Dexetra, the company behind the Android-like Siri Iris application and the application of track activity Friday, merges the two apps to work together seamlessly on Android devices. Give Siri a run for its money, Iris, now, users can search the Archives of the data generated by the application Friday, after the recent updates of these mobile applications deployed during the holidays of Thanksgiving here in the United States.
For those who don't know, Iris is one of the many "personal assistant" type applications for Android - a space that has exploded since the launch of the Apple Siri. Using the voice command, Iris allows you to perform common tasks such as setting reminders, send texts, play music, ask questions of reviews of movies and much more. It can also be used the responses to other issues through its integration of ChaCha. (Causing a bit of controversy in the past, we should note.)
Meanwhile, enforcement Friday, launched earlier this year, is like the reverse to Iris. Where we can talk about Iris regarding future events (is there a nearby sushi restaurant? what movies play?), you can request Friday about things that have already occurred. The $ $ app saves a history of your communications including calls, texts, emails and photos, but also changes in the phone status and activities that take place on third-party such as Facebook, Foursquare and Twitter services. This means that you can query Friday on things in the past, such as "who called me?" Tuesday afternoon or "where was I during the last, I spoke to Jim?" for example.
However, so far, both apps were autonomous entities. If you want to look back in time, you have used Friday. To ask questions or send you to a virtual assistant, you needed to Iris. But with the update, you no longer have to think about which app contains the information you need. Friday can run in the background, creating the diary of the activities of your life, and you can query against it with the help of Iris.
Dexetra CEO Narayan Babu said that since the launch of Friday at the end of April, more than 100 million documents have been created by the application, and to this day, millions of Iris users have asked questions over 250 million.
The company is now beta more 'applets' - the optional, context-aware are mini-programs that work with the Friday. For example, an applet called "Trails" allows users to create a travel diary where all your activities (photos, check-ins, tweets, etc.) are plotted on a map. New cmdlets will include a battery monitor, and an alternative Dialer. With the battery monitor Friday could inform the user when the phone is low on the juice and there is a charger nearby, while the $ $ dialer app would show calls not recent or favorite, but these figures, you are most likely to call, based on the previous behavior and your current context. In short, these applications make your phone aware of its surroundings and features in a way that was not possible before, and then link this data with a wizard interface virtual.
Dexetra is not the only company to think how our personal devices can help us to record the activities of living. However, a patent Apple recently found indicates that it could also search by integrating some sort of tracking events to the level of the operating system in the future.
Android users can download the Iris on Google app play here and on Google games here Friday.
Dexetra specializes in the supply of products would contribute to a better life experience. The company is currently working on a Smartphone Application to increase human memory and create a new dimension for self-discovery.
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For those who don't know, Iris is one of the many "personal assistant" type applications for Android - a space that has exploded since the launch of the Apple Siri. Using the voice command, Iris allows you to perform common tasks such as setting reminders, send texts, play music, ask questions of reviews of movies and much more. It can also be used the responses to other issues through its integration of ChaCha. (Causing a bit of controversy in the past, we should note.)
However, so far, both apps were autonomous entities. If you want to look back in time, you have used Friday. To ask questions or send you to a virtual assistant, you needed to Iris. But with the update, you no longer have to think about which app contains the information you need. Friday can run in the background, creating the diary of the activities of your life, and you can query against it with the help of Iris.
Dexetra CEO Narayan Babu said that since the launch of Friday at the end of April, more than 100 million documents have been created by the application, and to this day, millions of Iris users have asked questions over 250 million.
The company is now beta more 'applets' - the optional, context-aware are mini-programs that work with the Friday. For example, an applet called "Trails" allows users to create a travel diary where all your activities (photos, check-ins, tweets, etc.) are plotted on a map. New cmdlets will include a battery monitor, and an alternative Dialer. With the battery monitor Friday could inform the user when the phone is low on the juice and there is a charger nearby, while the $ $ dialer app would show calls not recent or favorite, but these figures, you are most likely to call, based on the previous behavior and your current context. In short, these applications make your phone aware of its surroundings and features in a way that was not possible before, and then link this data with a wizard interface virtual.
Dexetra is not the only company to think how our personal devices can help us to record the activities of living. However, a patent Apple recently found indicates that it could also search by integrating some sort of tracking events to the level of the operating system in the future.
Android users can download the Iris on Google app play here and on Google games here Friday.
Dexetra specializes in the supply of products would contribute to a better life experience. The company is currently working on a Smartphone Application to increase human memory and create a new dimension for self-discovery.

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