need your brother's phone number for a friend, but you don't want to call him. Say "show contact info for my brother" and it will ask which piece of info you need.

* For general purpose or complicated stuff, ask siri to create a note. She'll prompt you for the text of the note. Then you can cut and paste it later in to another app, such as email or reminders.

* Siri can launch apps "Launch dropbox" or "launch hourly news".

* Siri can understand punctuation and words like "new paragraph" or "new line". Experiment with this feature in your notes or other text editing app.

* Siri can dial numbers "dial 4 0 8 864 56 7 8.

* If dictating in a noisy environment, pause before speaking so siri can first hear and filter out the background noise.

* remember to add all your relationships to siri by speaking "Joe schmoe is my brother" "John doe is my husband" etc. John Q. Public" is my boss!

* Enunciate slowly and clearly but don't exaggerate your speech. If Siri can't understand you, search youtube for demos of siri working well and listen to people who are effective.

* Remember if dictating a long passage to use the magic tap in a text field. Double tap with two fingers, wait for the beep, speak a sentence, pause and press the magic tap again. Siri will take a minute to recognize and convert your speech as she needs to go online to use Apple's servers in the cloud to perform her magic. After she reads back to you what's entered, double tap with two fingers again and continue with your next sentence.

* For friends who like to get their texts on google voice or other non-traditional ways, tweak their contact records so siri knows how to text them. I've set my husband's google voice number as his "mobile" number and his actual mobile number (where he has to pay to receive texts) as his work number. This way when I ask siri to "text my husband" she sends that text to google voice and not to his cellphone where he would be charged.

Hope these less than obvious tips will be helpful to Siri newbies. Remember in mastering Siri, youtube is your friend.

By tunmi13 on Friday, March 25, 2016 - 18:13

Well, my guide can't have every single tip in the universe about Siri, I just picked out some of them.

By Ekaj on Sunday, September 25, 2016 - 18:13

Thanks for this guide. I took a look at Siri earlier today and it seems to be very good. I will definitely play around with it some more though. I'm loving Mac OS Sierra.

By JeffB on Sunday, September 25, 2016 - 18:13

Nicely done thanks for this.

By That Blind Canuck on Tuesday, September 25, 2018 - 18:13

Thanks for outlining some of the tricks in using Siri. For the most part, I've always been pretty successful in using Siri, but do run into gbrick walls sometimes.

One thing I did notice though, not sure if this was the same in iOS 11, but I asked Siri that famous question "What is zero divided by zero?", and is it me or does her tone sound different now? Before, her tone sounded robotic but now, she seems to have a bit more attitude behind her voice. I'm loving this!