Thanks for your response. I don’t understand, if the main purpose of the HomePod (And I agree with you) is to respond to “Hey Siri” commands (I.e., to play a song, answer a call, send a text), why would it be developed to hear my command from the other side of a 3,000 sq ft house where I can’t hear it at all? Makes no sense.
I believe, however, that something else is happening. The Apple Support Page (below) says that Bluetooth is used to determine which device heard me best and was used or raised last to determine which device to use. I can hold my iPhone (which was the last device I used “Hey Siri” on) on the other side of the house and softly speak “Hey Siri,” see the Siri app open on my iPhone, but then shut down (It certainly heard me best, and heard me first). The first time that happened I thought there was something wrong with my iPhone because I couldn’t hear HomePod answering the command. Surely the HomePod didn’t hear me from the other side of the house. I’m guessing it’s something to do with the Bluetooth communication between devices, and maybe geolocation issues for each device (on Find my iPhone, sometimes my devices are plotted on the house next door when they’re right in front of me).
At any rate, your suggestion to Apple to allow modification of the “Hey Siri” command to “Hey HomePod” or “Hey IPad” would be a GREAT fix for this issue. Sometimes I want to see the results I get from my command (like a web search or text message), and HomePod, obviously, doesn’t have a display like iPhone and iPad.
Thanks again,
Terry
The Apple Support Page on this issue says the following:
“Which device responds to ”Hey Siri”
When you say ”Hey Siri” near multiple devices that support ”Hey Siri,” the devices use Bluetooth to quickly communicate with each other and determine which one should respond to the request. The device that responds is the one that heard you best or was recently raised or used.
HomePod responds to most Siri requests, even when other devices that support ”Hey Siri” are nearby. To use Siri on a specific device, raise to wake that device or press the button to use Siri, then make your request.“