To Camdat’s point, a general transcription is definitely not low power even if you have some kind of gating on when it transcribes. Obviously Apple and Google and Samsung and whoever makes the phone can turn on the mic without you knowing, otherwise how would their voice assistant work, but Apple probably isn’t letting Facebook have access to the mic without throwing something up on the status bar.
I just did a rough whatsapp text to speech message using a tasker script log and monitor battery power usage. I had it rounding to 4 decimal places of a percentage and saw 0 percent change. Take my rather unscientific test as you will. I think the trick is to not do it continuously and leverage location and volume detection events. I think a few years ago this may have been a lot more heavy on the battery but anything made within the last 2-3 years will not have much of a problem.
To Camdat’s point, a general transcription is definitely not low power even if you have some kind of gating on when it transcribes. Obviously Apple and Google and Samsung and whoever makes the phone can turn on the mic without you knowing, otherwise how would their voice assistant work, but Apple probably isn’t letting Facebook have access to the mic without throwing something up on the status bar.
I just did a rough whatsapp text to speech message using a tasker script log and monitor battery power usage. I had it rounding to 4 decimal places of a percentage and saw 0 percent change. Take my rather unscientific test as you will. I think the trick is to not do it continuously and leverage location and volume detection events. I think a few years ago this may have been a lot more heavy on the battery but anything made within the last 2-3 years will not have much of a problem.
Whatsapp is sending your audio to the cloud to handle transcription. This is not an accurate test because it is not an on-device process.
No, my keyboard is doing it locally. Futo.