Siri now actively used on more than 500M devices, up from 375M in June
Apple buried a tasty tidbit in Tuesday's HomePod press release, revealing that its Siri virtual assistant is being "actively used" on over half a billion devices, a figure up from more than 375 million in June.

Apple last updated its public Siri adoption numbers at the Worldwide Developers Conference in 2017, meaning the voice activated assistant made its way to 125 million new devices over a seven month span.
"Siri, now actively used on over half a billion devices, has developed a deep knowledge of music and understands your preferences and tastes," Apple says in a HomePod press release issued today.
To put that number into perspective, Apple sold 87.7 iPhones, 21.7 million iPads and 9.7 million Macs in the third and forth fiscal quarters, totaling some 119.1 million Siri-capable devices. Apple does not disclose Apple Watch metrics, a device that also sports Siri integration, but some estimates put sales between approximately 10 million and 15 million units for 2017. Likewise, Apple TV sales are not disclosed, though fourth- and fifth-generation variants incorporate a version of Siri for media navigation and answering basic queries.
Apple has yet to release earnings for its first fiscal quarter of 2018, a period that likely added tens of millions of devices to the final count.
Perhaps luring new users to Siri are improvements to the service rolled out as part of iOS 11 in September. First announced at WWDC last June, the new and improved Siri features a more natural voice powered by deep learning technology.
Siri also received language translation tools and system-wide integrations that help the assistant adapt to user input.
On Apple Watch, a new Siri watch face debuted as part of watchOS 4. Like system integrations in iOS, the new Watch feature proactively pulls information it deems relevant to a user and displays it onscreen throughout the day. For example, Siri on Apple Watch can show weather notifications, upcoming calendar events and breaking news alerts.
With HomePod, Apple hopes to bring Siri into the home with an initial slate of capabilities like sending messages, setting timers, playing media and controlling HomeKit accessories, among other tasks. Considering Siri serves as HomePod's main method of user control, and a major selling point, adoption should rise in line with sales of the smart speaker.
HomePod preorders kick off on Friday ahead of shipments on Feb. 9.

Apple last updated its public Siri adoption numbers at the Worldwide Developers Conference in 2017, meaning the voice activated assistant made its way to 125 million new devices over a seven month span.
"Siri, now actively used on over half a billion devices, has developed a deep knowledge of music and understands your preferences and tastes," Apple says in a HomePod press release issued today.
To put that number into perspective, Apple sold 87.7 iPhones, 21.7 million iPads and 9.7 million Macs in the third and forth fiscal quarters, totaling some 119.1 million Siri-capable devices. Apple does not disclose Apple Watch metrics, a device that also sports Siri integration, but some estimates put sales between approximately 10 million and 15 million units for 2017. Likewise, Apple TV sales are not disclosed, though fourth- and fifth-generation variants incorporate a version of Siri for media navigation and answering basic queries.
Apple has yet to release earnings for its first fiscal quarter of 2018, a period that likely added tens of millions of devices to the final count.
Perhaps luring new users to Siri are improvements to the service rolled out as part of iOS 11 in September. First announced at WWDC last June, the new and improved Siri features a more natural voice powered by deep learning technology.
Siri also received language translation tools and system-wide integrations that help the assistant adapt to user input.
On Apple Watch, a new Siri watch face debuted as part of watchOS 4. Like system integrations in iOS, the new Watch feature proactively pulls information it deems relevant to a user and displays it onscreen throughout the day. For example, Siri on Apple Watch can show weather notifications, upcoming calendar events and breaking news alerts.
With HomePod, Apple hopes to bring Siri into the home with an initial slate of capabilities like sending messages, setting timers, playing media and controlling HomeKit accessories, among other tasks. Considering Siri serves as HomePod's main method of user control, and a major selling point, adoption should rise in line with sales of the smart speaker.
HomePod preorders kick off on Friday ahead of shipments on Feb. 9.
Comments
"Deep learning"? Deep what exactly?
But even with that Siri barely manages without an issue. I asked it the other day to play a mix of club tracks from the 90's, not a chance, no matter which way I asked the question it just kept coming back with some dumb response.
Text messages are frequently full of mistakes, time spelt out as Ten Fifteen as opposed to 10:15, words incorrectly spelt etc.
I'm sure the other voice assistants are not perfect either, but Siri struggles with the basics.
2) I don't know why, but Siri on the Watch seems to work better. That said, I still get far too many "Hold on…" messages when making a simple command. No idea what the hold up could be when the Siri service wants me to wait, but it's far too long for this sort of service. Alexa has always felt so fast that it can seem like it's reading your mind. Even double-tapping the Fn key on my Mac to bring up dictation takes about 5 seconds to activate, which I think uses Siri for the transcoding.
3) I don't think CarPlay is by any stretch a standard.. Most manufacturers offer it, but it depends on both the model and the package. CES had a plethora of automobiles that were going to be offering it later this year or next, and BMW will be offering it with an $80 per annum fee despite the UI for CarPlay actually residing within the iPhone.
4) I'm certainly an "active" Siri user across 4 devices, and yet all of them combined is considerably less used than any one of my Echos, despite my Watch and iPhone almost always on my person. This "actively used" pat on the back is even more of a lame duck than Google talking about Android activations if you use it as an argument for being the best option available.
I switched mine off but realised I could not use CarPlay without it for whatever reason. Note: I've used CarPlay for Spotify, Apple Music, Internet Radio, Messages and navigation and haven't used Siri once so I'm not sure why it's "required" at all.
My kids regularly call on Siri accidentally on their iPads with a long home button press, guess they're "active Siri users" too!
And dictation just loves to insert the names of contacts into my sentences. Wi-Fi becomes Wu-Fi thanks to my friend Mary Wu.
For people with weird accents I suggest using the 'Type to Siri' feature. It works OK too.
And though I’m not Siri’s biggest fan, I always remember the golden rule of the inter webs:
If you like something, say nothing.
If you don’t like something, post on a blog
I’d also agree that CarPlay is far from a standard.
I would use it even more if I didn't have to pause. Why can't I say "Hey Siri, set a time for 15 minutes" without the pause? So annoying.
Homepod will only further the experience with playing Podcasts and eventually controlling apple tv.
? iphone 7 here, no need to wait at all. Works every time
I think many of the complaints regarding Siri are due to poor internet connectivity. Compared to Amazon products, which are always used at home, with presumably reliable WiFi, Siri is used in the wild with spotty/slow data coverage and often unreliable/very slow public WiFi.
I use Siri all the time, several times throughout the day, mostly on my Watch but also on iPhone and iPad. I rarely have any issues (aside from the occasional “Hold on...”) and the responses are fast. Just a quick rundown of my daily uses all on my Watch: timers, conversions, fairly simple math (like “what is 33% of 1142?”), HomeKit, texts, sports scores.
I can can see how many of those would be handy on HomePod. I hadn’t realized we would be able to transfer calls to it, I’m interested in hearing how that sounds as I generally dislike the speakerphone on most cell phones.
If interacting using a button, Car/Mac/iDevice you need to wait. But with Hey Siri you don’t need to.