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ChatGPT’s voice chat feature is now free so you can finally (kinda) ditch Siri

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OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, went through quite the weekend recently, firing its CEO, hiring a new one, then firing him and bringing the previous CEO back. It was a real rollercoaster, but after all that dust settled the company found time to make a new feature available to more people. And it’s huge.

That feature is ChatGPT Voice, and while it’s been around since September it was previously limited to only those who paid for the Plus and Enterprise tiers of ChatGPT. Those who don’t pay anything and thus use the free plan were left in the cold.

But that’s now changed, and ChatGPT’s voice chat feature is available to anyone with an OpenAI account and it has the potential to change the way people use the chatbot entirely. All while putting yet more pressure on Apple and its oft-bewildered digital assistant, Siri.

ChatGPT has a voice now?

Yes, ChatGPT has a voice now. As mentioned, it was first launched a couple of months ago but it was impossible to get your hands on it without handing over any money. At the time, OpenAI described ChatGPT Voice by saying that users “can now use voice to engage in a back-and-forth conversation with your assistant. Speak with it on the go, request a bedtime story for your family, or settle a dinner table debate.”

Using ChatGPT voice is dead simple, too. Just open the ChatGPT app, press the headphones button, and speak. It’s pretty great, and it works surprisingly well. It sure puts Siri to shame, let’s put it that way.

Fast-forward to this week and OpenAI co-founder Greg Brockman, someone else who left the company for about three days, announced that voice conversations were coming to all OpenAI accounts, even those that don’t pay a penny.

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There’s a short video of it being used in that X post as well, including a little nod to the mess that has been OpenAI’s last few days.

But that’s just the beginning, because not only does this mean that Siri looks worse because ChatGPT’s crown jewel feature is available to all iPhone users, but there’s also a sting in the tail. And it’s called Shortcuts and the Action button.

OK, that’s two stings. Or two tails. Whatever it is, it’s bad news for Siri.

Getting chatty with ChatGPT

The key fact here is that ChatGPT presents an action to Apple’s Shortcuts app that allows people to quickly and easily initiate a voice chat. Create a shortcut with that action in it and you’re a tap away from talking to a chatbot. And I’m sure you can see where this is going.

For those with an iPhone 15 Pro or iPhone 15 Pro Max, setting that shortcut to run every time the Action button is pressed is trivial, making it easy to replace Apple’s incumbent digital assistant with something altogether more capable. No, ChatGPT can’t turn your lights off or on — although Siri in my HomePods can’t do that reliably, either — nor can it interact with phone functions or apps. But it can answer questions, provide information, and all the usual ChatGPT magic all via a voice conversation. And if this is what Apple’s rumored big 2024 AI push brings to iOS 18 and the iPhone 16, I’m all in and it can’t come soon enough.

At least configuring the Action button to launch ChatGPT voice doesn’t mean that Siri is gone for good — you can still use it for all those boring things like starting a timer and then leave all the more useful things to something else.





OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, went through quite the weekend recently, firing its CEO, hiring a new one, then firing him and bringing the previous CEO back. It was a real rollercoaster, but after all that dust settled the company found time to make a new feature available to more people. And it’s huge.

That feature is ChatGPT Voice, and while it’s been around since September it was previously limited to only those who paid for the Plus and Enterprise tiers of ChatGPT. Those who don’t pay anything and thus use the free plan were left in the cold.

But that’s now changed, and ChatGPT’s voice chat feature is available to anyone with an OpenAI account and it has the potential to change the way people use the chatbot entirely. All while putting yet more pressure on Apple and its oft-bewildered digital assistant, Siri.

ChatGPT has a voice now?

Yes, ChatGPT has a voice now. As mentioned, it was first launched a couple of months ago but it was impossible to get your hands on it without handing over any money. At the time, OpenAI described ChatGPT Voice by saying that users “can now use voice to engage in a back-and-forth conversation with your assistant. Speak with it on the go, request a bedtime story for your family, or settle a dinner table debate.”

Using ChatGPT voice is dead simple, too. Just open the ChatGPT app, press the headphones button, and speak. It’s pretty great, and it works surprisingly well. It sure puts Siri to shame, let’s put it that way.

Fast-forward to this week and OpenAI co-founder Greg Brockman, someone else who left the company for about three days, announced that voice conversations were coming to all OpenAI accounts, even those that don’t pay a penny.

See more

There’s a short video of it being used in that X post as well, including a little nod to the mess that has been OpenAI’s last few days.

But that’s just the beginning, because not only does this mean that Siri looks worse because ChatGPT’s crown jewel feature is available to all iPhone users, but there’s also a sting in the tail. And it’s called Shortcuts and the Action button.

OK, that’s two stings. Or two tails. Whatever it is, it’s bad news for Siri.

Getting chatty with ChatGPT

The key fact here is that ChatGPT presents an action to Apple’s Shortcuts app that allows people to quickly and easily initiate a voice chat. Create a shortcut with that action in it and you’re a tap away from talking to a chatbot. And I’m sure you can see where this is going.

For those with an iPhone 15 Pro or iPhone 15 Pro Max, setting that shortcut to run every time the Action button is pressed is trivial, making it easy to replace Apple’s incumbent digital assistant with something altogether more capable. No, ChatGPT can’t turn your lights off or on — although Siri in my HomePods can’t do that reliably, either — nor can it interact with phone functions or apps. But it can answer questions, provide information, and all the usual ChatGPT magic all via a voice conversation. And if this is what Apple’s rumored big 2024 AI push brings to iOS 18 and the iPhone 16, I’m all in and it can’t come soon enough.

At least configuring the Action button to launch ChatGPT voice doesn’t mean that Siri is gone for good — you can still use it for all those boring things like starting a timer and then leave all the more useful things to something else.

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